New York Daily News

Report sees too many child welfare probes

- BY CAYLA BAMBERGER

New York’s child abuse hotline filters out relatively few calls that fall below the threshold for a report, contributi­ng to thousands of families subjected to unwarrante­d investigat­ions every year, according to a new analysis.

The actions of the Statewide Central Register, which turns over allegation­s to local child welfare agencies to probe, can be the difference between a groundless call and months of intrusive home visits. Once hotline staff hand off a report to the city, the Administra­tion for Children’s Services is required to respond to it.

But advocates at the New York City Family Policy Project are pushing agents who field the calls to ask more questions before putting a family through a traumatic investigat­ion.

“It can’t be that you have very little informatio­n about a family,” said Nora McCarthy, director of the think tank, “and make a life-altering report alleging that they’re hurting their kid.”

To accept a hotline call as a report, staff are required by law to determine if a child is in imminent danger because a parent or caregiver is not providing a minimum degree of care, the study found.

“That’s a strong part of the law that if a parent is trying to address a situation, it’s not neglect,” McCarthy said. “It’s not neglect if you’re having trouble getting your child to school because you entered a shelter, you don’t have food but are contesting HRA. It’s not neglect if your kid isn’t attending school because they’re having a lot of trouble if you’re seeking mental health care.”

“The power they do have is to ask more questions,” she continued. “They don’t seem to be really honing in asking the reporter, but is the parent trying?”

The consequenc­es are serious and fall disproport­ionately on families of color. Nearly 80% of investigat­ions in the city last year were ultimately unfounded. About half of Black children will experience a child welfare investigat­ion before they turn 18.

“There’s definitely the perception that an investigat­ion is jut a check-in on a family,” McCarthy said. “But that’s not what [it] is.”

“It’s intrusive, requires children to pull up their shirts, show they’re not bruised,” she said. “Parents are asked to provide contact informatio­n for their doctors, their children’s teachers. They knock on your neighbors’ doors and talk to all sorts of people about you.”

New York is one of just six states that do not share informatio­n in a federal database. The NYC Family Policy Project obtained the data through a Freedom of Informatio­n Law request.

Each year, hotline staff use their judgment to reject 12% of calls received, the analysis found. Only 1% of reports were closed out by the state’s Office of Children and Family Services, which runs the SCR, because a child was not in “imminent danger” — though many cases are ultimately closed or put on a non-investigat­ory track by local agencies for that reason.

All in, close to 50,000 calls were deemed “non-reports” last year, including if a caller does not provide enough informatio­n, no child or parent is involved in the allegation­s, or they took place out of state.

The Office of Children and Family Services said SCR staff receive training on intake standards outlined in social services and family court law.

“OCFS fully acknowledg­es that disparitie­s continue to exist within the child welfare system,” said Karen Male, a spokeswoma­n for the state agency, “and remains firmly committed to addressing these systemic inequities and the resulting impact they have on children, families, and communitie­s.”

Male added that the agency has taken action in recent years to reduce unnecessar­y child welfare probes.

Hotline agents are limited both legally and practicall­y in what they can do. They cannot decide whether they believe a caller and only know informatio­n shared in calls that typically last under half an hour.

Manhattan dad Alex said he was subjected to a spurious investigat­ion after his ex-wife called the hotline alleging he hit their son.

The child, 9, was living with his father fulltime while his mom addressed her mental health, and within weeks, the family court judge dismissed the case.

But ACS continued to show up at their home. Alex said he was told during the first visit that it seemed like a “non-case,” but the caseworker came back. She asked for contact informatio­n at his son’s school, tried to see the younger daughter who was asleep, and threatened to escalate the investigat­ion, he recalled. “I felt harassed and violated,” Alex said. The study calls for changes to the Office of Children and Family Services’ practices and increased oversight. “They haven’t been making this data public,” McCarthy said. “When nobody knows what you’re doing, nobody’s pressuring you to improve.”

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