The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Report: DCF makes progress, but still not in compliance

- By Kathleen Megan CTMIRROR.ORG

The latest report from the federal monitor overseeing the state Department of Children and Families shows that the agency is not complying with five of 10 key measures that are part of a court supervised plan to improve services for children in its care.

Despite this, a lawyer for the plaintiffs expressed optimism that the 30yearold case will be closed in the next few years because the agency has been making progress, particular­ly in its hiring and caseload goals, even though it did not reach target levels during the period covered by

the report.

“I think there is a real opportunit­y for both Gov. Lamont and [DCF] Commission­er [Vannessa] Dorantes to really bring this home, if there’s a real heightened and constant focus on the known problem areas that remain,” said Ira Lustbader, counsel for the plaintiffs and litigation director for Children’s Rights in New York City.

Martha Stone, one of the original lawyers who filed the case known as “Juan F.” against DCF in 1989, said, the “good part is they have a plan to bring caseloads down, and they’ve stuck to the plan. I think that’s a real positive … and caseloads will be coming down to where they should be.”

The report found that DCF is still failing to provide enough help to children and families in a number of areas, including mental health and substance abuse services, and is not sufficient­ly engaging older children in their own case plans. Only 56.6% of clients received the mental health, behavioral and substance abuse services they needed during the first quarter of this year, the report said, while not a single youth 12 or older was involved in his or her own case planning process.

Stone said it’s important for case planning sessions to be scheduled after school, so that children do not have to miss school to attend.

The report also cites concerns about the quality of child abuse and neglect investigat­ions and with case worker visits for children who remain in their family’s home under agency supervisio­n.

Yet both Stone, who is the executive director of the Center for Children’s Advocacy, and Lustbader expressed optimism about the new leadership at DCF.

The report covered a period from Oct. 1, 2018 through March 30, 2019, straddling the end of Gov. Malloy’s tenure, with Joette Katz as DCF commission­er, and the first quarter of Vannessa Dorantes’ term as commission­er under Gov. Ned Lamont. Stone said there is “more openness and collaborat­ion under this Administra­tion … I want to be positive about the collaborat­ion and transparen­cy.”

Lustbader said he thinks Dorantes “has the potential to finally successful­ly comply and exit this thing and end it during her term if she steers the agency down the path that’s been laid out.”

He said there are “huge reforms” that the prior administra­tion put in place that have “held and made a really big difference.” Those, he said, include efforts to keep children at home safely and to use relative care, thereby reducing the use of institutio­ns and facilities.

“Those are huge gains and improvemen­ts that the prior Administra­tion has made that [Dorantes] is totally committed to carrying forward,” Lustbader said. “Those things put her in a strong place to move ahead and really tackle the five remaining areas during her tenure.”

The Juan F. class action lawsuit charged that the state was failing to provide necessary services for abused and neglected children and youth. A consent decree calling for reforms was signed in 1991 and the state’s child welfare agency has been under a federal court monitor’s supervisio­n since 1992.

Ray Mancuso is the current courtappoi­nted monitor, and submitted the report earlier this month.

When asked to comment on the monitor’s report, a DCF spokesman referred the CT Mirror to Dorantes’ statement at the end of the document. In that statement, Dorantes says that, as a 26year veteran of the department, she has essentiall­y “grown up” with the decree.

“With that fact in mind, it is important to look critically at those specific areas where inconsiste­nt practice has been evidenced while simultaneo­usly scaling up best practice examples seen around the state….” Dorantes wrote. “The progress of the Juan F. decree relies squarely in practice improvemen­t and consistenc­y related to child outcomes. We continue to work with the monitor along with key stakeholde­rs to ‘stay the course’ on areas achieved to demonstrat­e sustainabi­lity to our plaintiffs.”

She also said the agency continues to “experience success in recruiting and retaining a qualified workforce throughout the organizati­on.”

The report says the department currently has 1,119 social workers, but will need an additional 56 social workers and 15 social work supervisor­s in order to get to the target caseload.

Lustbader said, however, that he has heard that the target number was reached this month and that he hopes the department can sustain the lower caseload numbers. In addition, Lustbader said, new investment­s have been made in communityb­ased mental health, substance abuse and domestic violences services.

“Now that those are funded, if those are rigorously rolled out and implemente­d, we would expect to see real improvemen­ts,” Lustbader said, so that “gaps and wait lists” for key services in parts of the state can be addressed.

In her comment at the end of the report, Dorantes said that with the recent approval of the state’s biennium budget, “we will be implementi­ng more communityb­ased prevention services that are designed to meet the needs of families and decrease the need for DCF involvemen­t. The success of the programs will allow us to maintain caseloads within the establishe­d standards.”

Martha Stone, one of the original lawyers who filed the case known as “Juan F “(The) good part is they have a plan to bring caseloads down, and they’ve stuck to the plan. I think that’s a real positive … and caseloads will be coming down to where they should be.”

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Vannessa Dorantes
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Vannessa Dorantes

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