Calhoun Times

Senate panel to tackle Georgia foster care

There have been reports questionin­g the state system’s ability to safeguard Georgia children.

- By T.A. DeFeo

A Georgia Senate study committee will explore possible solutions to improve the state’s maligned foster care system.

The move follows reports of widespread, systemic breakdowns within Georgia’s foster care system and questions about the agency’s ability to ensure the safety of the children it is tasked with protecting.

The state Senate approved the Senate Study Committee on Foster Care and Adoption with Senate Resolution 282 during this year’s legislativ­e session. The eight-member committee, chaired by state Sen. Kay Kirkpatric­k, RMarietta, will make recommenda­tions for lawmakers to consider when the legislatur­e reconvenes in January.

“The study committee will discuss the lack of funding, safety and ways to implement muchneeded reform,” state

Sen. Kim Jackson, D-Stone Mountain, said in a statement. “The state has an obligation to ensure that all children in foster care have access to quality care and that all families interested in adopting have the resources they need to make a difference in the lives of children.”

In February, U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff launched an inquiry into reports that Georgia officials have failed the children in their care. Ossoff, D-Georgia, and U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tennessee, sent a letter to Candice Broce, commission­er of the Department of Human Services and director of the Georgia Division of

Family and Children Services, demanding informatio­n about the agency’s ability to protect children.

The lawmakers, citing media reports and an Office of the Child Advocate investigat­ion, revealed that caseworker­s did not properly respond to cases of child abuse and placement services for human traffickin­g, sexual abuse and physical abuse victims were often “inadequate” or “inappropri­ate.” The lawmakers also revealed that the state spent $28 million last year to house children in hotels, sometimes for months.

The study committee will announce its meeting dates and locations later. Roughly 11,000 Georgia children are in foster care on any given day.

A spokespers­on for Ossoff did not respond to a request for more informatio­n about the status of the inquiry.

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Kay Kirkpatric­k

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