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(published in Dallas Morning News,
April 12, 2004)
Kurt
Senske: Let's do more for our foster children
12:02 AM CDT on Monday, April 12, 2004
By KURT SENSKE
The first time most parents hold their newborn infant, they make a
vow to provide the best possible life for their child.
But for the more than 26,000 children in Texas' child welfare system,
those vows were broken. Or they never even were made.
State Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn tries to make it right for
Texas' abused, neglected and abandoned children with a comprehensive
audit of the system that seeks to ensure that Texas' children are protected
and that they receive the care and compassion they deserve.
In her report, "Forgotten Children: A Special Report on the Texas
Foster Care System," she identifies the shortcomings of the system
and the opportunities for improvement.
There are many dedicated staff members at the Texas Department of Family
and Protective Services who see their jobs as a calling.
At Lutheran Social Services of the South, we are privileged to work
with those individuals, who put in long hours under stressful conditions
for little pay or recognition.
But years of experience have taught us that there is significant room
for improvement.
Ms. Strayhorn's report has many specific suggestions. Here are the
two recommendations we believe are the most important:
End the dual system of foster care.
We wholeheartedly agree with Ms. Strayhorn's recommendation that the
state should get out of the direct-care business and instead focus
all of its attention on ensuring the health, safety and education of
the children in its custody. Nonprofit child-placing agencies are able
to access community resources that the state government can't.
For years, mentors, tutors and volunteers have made a profound difference
in the lives of the nearly 2,400 children served annually at our four
Texas residential treatment centers and our network of foster homes.
Generous donors contribute to build recreational facilities and state-of-the-art
dormitories and make gifts so that we can pay for modifications to
foster homes and buy equipment for medically fragile children.
Increase accountability through performance-based contracts.
Accountability is critical to improving the system. Agencies should
be expected to demonstrate that the care they are providing, whether
it is basic care or more intensive treatment, is making a difference
in the lives of children. Agencies should be able to prove that taxpayers
are getting a high return on their investment in the child welfare
system.
We urge state officials to seek accreditation by the Council on Accreditation
of both Department of Family and Protective Services and foster care
providers to ensure that consistent standards of care and fiscal responsibility
are being met.
We also agree with Ms. Strayhorn that every provider should be held
to the same standards and that those who exceed the minimum standards
should be recognized and rewarded.
"
Forgotten Children" challenges our state officials and citizens
to set higher expectations for the care we provide to the victims of
abuse, neglect and abandonment.
It is my hope and prayer that we will rise to that challenge.
Kurt Senske is chief executive officer of the Austin-based Lutheran
Social Services of the South, which serves more than 25,000 children,
elderly and poor throughout Texas and Louisiana. The group's
Web site is www.lsss.org.
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