Fewer 蜜柚直播 children are being removed from their families, the backlog of uninvestigated child abuse reports is down dramatically and child welfare workers have manageable caseloads 鈥 all signs that the 蜜柚直播 Department of Child Safety is finally on the right track, its leaders say.
The state鈥檚 efforts are getting national attention. The April 2017 issue of Governing magazine heralded the recent improvements with the headline 鈥
鈥淲e have seen phenomenal improvement,鈥 said Katherine Guffey, DCS鈥檚 chief quality improvement officer.
But advocates for children say it鈥檚 not yet time to celebrate 鈥 they warn that recent progress to overhaul 蜜柚直播鈥檚 chronically strained child welfare system could easily be reversed. The very idea that the child welfare system has been 鈥渇ixed鈥 could spur complacency by policymakers whose funding decisions determine DCS鈥檚 ability to function, they fear.
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DCS鈥檚 reported progress hasn鈥檛 trickled down to children and foster families, said Kris Jacober, executive director of the 蜜柚直播 Association of Foster and Adoptive Parents.
Despite a recent decline, 蜜柚直播 still has more than 14,300 children in foster care. The numbers more than doubled between 2008 and 2016, even as most states saw their numbers decline.
Foster parents describe chaos in trying to get services for children in their care. They also report difficulty reaching their DCS caseworkers. Grandparents and other relatives caring for children DCS removed from their parents often get little to no support.
鈥淭here is still a lot of desperation and isolation,鈥 Jacober said. 鈥淚t has not been my experience that kids are doing any better in foster care than they ever have been.鈥
Child welfare agencies like DCS can do only so much when policymakers cut funding for services that can prevent a family crisis, or for in-home supports to help families before dysfunction becomes a safety issue. But when a child does come into DCS custody, the agency鈥檚 practices must not do more harm than good.
Searching for solutions that could work here, the 蜜柚直播 talked with more than 100 leaders in child-safety reform and traveled to six states to see what鈥檚 working there. Today, in the second part of a special report running the first three Sundays in March, the Star visits Alabama and Allegheny County, Pa., whose child welfare systems underwent transformative reforms that offer lessons for 蜜柚直播.
![蜜柚直播 Child Abuse](https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=200%2C139 200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=300%2C209 300w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=400%2C278 400w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=540%2C375 540w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=750%2C521 750w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=1200%2C834 1200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/0/0e/00ea5193-de9a-53df-bfd1-32a33fa14769/5a9f325959641.image.jpg?resize=1700%2C1182 1700w)
After the revelation in 2013 that 6,000 child abuse and neglect reports were closed without investigation, people gathered at a forum at Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix to discuss ideas on improving the Child Protective Services agency, whose caseworkers were saddled with impossible caseloads. A new Department of Child Safety was formed the following year.
DEFINITION OF 鈥淣EGLECT鈥
Recent reforms at the 蜜柚直播 Department of Child Safety have stemmed the deluge of children flooding into out-of-home care since the Legislature cut critical services to families during the recession.
The number of 蜜柚直播 kids in out-of-home care has dropped from a peak of almost 19,000 in early 2016 to 14,300 as of December.
But we鈥檙e still in a crisis, advocates say. In 2008, just over 9,100 蜜柚直播 children were in foster care. Then the state cut safety-net services like subsidies to help low-income families pay for child care. Without access to affordable care, some parents had to choose between losing their jobs or leaving their children home alone 鈥 and predictably, neglect reports started to soar.
Compounding the issue was a change in the definition of 鈥渘eglect鈥 in 蜜柚直播. In 2008, the Legislature said a child could be removed for neglect if there was an 鈥渦nreasonable鈥 risk of harm, as opposed to the previous threshold of 鈥渟ubstantial.鈥 That vague definition led to more removals, said Shalom Jacobs, deputy director of field operations for DCS.
The situation worsened as the recession prompted cuts to the Department of Economic Security, which at the time oversaw Child Protective Services. That led to hundreds of layoffs, exacerbating caseloads for the remaining workers who had little time to investigate allegations of abuse and neglect.
