Los Angeles Times

State to audit county child services

Review of protection­s for LGBTQ youths follows the highprofil­e death of Anthony Avalos, 10.

- By Nina Agrawal

After the recent death of 10-year-old Anthony Avalos, state officials will conduct an audit of L.A. County’s Department of Children and Family Services to determine whether the agency is doing enough to protect children.

The California legislativ­e audit committee approved a request for the review Wednesday from state Sens. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) and Scott Wilk (RSanta Clarita) and Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey (RPalmdale).

In their request, the legislator­s noted that Anthony had been the subject of 13 calls to the department and that he may have come out as gay before his death, citing reporting in The Times.

“Unfortunat­ely, this is not an isolated incident,” their letter to the audit committee said, referring to the 2013 death of 8-year-old Gabriel Fernandez, who was tortured and abused for months by his mother and her boyfriend, allegedly because he suspected Gabriel was gay.

In an interview Wednesday, Lara said that the deaths of Anthony and Gabriel felt personal.

“As an openly gay man who had to endure bullying … using my home as a place to shield myself from that and having a welcoming environmen­t where I felt protected was my only reprieve,” Lara said. “Seeing and hearing the grotesque and inhumane way these parents treated their children for being gay or being perceived as gay shocked me.”

The audit will specifical­ly review whether the Department of Children and Family Services has adequate protection­s in place for LGBTQ youths, who are disproport­ionately represente­d among foster youth and who face additional trauma because of having been rejected by their families and others for their sexual orientatio­n or gender ex-

pression.

The legislator­s also requested that the auditor look at whether the safety and risk assessment­s performed by social workers are timely and accurate, and whether their child abuse and neglect investigat­ions are thorough “and leading to appropriat­e results.”

If not, they asked the state auditor to find out “what are the root causes of these deficienci­es and how can these root causes be resolved so that children are better protected?”

L.A. County is conducting its own review of what went wrong in Anthony’s case and any systemic issues that may have impeded coordinati­on of services, but Lara said an independen­t audit is still warranted.

“I need a third-party entity — somebody who’s nonpolitic­al, somebody who’s not beholden to the supervisor­s — to really look at these procedures and systems,” he said.

State officials last conducted an audit of L.A. County’s child welfare department six years ago in response to widely publicized child deaths and turmoil among department management.

The county stonewalle­d their efforts for months, refusing to turn over records related to child deaths, prompting strongly worded rebukes from the state auditor, who said her office has statutory authority to review any and all records to which the county has access.

The audit, ultimately released in 2012, described widespread deficienci­es in L.A. County’s oversight of abused and neglected children, including problems with the speed and quality of investigat­ions and failure to perform required safety assessment­s of relatives’ homes where children were placed.

Lara said he worked with the state auditor’s office to ensure the latest audit would not duplicate earlier efforts.

In their request to the audit committee, the three legislator­s noted that the Department of Children and Family Services has implemente­d a series of reforms since 2012, but a new audit could identify any breakdown in processes and recommend systemwide solutions while the investigat­ion into Anthony’s death continues.

“I hope that county leadership will welcome this as an opportunit­y to improve its practices, particular­ly when it comes to protecting LGBT youth who are more likely to face abuse and rejection by their families,” Lara said in a statement.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? STATE Sen. Ricardo Lara joined two other L.A.-area legislator­s in requesting the audit of child services.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press STATE Sen. Ricardo Lara joined two other L.A.-area legislator­s in requesting the audit of child services.
 ?? David Barron ?? CHILD services received 13 calls about Anthony Avalos before his death.
David Barron CHILD services received 13 calls about Anthony Avalos before his death.

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