The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Child abuse and neglect remain underrepor­ted

- By Josiah H. Brown Josiah H. Brown is executive director of CASA of Southern Connecticu­t (New Haven, New London, and Middlesex counties), part of the Connecticu­t CASA and national CASA network.

May is Foster Care Month, June National Reunificat­ion Month, a complement in that the hope is for foster care to be temporary before children are reunited with their families. These occasions evoke the enormous challenges facing children and families — challenges heightened during a pandemic — and how to help.

There is value in raising awareness through a particular month (or week or day) to highlight a social issue. Yet there is an arbitrary aspect; many such issues are potent every day. Moreover, because problems and systems are interrelat­ed, it can be distractin­g to view any one in isolation.

For example, May is not only Foster Care Month but also Mental Health Month and Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month. April was both Child Abuse Prevention and Volunteer Month. October is both Domestic Violence Awareness Month and Substance Abuse Prevention Month. November is Adoption Month. These are all important; often they’re connected.

Among the effects of COVID-19 are those related to domestic violence, child abuse, and neglect. In Connecticu­t and beyond, they are likely underrepor­ted.

According to a chilling Atlantic article: “Social workers, lawyers, and advocates have had to rapidly adjust their services in order to get help to domestic- and childabuse victims … people are stressed. They’re getting sick, losing loved ones, or worrying about getting sick or losing loved ones. The income loss … only adds to the daily anxiety. Plus, school cancellati­ons mean that many parents have lost their regular affordable child care. Financial strain has been linked to increases in the frequency and severity of domestic abuse, and a 1 percent increase in the unemployme­nt rate leads to a 25 percent increase in child neglect and a 12 percent increase in physical abuse, one study found ... Experts also worry that the coronaviru­s lockdowns are leading to a rise in child abuse … [though] reported cases of child abuse are actually down in several states and cities.”

In the New York Times, pediatrici­an Dr. Nina Agrawal urges: “Make use of technology for virtual check-ins. Look for signs of distress and remember that anyone can report concerns to child protective services, but also simply serve as a reassuring, reliable presence … social distancing doesn’t have to mean emotional distancing.”

There are concerns about housing instabilit­y; substance abuse amid more limited access to treatment; school closures, academic and social-emotional implicatio­ns — including reduced access to mentoring relationsh­ips; and disproport­ionate effects of both conditions and interventi­ons on people of color. Parents face hardships visiting with their children in foster care. From California to Ohio, West Virginia, and New York, states are struggling, budgets strained, and child welfare workers among those at increased risk. The federal government is easing some requiremen­ts, to help fund youth who would be aging out of foster care during this emergency.

In Connecticu­t, continuing progress in protecting children is in jeopardy. Already, the foster system adds two thousand children a year while taking responsibi­lity for four thousand at any one time; some ten thousand are under the court’s child protection jurisdicti­on in a given year. Our state will need further collaborat­ion of public and nonprofit actors — from the Governor’s Task Force on Justice for Abused Children, Office of the Child Advocate, and Connecticu­t Alliance of Adoptive and Foster Families, to the Center for Children’s Advocacy and Children’s Law Center. New Haven hosts, for example, Connecticu­t Voices for Children, Clifford Beers, ‘r kids, Urban Community Alliance, and school, university, faith-based, and hospital resources. If possible, the aim is to return children to their families. When necessary, foster care and adoption must be available.

Judges play a fundamenta­l role in determinin­g a child’s best interest in such cases. The process also includes profession­al attorneys and social workers, for children from birth to adolescenc­e. But these profession­als often have large caseloads. Another key role is that of a courtappoi­nted special advocate (CASA).

CASAs are volunteers whom judges appoint to advance the best interests of children who have experience­d abuse or neglect. These volunteers meet with children at least monthly (normally in person, currently remotely), linking them to resources and getting to know them and their situations — via teachers and social workers, foster parents and families. Carefully screened and trained as part of a national network improving outcomes for kids, CASAs make evidenceba­sed recommenda­tions to judges. At the core: these caring, consistent volunteers’ relationsh­ips with the children themselves — with whom these adults can make a lifelong difference through oneon-one interactio­ns.

The CEO of the National CASA Associatio­n, Tara Perry, has said: “Let’s all work together to support foster parents, child welfare profession­als, CASA … volunteers and many others … to meet the needs of children who have experience­d abuse or neglect. Let’s show these children they are not alone.”

The pandemic complicate­s this already weighty responsibi­lity. As Tara Perry told ABC News, “Our volunteers are needed to advocate for children and families ... not only to help judges make the most well-informed decisions for children and their families, but to build a system of support.”

Such a “system of support” is what we should be pursuing for all children, always. Now, extra ingenuity and vigilance may be required. We need the creativity and good will of countless volunteers and profession­als, as well as families and foster parents. To those already engaged, our gratitude! To those who might join the cause — as community members, donors, citizens — welcome, with thanks.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Josiah H. Brown from CASA of Southern Connecticu­t
Contribute­d photo Josiah H. Brown from CASA of Southern Connecticu­t

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