Saddling caseworkers with impossible workloads can unleash the worst-case scenario: rushed investigations leading to children unnecessarily removed from their families, and others left in dangerous situations.
Now DCS has newly retrained caseworkers and a goal to decrease unnecessary removals. Caseworkers are taught to focus on each family鈥檚 strengths and look for 鈥渟afety monitors,鈥 friends, family or neighbors who can help oversee and support DCS-involved parents. The agency also replaced its 1994-era data management system with a modernized version that lets caseworkers use mobile tablets in the field.
With funding from Casey Family Programs, DCS partnered with private agency Southwest Human Development to plow through a massive backlog of uninvestigated cases. That helped mitigate caseworkers鈥 impossible caseloads 鈥 plummeting from 145 investigations per caseworker in 2015, to 16 per caseworker as of September.
Some in the private sector say relationships between providers who serve families and the massive child welfare agency are improving, thanks to DCS鈥檚 willingness to listen to provider feedback.
鈥淭here are some really good things happening,鈥 said Suzanne Schunk, vice president for family support services at Southwest Human Development in Phoenix. 鈥淭hey are really open now to working with us as partners and actually using our expertise to improve their own work. That was never true before.鈥
But some of the progress at the top levels of DCS hasn鈥檛 yet reached front-line workers, she said.
鈥淲e still definitely have case managers who will say things like, 鈥業 answer my emails on Fridays. I鈥檓 not available other than that,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge system and it鈥檚 very entrenched.鈥
NUMBERS-FOCUSED
In 2015 DCS brought in Mike Faust, an expert in improving processes in government and industry who last worked in Gov. Doug Ducey鈥檚 office, to help the agency run more efficiently.
Faust, now DCS deputy director of support services, said the 鈥渓ean鈥 management system he helped to implement is based on standardizing processes, training staff in efficient workflow and creating measures to gauge staff adherence to the new way of doing things.
鈥淲e want to do all of that in a culture of safety, where employees know they can make objective decisions in the best interest of families, without fear of repercussions,鈥 he said.
But while DCS touts the reduced backlog of uninvestigated cases, two agency staffers and two child welfare attorneys told the Star there are pitfalls in the new business-oriented philosophy, including a heightened focus on numbers and demands from Phoenix that local child welfare offices close a certain number of cases each week. The DCS workers spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear they would lose their jobs if they spoke to the media.
DCS spokesman Darren DaRonco said the agency does not prohibit staff from talking to the media as long as they don鈥檛 divulge case information. But as in any industry, publicly criticizing one鈥檚 employer 鈥渃ould potentially have consequences,鈥 he said.
![Adam Mada](https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=200%2C173 200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=300%2C260 300w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=400%2C346 400w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=540%2C468 540w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=750%2C649 750w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/f7/bf7d69ee-9a4d-5bb3-a31b-cda87f978691/5a9f325b1d275.image.jpg?resize=887%2C768 1200w)
Adam Mada
Rushed or inadequate casework can precede tragedy, as in the case of . The 20-month-old died in March 2016 after DCS placed him with an aunt whose own baby had almost died after ingesting methadone. The agency closed the methadone investigation within a month and Adam鈥檚 caseworker didn鈥檛 know about the incident. When Adam died in his aunt鈥檚 trailer in Three Points, he had ruptured organs, broken bones, and cocaine and Percocet in his system.
RATE OF REMOVAL
蜜柚直播鈥檚 rate of removal 鈥 how often children are taken from their families 鈥 has dramatically outpaced national averages, said Richard Wexler, executive director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform in Alexandria, Va. Wexler calculates a rate-of-removal index each year using U.S. census data on population and poverty, combined with federal data on removals.
In 2015, 蜜柚直播 removed 7.9 children for every 1,000, more than double the national average of 3.6 removals per 1,000. In Pima County, the removal rate was 11.3 per 1,000.
