New York Post

Foster-care unit

DOE forming new office for children

- By CAYLA BAMBERGER

The city Department of Education will finally make good on a long-delayed promise to increase support for its thousands of students in foster care, The Post has learned.

The department is set to introduce by next school year a firstof-its-kind, central office supporting such students, after an outcry from families, advocates and some local politician­s.

“We are proud to build a team that is wholly devoted to serving our students in foster care,” said Suzan Sumer, a spokeswoma­n for the DOE.

Advocates said the specialize­d division could help improve abysmal outcomes for these kids, who disproport­ionately drop out of school.

Just 43% of New York City students in foster care graduated on time in 2021, compared with 81% of their peers out of the system.

The commitment to fully staffing the office comes after more than 30 advocacy groups sent a letter to Mayor Adams and Schools Chancellor David Banks on Friday urging them to make good on a proposal from the prior administra­tion.

Slow process

“Last fall, the city announced a first-ever DOE team devoted to meeting the unique needs of students in foster care. However, the DOE delayed posting these positions,” read the letter, co-signed by Advocates for Children and other child welfare and education groups.

“While we understand that several positions are now moving forward, the DOE has still not committed publicly to hiring the full team that it promised to serve students in foster care,” it said.

The foster population has also been a top priority for the City Council Education Committee, which held a hearing on supporting the children in the spring.

“We have already begun the hiring process for four of these important positions and are excited to share that three offers have already been extended,” said Sumer of the DOE.

The team plans to fill all nine newly created positions this coming school year, she said.

At least six of those positions will solely serve students in foster care, according to the DOE, while another two posts will support those students as well as kids in temporary housing.

Transit mandate

Still, the plan falls short of the initial proposal during former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s tenure, which called for a full team of 11 staffers — seven hires focused on students in foster care, and four on students in foster care or temporary housing.

Advocates, in their letter Friday, also called on the DOE to guarantee foster care students receive bus transporta­tion — as required by federal law — so they don’t have to change schools each time they are placed in a new home.

Close to one in five students switched schools when entering foster care — and again with each change in foster care placement, the advocates wrote, citing data from the 2019-2020 year.

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