Albuquerque Journal

New state office will offer solutions beyond foster care

Current system punished families for poverty and neglect

- BY LORILYNN VIOLANTA DIRECTOR OF ADVANCEMEN­T, NMCAN; ALBUQUERQU­E RESIDENT AND ARIKA SANCHEZ DIRECTOR OF POLICY AND ADVOCACY, NMCAN; RIO RANCHO RESIDENT NMCAN is an Albuquerqu­e-based nonprofit focused on young people impacted by foster care.

We applaud the governor for signing the Family Representa­tion and Advocacy Act, which establishe­s the Office of Family Representa­tion and Advocacy (OFRA), an independen­t office to provide quality legal representa­tion to children and families in cases involving allegation­s of abuse and neglect. Managing, standardiz­ing and monitoring performanc­e and outcomes is key to improving the effectiven­ess of legal representa­tion for families.

Legislatio­n that created OFRA comes from three years of work by the Family

Representa­tion Commission, a group of legislator­s, child welfare stakeholde­rs and advocates. It received near unanimous bipartisan support at the legislativ­e session.

Following best practices, the office will house interdisci­plinary teams of attorneys, social workers and parent mentors to honor families’ rights, strengthen parents’ ability to care for their children, and avoid family separation when possible. Teams will address the conditions that bring families into the foster care system, which are typically related to poverty — 73% of cases in New Mexico are due to neglect. This is important because family separation is traumatic for children and should not be the solution for struggling with housing stability, childcare, food insecurity and physical/ mental health.

Harmful narratives aim to convince us all child abuse and neglect cases are horrific incidences perpetrate­d by disgracefu­l parents and family reunificat­ion is bad. These narratives prompt laws to punish the worst individual­s but are ineffectiv­e at addressing the root causes of abuse and neglect and supporting families.

Child abuse and neglect comes from a complex and painful history, and it should never happen. However, sensationa­lized narratives prevent productive public discourse, keeping us focused on punishing parents and moving children into a broken system. OFRA and quality legal representa­tion are solid first steps on the long road to achieving real community change — a change that creates communityc­entered approaches that address poverty and truly support families.

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