A low rate of removal isn鈥檛 always good, since it could mean children are being left in unsafe homes. But a high rate is almost always bad, Wexler said.
蜜柚直播鈥檚 removal rate remains outside the norm even when factoring in the state鈥檚 high childhood poverty rate. In 2015, 蜜柚直播 removed nearly 29 children for every 1,000 impoverished children, compared with 18 removals per 1,000 poor children across the U.S. Again, Pima County鈥檚 statistics were even more extreme, with 40.8 removals per 1,000 poor children.
Poverty, which can often look like neglect, is the highest risk factor for abuse, Wexler said. Failing to factor it in can make wealthy states appear to have better child welfare practices than poor states.
Child welfare workers in 蜜柚直播 are sometimes left with little choice but to remove a child, because there鈥檚 a shortage of reliable alternatives to help families on the brink of crisis. In some parts of the state, waiting lists for services like in-home supports can be weeks long, although DCS has been improving access.
But 鈥減laying it safe鈥 by removing a child from home is not an acceptable child-welfare practice. Removal can cause lifelong damage, resulting both from the trauma of being torn from one鈥檚 family and the psychological damage, or outright abuse, that can be sustained in the foster care system.
The public dramatically underestimates the impact of an unnecessary removal, said James Tucker, who was co-counsel on behalf of the plaintiffs in the 1988 lawsuit that transformed Alabama鈥檚 failing child welfare system.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e pulling the wrong kids into care, that is as much of a mistake as not putting them in foster care鈥 if they are in danger, Tucker said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very likely you鈥檙e creating a new and different type of harm.鈥
In February, a former 蜜柚直播 foster youth against DCS and the Department of Economic Security alleging child welfare workers placed him in a Sierra Vista foster home where he was physically and sexually abused for 12 years. In December 2016, his former foster father, David Frodsham, was sentenced to 17 years in prison after pleading guilty to child sexual abuse and child pornography.
Frodsham 鈥渦tilized the State of 蜜柚直播 and the foster care system to funnel innocent, vulnerable children into his home, so he could run a pedophile ring,鈥 the claim said.
Even children placed in safe and loving foster homes suffer. In being pulled from their families, they lose everything familiar. They can be separated from siblings and other relatives and put into a new school district 鈥 sometimes a new city. They often bounce between foster homes and group homes and, over time, struggle with behavior and attachment issues resulting from the sustained lack of stability in their lives.
Foster children are to calm disruptive behaviors, but rarely are the underlying causes of that behavior addressed, experts and former foster youths told the Star. Instead, foster children too often get a diagnosis of 鈥渙ppositional defiance disorder鈥 or attention-deficit disorder, and are medicated to the point that they鈥檙e catatonic, said Joseph Aparicio, an alumnus of California鈥檚 foster care system who mentors foster youths in 蜜柚直播.
蜜柚直播 artist and former foster youth Alexei Ruiz, 23, was on psychotropic medications throughout her childhood.
Ruiz entered the foster care system at 18 months old, remembers being sexually abused by a foster parent and was adopted at age 6 鈥 but problematic behaviors landed Ruiz in a group home at age 11.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard knowing as a child that you鈥檙e kind of a lost cause,鈥 Ruiz said. 鈥淭he people who said they wanted you didn鈥檛 want you, the system doesn鈥檛 want you, you鈥檝e got no friends and you鈥檙e just passed around.鈥
A 2015 lawsuit against DCS and the 蜜柚直播 Health Care Cost Containment System, the state鈥檚 Medicaid agency, in 蜜柚直播. Among the allegations from the advocacy groups filing suit: DCS鈥檚 鈥渨idespread failure to engage in basic child welfare practices aimed at maintaining family relationships,鈥 such as placing siblings together, trial reunifications with parents and providing adequate visitation between children and biological families.
The suit, which was granted class-action status in September, also alleges severe shortages in mental and behavioral health care for children, as well as a sustained shortage of foster homes, resulting in more children placed far from their families and often in group homes or emergency shelters.
