The Columbus Dispatch

State fund to help parents keep kids

- By Rita Price

Of all the anguish that befell Mark Butler as he fought to obtain care for his severely autistic son, the worst came when he and his wife had to sign over their parental rights.

So Butler couldn’t help but savor the part of Ohio’s new biennial budget that speaks — finally, he and other advocates say — about parents and guardians “at risk of relinquish­ing custody of the youth” in order to access badly needed services.

“When I saw those words written down, I said, ‘They heard us.’ The dagger that

hit us in the heart, this specifical­ly says it wants to pull that out,” Butler said. “No parent should have to go through what we went though.”

For the first time, the state is to create a “crisis stabilizat­ion fund” that can be tapped to help so-called multisyste­m youths — those in danger of entering the child-protective or juvenile-justice systems because of their disabiliti­es, mental illnesses and dangerous behavioral problems.

Legislator­s set aside $5 million in federal welfare money each of the next two years to support the fund. County Family and Children First councils will design local plans for administer­ing it.

Although the funding is far short of the $30 million supporters had hoped for, they’re celebratin­g progress in a tight budget cycle.

Longtime children’s advocate Gayle Channing Tenenbaum thanked legislator­s “on behalf of the youth and families who have taken out a second mortgage on their home, sold a second car and are working two jobs each to pay for service for their multi-need children.”

Ohio is giving those families hope by saying that custody relinquish­ment should not be a practice in cases where parents are trying to meet their children’s needs, she said. They now “have a chance to stay together.”

The Dispatch has been reporting on the obstacles and heartbreak­ing choices families face when Medicaid and private health insurance aren’t sufficient to pay for services and treatment.

The Butlers surrendere­d custody of their teenage son, who cannot communicat­e verbally, then saw him placed in a residentia­l treatment center hours away in southern Ohio. The Whitehall family waged a two-year campaign to get local care for Andrew, who is now 19 and back in Franklin County, living in a home staffed with aides to keep him and others safe.

“Everything we went through with Andrew — custody surrenderi­ng and relinquish­ment, all those drives to Ironton and sitting in committee meetings — then if it helps just one dad like me, then my gosh, it was worth it,” Butler said. “Too many of these families suffer in silence.”

The budget provision also calls for a data-collection system to shed light on the number of multisyste­m youths served and to monitor trends and outcomes. The state hasn’t in the past tracked such cases or counted the number of families who trade or lose custody because of service barriers.

But advocates say that more than half of youths in the custody of Ohio’s child-protection agencies are not there because of abuse or neglect.

“I think a big problem in all this is that we don’t know how many like Andrew there are out there,” Butler said.

In the past year, the Ohio Department of Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es also created a pilot program in central Ohio to aid families whose children have disabiliti­es and volatile behaviors that require expensive treatment. And the Franklin County Board of Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es worked with other local government agencies and a nonprofit organizati­on to designate a four-bedroom residentia­l center on the East Side to serve youths who can’t safely remain in their family homes.

“The system can change, it really can,” Butler said. “It just takes the hard work and dedication of a lot of people.”

 ?? [FRED SQUILLANTE/DISPATCH] ?? Andrew Butler, left, now shares a home in Franklin County staffed with aides who keep him safe. His parents, in front, second from left, Mark and Susan Butler of Whitehall, visited him in the home in June last year after he was moved there from a...
[FRED SQUILLANTE/DISPATCH] Andrew Butler, left, now shares a home in Franklin County staffed with aides who keep him safe. His parents, in front, second from left, Mark and Susan Butler of Whitehall, visited him in the home in June last year after he was moved there from a...

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