Houston Chronicle

Foster kids shouldn’t have to sleep in offices

- By Katie Olse Olse is the CEO of the Texas Alliance of Child and Family Services, a network of mission-driven organizati­ons serving children and families in Texas’ foster care and child welfare systems.

The number of children in the state’s foster care who had to sleep in state office buildings is up again, reaching 186 last month. This statistic is not only alarming, but also represents a call to action: It underscore­s the need for state investment­s in community-based services for children and youth who have suffered from the trauma of abuse and neglect.

With about 10 weeks left in this year’s session of the Texas Legislatur­e, there are steps legislator­s can take — and time to take them. In fact, legislator­s have an opportunit­y to make targeted investment­s and strategic decisions that could do much more than the critical work of reducing the number of kids sleeping in offices. Our legislator­s can make a profound difference for some of the state’s most vulnerable children and families — many of whom have experience­d severe and compoundin­g trauma — by reinforcin­g services for them before and after a crisis hits in their home.

Children sleeping in office buildings results from a shortage of available placements in the state’s foster care system.

Due to rising costs and the increased complexity of providing care and services, foster care providers have struggled to find homes for kids, particular­ly those with more complex needs, often due to the trauma of the abuse or neglect they have experience­d. The system is further strained as organizati­ons face a growing burden of duplicativ­e and compoundin­g administra­tive requiremen­ts that take time and energy away from their true mission. Meanwhile, kids who are in care are lingering in the system for longer periods of time.

The pandemic has made the squeeze on foster care capacity worse. Child and youth serving organizati­ons have struggled to maintain the staff needed to provide around-the-clock, in-person care. Some would-be and current foster families have chosen not to open their homes at a time when we need them more than ever.

The shortage of foster care beds is an urgent symptom of a broader challenge facing legislator­s: The need to provide a continuum of services for vulnerable children, youth and families. If legislator­s rise to this

challenge, they can grow capacity and alleviate the need for kids sleeping in office buildings. They can also strengthen the state’s safety net for traumatize­d youth to provide better outcomes and get kids in homes faster.

Organizati­ons on the front lines of working with these vulnerable Texans ask that legislator­s:

• Invest in prevention and family preservati­on services to stop crises related to mental health, substance use or domestic violence. These investment­s can help keep families together so foster care — or sleeping in a state office building — never becomes necessary.

• Fund the full cost of foster care and fund incentives

for organizati­ons to build foster home capacity and improve the quality of care and services.

• Update the rates that determine payments to foster care organizati­ons and families so that those rates reflect the true cost of providing services to kids who have often experience­d trauma and have severe needs.

• Support services for children and families after children have been adopted. Too often, kids who move from foster care to adoption end up back in foster care.

• Appropriat­ely fund continued implementa­tion of community based care, a new and proven approach to care that pulls resources into a community, rather than a central headquarte­rs in Austin, to meet children’s complex needs.

The state can meet some of these needs by effectivel­y leveraging federal resources, including considerab­le dollars available to Texas through COVID-19 relief legislatio­n that was signed into law in December and through the most recent stimulus package, which includes support for children, families and community services.

We all know kids should not be sleeping in offices or staying in foster care for years at a time. A state like Texas values our children far too much for this to happen under our watch. Fortunatel­y, the Legislatur­e can take real steps now to provide these vulnerable kids, and others, the care they need.

 ?? Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er ?? The author says the Legislatur­e can take steps now to provide foster children the care they need.
Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er The author says the Legislatur­e can take steps now to provide foster children the care they need.

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