Research indicates that children left with their own troubled families fare better than those brought into the foster care system. A 2007 study found children whose families were investigated for abuse and neglect but remained home were less likely to become teenage parents or juvenile delinquents than similarly abused children who were removed from home. Those left at home were also more likely to have jobs as young adults, compared with children of similar backgrounds who were put in foster care.
The study by Massachusetts Institute of Technology鈥檚 Joseph Doyle tracked 15,000 children from 1990 to 2002 whose child abuse investigations could have gone either way: with a decision to remove the child or leave them at home.
LESSONS FROM ALABAMA
Alabama鈥檚 success in overhauling its dysfunctional child welfare system could be a model for 蜜柚直播, said Wexler of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform.
Like in 蜜柚直播, more than one-quarter of Alabama鈥檚 children live in poverty. The state is ethnically diverse and has broad swaths of isolated, rural communities punctuated by a few urban centers like Huntsville, Birmingham and the state capital, Montgomery.
In the late 1980s, the average child welfare worker鈥檚 caseload was 65 and the backlog of uninvestigated cases topped 1,000. Children spent years in state custody or languished in private residential treatment facilities with no case plan for reuniting with their families or finding a new, permanent home.
In 1988, children鈥檚 rights groups, led by the D.C.-based Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, sued Alabama over its failed child welfare system, which at the time was among the worst in the nation, Wexler said. The lawsuit tackled every part of the state鈥檚 system, from how children enter foster care to how they鈥檙e treated once they鈥檙e inside, and the state鈥檚 failure to give parents a real opportunity to get their children back.
Alabama鈥檚 Department of Human Resources, which oversees the child welfare agency, decided to settle the lawsuit after realizing the state would probably not prevail in a trial, said Paul Vincent, who was the brand-new director of Alabama鈥檚 child welfare division when the suit was filed. He became a devoted proponent of reform, partnering with the advocates who sued the agency he ran.
The settlement laid out an ambitious plan to transform Alabama鈥檚 child welfare system. Reform started with six counties that contained 15 percent of the state鈥檚 foster care population.
鈥淥ne of the keys to success of the reform was that we weren鈥檛 trying to fix 67 counties concurrently,鈥 said Vincent, now a national child welfare practice consultant whose organization, the Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group, partners with states to help improve their child welfare systems. 鈥淲e realized we鈥檇 never have resources to push reform deep if we did it all at one time. 鈥 But once we got a county through the process, the change lasted.鈥
Today, Alabama鈥檚 rate of removal 鈥 how often children are removed from their families relative to the state鈥檚 child population 鈥 is less than half of 蜜柚直播鈥檚. And Alabama鈥檚 low repeat-maltreatment rate 鈥 children who are abused again after a child welfare investigation 鈥 indicates that disparity isn鈥檛 because Alabama is failing to take children into custody who are in real danger, Wexler said.
Rather, Alabama鈥檚 caseworkers are trained to support family preservation by partnering with parents, rather than seeing them as the problem. And importantly, the state created a continuum of home- and community-based services for families that caseworkers can access quickly.
Instead of a collaborative approach, 蜜柚直播 parents sense the adversarial nature of DCS鈥檚 approach, said Steve Rubin, who was Pima County Juvenile Court administrator until May 2014.
Many parents come into dependency court and the first thing they say is, 鈥榃hat am I being charged with?鈥 As opposed to 鈥榃hat services are you going to provide to my family and my kids so we can get back together?鈥欌 Rubin said.
And 蜜柚直播鈥檚 high removal rate isn鈥檛 keeping children safer, data show: In 2015, the state鈥檚 was 3.1 per 100,000 children, more than double Alabama鈥檚 rate of 1.2 per 100,000.
