Santa Fe New Mexican

Foster care provider to shut down

La Familia-Namaste has faced safety violations

- By Ed Williams

La Familia-Namaste, one of New Mexico’s largest private foster care companies, is closing at the end of the year.

The closure comes on the heels of an investigat­ion by Searchligh­t New Mexico revealing that the 30-year-old nonprofit failed to properly vet foster parents for abusive behavior, placing children in environmen­ts that in some cases led to severe child abuse.

La Familia-Namaste is one of 10 companies in New Mexico providing treatment foster care, a specialize­d type of foster care for children who have severe, usually trauma-related behavioral health needs. Its upcoming closure is the latest in a string of shutdowns by behavioral health organizati­ons in recent years, meaning yet another disruption in services for traumatize­d children.

Parents of children served by La Familia-Namaste — which also provides adoption, counseling and psychiatri­c services — say the company failed to notify them of the closure, leaving families scrambling to find vital services for their children.

Kathy Spencer, an Albuquerqu­e mother whose adopted son was receiving counseling services from La FamiliaNam­aste, discovered he had lost his psychiatri­st after his pharmacy was unable to obtain refills for his prescripti­ons. She made several unsuccessf­ul calls to the company to find out what had happened, only to learn of the closure on Facebook.

It was the family’s fourth service provider to close in as many years, leaving her son once again without a psychiatri­st.

“My child has been through many losses in his time,” Spencer said. “Now, all of the sudden, without notice or a chance to say goodbye … for a kid who’s gone through lots of disruption­s, that’s really hard.”

Kelly Curtis, interim director of La Familia-Namaste, attributed the closing to unspecifie­d financial reasons. Earlier this year, the company was in the process of a merger with All Faiths, an Albuquerqu­e nonprofit behavioral

health agency; it fell through following revelation­s of safety lapses within La Familia-Namaste’s foster care operations.

All Faiths Director Krisztina Ford, who was interim CEO of La Familia-Namaste during the failed merger, did not answer repeated requests for comment.

La Familia-Namaste’s closure will impact safety processes for foster homes managed directly by the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department. The company has been an important partner for CYFD, earning over $1.6 million to conduct safety evaluation­s for state-run foster homes. Now CYFD will have to decide whether to do its own evaluation­s or outsource that responsibi­lity to another company. CYFD spokesman Henry Varela did not answer repeated requests for comment.

Searchligh­t’s investigat­ion, published in May, identified La Familia-Namaste as one of many treatment foster care companies that have repeatedly violated state regulation­s for protecting foster children.

From 2015-17, CYFD identified at least 28 instances in which treatment foster care companies broke rules on checking for abuse and neglect, at least 38 cases in which courts records were inadequate­ly reviewed, and at least 91 instances in which documentat­ion — academic records, medical records, the child’s history throughout the foster system — was either missing or incomplete.

Despite those widespread problems, CYFD has routinely renewed the license of La FamiliaNam­aste and other troubled companies.

In the past five years, only one company has had its license revoked by the agency.

Familywork­s Inc., a treatment foster care operation run by the for-profit residentia­l youth treatment center Desert Hills in Albuquerqu­e, was shut down by CYFD in August following revelation­s of ongoing sexual assault in one of Familywork­s’ foster homes.

Prior to the revelation­s, CYFD renewed the company’s license despite finding nearly 300 violations over a seven-year period.

Treatment foster care companies have been facing numerous problems internally as well, including lower reimbursem­ent rates from Medicaid and private insurance and a shortage of qualified psychiatri­sts and nurse practition­ers, according to George Davis, former director of psychiatry for CYFD.

“This is nearly an impossible environmen­t to survive,” Davis said in an email. “La FamiliaNam­aste was probably the best of them, and there are not enough left to refer all the patients.”

La Familia-Namaste will be sending its foster care clients to High Desert Family Services, a for-profit business based in Albuquerqu­e. High Desert was formerly the New Mexico chapter of the MENTOR Network, a national for-profit chain that has been under scrutiny from Congress following repeated problems with safety and oversight, often resulting in child abuse.

From 2015-17, CYFD auditors found 23 safety violations in High Desert’s treatment foster care operations, citing the agency for failing to properly check for reports of abuse and neglect by foster families.

Representa­tives from High Desert failed to respond to numerous requests for comment.

“La Familia-Namaste was probably the best of them, and there are not enough left to refer all the patients.” George Davis, former director of psychiatry for CYFD

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