The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

For foster parents of disabled children, money stays tight

- By MARIAH BROWN

Like most parents trying to make ends meet, Vivian Shine-King needs to get creative sometimes. When she has to take her four children to doctor’s appointmen­ts, for instance, she’ll make sure multiple kids are booked at the same clinic around the same time, helping her to save on gas and parking.

But Shine-King isn’t your average parent. She is foster mother to four disabled children and relies on government money to make sure they get what they need, including — crucially — health care.

“Couple of times I’ve had to park the car away and take the children in a stroller,” Shine-King said, because she didn’t have enough money for a $15 parking garage. “If you gave me

50 cents more, it’s a piece of change that matters.”

Shine-King, 61, got a little respite starting in July when Philadelph­ia raised its foster care per-diem rates, a daily reimbursem­ent of expenses per child to ease financial burdens, something seen as especially crucial for disabled children because the high cost of caring for them makes it less likely they’ll ever be adopted.

Financial support for foster parents in general has lagged nationwide and is pervasive among child welfare agencies; Philadelph­ia is not alone in re-examining reimbursem­ent rates. But even with the increases, parents and others say, it often isn’t enough.

Some states have a set statewide foster care reimbursem­ent, while a few determine it county by county, with the money coming from a combinatio­n of federal and state coffers. Meanwhile, federal funding for child welfare agencies dropped 16 percent from 2004 to 2014, according to a 2017 policy report by the nonprofit research organizati­on Child Trends.

Federal dollars fund more than half the child welfare spending in Missouri, which raised foster care reimbursem­ents in recent years, although Gov. Eric Greitens signed a budget in June that cut rates by 1.5 percent. Greitens later said that it was a mistake and that there was enough money in savings elsewhere to stop those cuts from happening, but not officially in the budget.

Current rates do not do a good job covering costs, according to Lori Ross, who founded Foster Adopt Connect, a Missouri support organizati­on for foster parents.

“It is about a third of what is actually spent out of pocket on taking care of a child,” Ross said. The rate “should be adequate to cover the costs of care for those kids,” she said.

Oklahoma’s Department of Human Services had an $80 million reduction in funding for the past two years, putting pressure on foster care. The Department in July announced a reduction to payments for foster and adoptive families by 5 percent, or $1 a day.

“Without a shadow of a doubt, a dollar-a-day cut goes a long way,” said John DeGarmo, who has trained foster parents in Oklahoma.

In Philadelph­ia, Shine-King will see an increase in the reimbursem­ent pay for disabled children 13 years and younger from $44 to $51 per day and an annual increase of $2 for five years.

“I am always begging and pleading, my kids need this, they need that,” Shine-King said.

The old rates were “barely enough for three meals a day,” said Cynthia Figueroa, Philadelph­ia human services commission­er.

Of the nearly 6,000 children in Philadelph­ia’s foster care system, an estimated 900 have disabiliti­es. The extra costs of their care make adoption less likely for children who will not be able to reunite with their biological families, said Heather Keafer, a city human services spokeswoma­n.

Finding permanent homes for children with physical, behavioral and mental disabiliti­es is crucial to their developmen­t, advocates say. Constant moving can disrupt their health conditions.

Phyllis Stevens, executive director of Together as Adoptive Parents, a foster family support organizati­on based in Philadelph­ia, said 70 percent of foster parents adopt the child in their care and are more likely to do so with better financial aid.

Data on pay for foster care from Child Trends show Philadelph­ia had lagged further behind other states and counties after not raising its rates in 10 years. The city put forward $9 million with federal, state and county dollars to raise the rate, hoping foster parents would adopt.

Shine-King has been a single foster parent, mainly for disabled children, for 21 years.

She had intended to get a playmate for her son when she fostered her first child, with a mental disability. Later, she ended up adopting three children and fostering several at a time with mental, physical and behavioral disabiliti­es over the years.

“What works you hard is when you need the outside help,” Shine-King said when she reflected about her journey. But, she said, fostering children with significan­t medical needs is her gift.

Medical and other equipment is evident throughout the house. In one corner of the living room alone are stacked diapers, blue pads and feeding tubes. By the door sits a wheelchair; nearby, a portable toilet.

She calls the children’s health insurance company to offset the costs when she

restocks the items from her budget, and they don’t always cover all expenses.

Right now, her children include adopted son Jared, 20, who has the joint disorder Beals syndrome; adopted daughter Kathleen, 12, who has a mental disability; foster daughter Heavenly, 5, who has cerebral palsy; and foster son Alexander, 2, whom she describes as having hidden disabiliti­es.

Even though she must juggle her responsibi­lities, she acted with an air of normalcy and said she is not focused on money shortages.

“You’re never going to look at the dollar sign and say they give you enough,” she said. “I just make it work.”

 ?? JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this July 28, 2017, photo, Kathleen, 12, a disabled adopted daughter of Vivian Shine-King, poses for a portrait at her home in Philadelph­ia. For foster parents of disabled children, money is getting tighter. The reimbursem­ents are seen as crucial...
JACQUELINE LARMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this July 28, 2017, photo, Kathleen, 12, a disabled adopted daughter of Vivian Shine-King, poses for a portrait at her home in Philadelph­ia. For foster parents of disabled children, money is getting tighter. The reimbursem­ents are seen as crucial...

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