![Allegheny County's Children, Youth and Families](https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=200%2C133 200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=300%2C200 300w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=400%2C267 400w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=540%2C360 540w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=750%2C501 750w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=1200%2C801 1200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/b/0a/b0a2af65-5312-5ce7-a9ec-658023b5ba1b/5a9f325a1b73f.image.jpg?resize=1700%2C1135 1700w)
Director Marc Cherna鈥檚 emphasis on prevention, individualized services and caseworker training has made the Allegheny County (Pa.) Department of Human Services a model.
A reset in Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh nonprofit director Walter Smith watched with growing dread as his largest funder took an onslaught of criticism from parents one day in 1997.
Smith was director of Family Resources, which contracted with the Allegheny County, Pa., Department of Human Services to help families involved with the child welfare division.
Unlike 蜜柚直播, child welfare agencies in Pennsylvania are run at the county level and overseen by the state.
The contentious meeting between a dozen frustrated parents and the new head of child welfare, Marc Cherna, had been Smith鈥檚 idea.
鈥淭hese parents lambasted him. They were cussing up and down, telling him stories about child welfare and what it had done to them,鈥 said Smith, now deputy director of the department鈥檚 child welfare office. 鈥淚 was sitting there thinking, 鈥楳y God, I think I just lost my funding.鈥欌
But Cherna looked at Smith and said, 鈥溾楾hat was good. Let鈥檚 do that again,鈥欌 Smith recalled. 鈥淚 said, 鈥極K, now we have someone who isn鈥檛 just talking the talk, but who is sincerely interested in how you design a system based on the people we鈥檙e serving, and not just on the professionals that work in it.鈥欌
Government agencies tend to get structured in ways that are most convenient for those working in the systems 鈥 not necessarily the people they serve. That鈥檚 evidenced even in the location of services, usually in a downtown administrative office, rather than in high-risk communities, Smith said.
Cherna set out to change that.
Now director of Allegheny County鈥檚 Department of Human Services, he has led the department with a focus on working with each community and soliciting feedback from those who interact with child welfare. He tackled issues head-on, like systemic bias in child welfare investigations, that resulted in a disproportionate number of minority families being split apart.
Child welfare doesn鈥檛 start and stop with the child welfare agency, said Susan Dreyfus, president and CEO of the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities, a national network of social service groups that includes Child & Family Resources in 蜜柚直播.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been making the mistake as a nation in thinking a state child welfare agency is the beginning, middle and end of a child welfare system,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e keep thinking it鈥檚 about what a state agency does alone. That鈥檚 why Marc Cherna is such a model. Yeah, he鈥檚 doing a lot within his agency, but he鈥檚 doing a lot to effect change outside the agency.鈥
Under Cherna鈥檚 tenure, the child welfare office used many of the same strategies that succeeded in Alabama, with guidance from Paul Vincent鈥檚 Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group. That includes shifting funding to prevention (31 percent of the child welfare agency鈥檚 $186 million budget is for prevention and 19 percent for placements); ensuring individualized services are accessible; training caseworkers to collaborate with families to identify their strengths; and involving families in their case plans through regular meetings.
Vincent鈥檚 model is flexible, recognizing that every state and county鈥檚 child welfare needs are different, and 蜜柚直播 could learn a lot from it, Smith said.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e not insisting you follow exactly as he鈥檚 designed it. Every system is so different, you can鈥檛 take one (model) and plug into another,鈥 he said.
The population of children in foster care in Allegheny County dropped from more than 3,000 in 1996 to 1,400 in May 2017. The number of children in congregate care has dropped from just over 350 in 1997, to 120 last year. And the majority of children placed in foster homes are now in licensed 鈥渒inship鈥 placements, being cared for by relatives who get financial support from the child welfare agency.
Showing politicians the dramatic financial savings that come from better child welfare practice can help support reform efforts: Group home placements in Allegheny County cost an average of $108,000 per year and foster care costs an average of $20,000 per year. But in-home support services for a family average just $3,325, Allegheny County officials said.
