Need strategies to involve birth families in your state CFSR? New tools can help.
learn more>Two new resources related to dads as permanency resources: What about the Dads? Child Welfare Agencies’ Efforts to Identify, Locate, and Involve Nonresident Fathers (PDF) and Fatherhood.gov, the new federal clearinghouse with sections for researchers and policymakers.
Questions about kinship care among social workers, policymakers, state legislators, or community partners? See Is Kinship Care Good for Kids? (PDF)
“Kayla is like a complicated plant. She has roots with us— her adoptive family—and roots with her birth family. To be healthy as an adult, the more support she has in place, the better.”
Donna Coraluzzo, foster parent
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Being in foster care can sever relationships between youth and people important to them, including family and caring adults. Rather than assume that youth who have languished in foster care do not have “family,” child welfare systems across the country are using family search practices. The goal: to identify family members and engage them in case planning with the youth, as well as explore the possibility of establishing meaningful and lasting relationships.
Families are larger and more diverse than we often believe, according to the Finding Permanency for Youth Resource Handbook. Experts estimate that children have between 100 to 300 relatives at one time! Family tracing work can help to locate people who care about the youth but have either lost contact or were never aware that the young family member was in foster care.
Family searches are being conducted using a variety of approaches:
Many child welfare agencies use a combination of these approaches. Alameda County, California, for example, uses Internet technology and case mining to locate relatives and find permanent families for youth in group home care.
Training
To support the successful implementation of family searches, states, tribes, and counties are providing staff training to develop and strengthen family-search skills and work with youth who are reestablishing family relationships. In a recent survey, the Casey Center for Effective Child Welfare Practice at Casey Family Services found that at least 10 states are training staff on family search and strategies for tapping the natural networks of youth in care.
Practice Guidelines and Policies
There is a recognition that expanded family search strategies must go hand in hand with good casework practice. As child welfare agencies have embraced family search, strategies and guidelines are emerging to ensure family searches are supported by good casework practice.
Efforts do not focus solely on finding family members. Preparing youth for family search activities is vital. Practice also addresses appropriately approaching youth with family search information, contacting families to gauge interest in reconnecting with youth, assessing the benefits of family reconnections, and working with youth and family to reconnect in meaningful ways.
Toward this end, systems are revising practice guidelines and policies regarding family search activities. States in which this work is taking place:
Program Development
Rhode Island’s Real Connections focuses on youth in foster care who are ages 14 to 24 and at risk of “aging out” of state care without positive, consistent adults in their lives. Staff support youth and their care providers in identifying adults from their existing network who could become positive, lifelong supports.
Ties with birth families—however complicated—are important to older youth in care, two different studies say.
Produced by the Annie E. Casey Foundation/Casey Family Services, Connections Count is an electronic newsletter focusing on best practices, tools, research, and data on youth permanence in child welfare.
read more>Casey Family Services
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New Haven, CT 06510
Tel: 203.401.6900
Fax: 203.401.6901