Houston Chronicle

Abused Texas foster kids need a lifeline

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We thought we’d heard it all, but Texas finds new and appalling ways to fail children in foster care.

U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack last week brought harrowing details to light in a 427-page contempt order that would shake anyone’s faith in humanity. Jack offered dozens of examples of severely flawed state investigat­ions that put foster children in danger, particular­ly those who require medication for mental illnesses. Few were as disturbing as “Child C,” a teenage girl who suffered abuse at a group home in Austin that was so extensive it led to 12 state investigat­ions in one year.

Child C first entered the foster care system as a traumatize­d toddler, removed from the care of her biological mother at age 3 due to physical and mental abuse. She has a range of behavioral and developmen­tal disorders, and is given 12 pills to take every day. When Child C was placed at C3 Christian Academy in Austin in 2021 at age 14, she performed academical­ly at the level of a preschoole­r, and had an IQ score of 55.

In May 2021 a state investigat­or found “a prepondera­nce of evidence” that a staff member used a Taser on Child C on her arm while she was in bed. In July 2021, Child C ran away from the group home, was returned by a law enforcemen­t officer, then attempted to strangle herself.

In April 2022, Child C’s caseworker reported she was admitted to the hospital with her jaw broken in two places. An administra­tor at the group home told investigat­ors a staff member had punched the child in the face multiple times and she went to bed untreated. It wasn’t until the following day when an administra­tor observed Child C bloodied and bruised that they took her to the hospital.

As the presiding judge in a decadeold class-action lawsuit designed to force an overhaul of the foster care system, Jack has mandated a laundry list of reforms, including requiring the state to complete high-priority investigat­ions within 30 days, and that investigat­ors must make face-toface contact with child victims. Each of the investigat­ions involving Child C took months, and sometimes more than a year to complete, and several did not even interview her directly.

Jack, whom the Dallas Morning News named Texan of the Year for pushing the state to improve its foster care system, has been extraordin­arily patient with the state. She has practicall­y begged Gov. Greg Abbott, Health and Human Services and the Department of Family and Protective Services to abide by the reforms she’s ordered, and given them every chance to avoid a fate that nobody wants: a federal takeover of the entire system.

Yet the continued failures detailed in her order prompted Jack to hold HHS in contempt, issuing fines of $100,000 a day until the agency complies with her mandates. A federal appeals court temporaril­y blocked the fine while the state appeals Jack’s ruling. A compliance hearing is scheduled for June 26.

While Jack has repeatedly said she’d prefer not to take the Draconian step of a federal receiversh­ip, the state’s continued recalcitra­nce may force her hand. While the plaintiffs’ attorneys in the class-action suit have pushed for it, even they acknowledg­e ceding control of a state agency to a federal monitor would be a dramatic setback.

“Nothing is going to change quickly or substantia­lly until state leadership decides that this is a priority,” Paul Yetter, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys, told the editorial board. “Even with a receiversh­ip, if you don’t have the state executives behind it supporting reform and not resisting, it’s going to go very slowly.”

Washington, D.C., is the only other jurisdicti­on to have a federal receiver take over its foster care system, from 1995 through 2001. When their receiver was terminated, many advocates complained that the system was no better off than it was before. In fact, there were still gut-wrenching incidents under the receiversh­ip, such as a 1-year-old child who was beaten to death by a family friend after a judge removed her from foster care.

We’d much prefer that Abbott take responsibi­lity for institutin­g the reforms mandated by Jack. Instead, he seems content to pay high-priced attorneys up to $6 million to defend the state at every turn rather than concede any failures.

Resources are not the issue. The Legislatur­e has done its part, providing $400 million of the state budget surplus last session to increase payments to foster care providers. A policy reform blueprint is also right at Abbott’s fingertips. An expert panel the governor convened came up with a list of short- and long-term recommenda­tions, such as emergency funding to place more kids with grandparen­ts, aunts and uncles and kinship providers and strengthen­ing mental health services for all children in foster care.

Tough talk is not in short supply either. In January 2021, Abbott ordered HHS and DFPS to quickly comply with Jack’s orders five days after she found them in contempt. His directive was unequivoca­l and even child welfare advocates concede, for a time, it led to a complete change in attitude by the agencies overseeing our foster care system. Yet far too many children are still caught in a revolving door from psychiatri­c care to unregulate­d, poorly supervised group homes because the state refuses to find proper placements for them.

What’s lacking is executive leadership and the necessary commitment that Abbott gives to more politicall­y advantageo­us issues. Instead of staging photo ops on the border, he should focus his attention on foster children.

The state is on the road to a receiversh­ip unless he can prove he is willing to reform rather than resist an overhaul of the foster care system.

State is on the road to a federal takeover without bold reforms

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack, shown in 2008, continues to say Texas’ foster care system is broken. Last week, she issued a 427-page contempt order against the state.
Associated Press file photo U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack, shown in 2008, continues to say Texas’ foster care system is broken. Last week, she issued a 427-page contempt order against the state.

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