蜜柚直播鈥檚 child welfare agency needs a more structured and consistent way to solicit feedback and criticism from stakeholders, including foster families, said Jacober of the 蜜柚直播 Association for Foster and Adoptive Parents. Here, responsive leadership happens sporadically 鈥 usually after a public-relations crisis.
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The Legislature cut critical services to families during the recession. The result was a deluge of children flooding into out-of-home care. Above, Rep. Kate Brophy McGee, R-Phoenix, discussed the crisis with Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery.
In 2013, when news broke that Child Protective Services hadn鈥檛 investigated 6,000 reports of abuse and neglect, agency leaders held town halls, removed CPS from the oversight of the massive Department of Economic Security and created a new agency, the Department of Child Safety.
But since then, as tends to happen once the immediate crisis subsides, agency leaders have been far less responsive to foster families, Jacober said.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to only do that when there鈥檚 a huge problem,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t seems to me it should be part of ongoing activity of the department to listen and invite the community to help solve the problems.鈥
STAYING THE COURSE
Alabama and Allegheny County, Pa., have built child welfare systems rooted in high-quality, thoughtful casework, not reactive systems driven by the latest scandal.
Too often, a tragedy like a child fatality results in a flood of children coming into the system as caseworkers err on the side of removing a child instead of finding ways to keep them safely with their family. Former Pima County Juvenile Court Presiding Judge Karen Adam saw it again and again during nearly three decades in the field.
鈥淚t cycles whenever there鈥檚 a new director. It cycles whenever local management changes. It cycles when there鈥檚 a crisis. It cycles when a baby dies,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll your progressive efforts stop because there鈥檚 this new emphasis on, 鈥楴ow we need to be super careful because this one situation happened.鈥欌
![Greg McKay](https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=200%2C125 200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=300%2C188 300w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=400%2C250 400w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=540%2C338 540w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=750%2C469 750w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=1200%2C750 1200w, https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tucson.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/d/fb/dfb03e50-257e-544a-a6b1-8919119f3f65/5a9f3259a6209.image.jpg?resize=1700%2C1063 1700w)
The backlog of uninvestigated abuse reports in 蜜柚直播 has been sharply cut. 鈥淲e have an intentional plan. It is working,鈥 says Greg McKay, who took over DCS in 2015.
Greg McKay, director of the 蜜柚直播 Department of Child Safety, said he鈥檚 keenly aware of the pitfalls of letting scandal or tragedy drive child welfare decisions. As a Phoenix police detective, he was lead investigator in the 2011 homicide of 10-year-old Ame Deal, who suffocated after her cousin locked her in a box as punishment.
鈥淚 was a cop for 20-plus years,鈥 said McKay, who took over DCS in 2015. 鈥淚 know emotion. I know what it鈥檚 like to stand there over the carnage. But I also know how devastating it is for leaders to let emotions dictate the direction of a system.鈥
Now, at DCS, 鈥渨e identify, instead, the goals and objectives we鈥檙e trying to meet. We make our strategy very small and targeted,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have an intentional plan. It is working. We鈥檙e staying true to it.鈥
DCS has shared its progress and strategies with child welfare leaders from Oklahoma, Utah, Vermont and other states. And in January the Casey Family Programs, a Seattle-based nonprofit focused on reducing the need for foster care, honored McKay for his leadership in turning around 蜜柚直播鈥檚 child welfare system.
鈥淲e鈥檙e leading the way, and people don鈥檛 know it yet,鈥 McKay said. 鈥淭his is the secret sauce to fixing it. It requires somebody to stave off the emotion and absorb those distractions, absorb the vitriol, which is what I do best.鈥
Sustaining the progress will require keeping child welfare top of mind for policymakers who set the agency鈥檚 funding, McKay said.
Legislators care about protecting 蜜柚直播鈥檚 children, he said, but as new issues pop up, 鈥渋t becomes less of a priority, and therefore energy goes elsewhere.鈥
And if legislators see DCS鈥檚 progress, McKay said, 鈥淎re they going to start sweeping our funds? That鈥檚 always a concern.鈥