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Past Events

Feet in Two Worlds Project: Linking Ethnic Media and Public Radio
Selected Articles
  by Andrew White
  by Sharon Lerner
Publications
  Half Full, Half Empty: Children and Families with Special Needs [PDF]
  "There's No Such Place": The Family Assessment Program, PINS and the Limits of Support Services for Families with Teens in New York City [PDF]
  Developmental Disabilities Watch: More Voices, More Choices [PDF]
  A Matter of Judgment: Deciding the Future of Family Court in NYC [PDF]
  The Innovation Issue: New Initiatives in New York Child Welfare [PDF]
  Framing the 2005 Mayoral Debate: Issues and Proposals for the Candidates [PDF]
  Spanning the Neighborhood: The Bridge Between Housing and Supports for Families [PDF]
  Community Collaboration in New York City: Charting the Course for a Neighborhood-Based Safety Net [PDF]
  Pivot Point: Managing the Transformation of Child Welfare in NYC [PDF]
  New Country, New Perils: Immigrant Child and Family Health in NYC [PDF]
  Hardship in Many Languages: Immigrant Families and Children in NYC [PDF]
  Maintaining Momentum for Reform in a Time of Fiscal Austerity [PDF]
  Tough Decisions: Dealing with Domestic Violence in Child Welfare [PDF]
  Newcomers Left Behind: Immigrant Parents Lack Equal Access to New York City’s Schools [PDF]
  Consider the Future: Strengthening Children and Family Services in Red Hook, Brooklyn [PDF]
  Uninvited Guests: Teens in NYC Foster Care [PDF]
  Supporting Stronger Families and Neighborhoods: City Hall and New York's Family and Children's Services [PDF]
  Health and Mental Health Issues: Immigrant Youth and Families in New York
  Immigrant Girls: Struggling with Cultural Traditions
Transcripts of Past Events
  Double Duty: Solutions to the Work/Family Dilemma [PDF]
October 11, 2006
  Is There Order in Family Court:
A Child Welfare Watch Forum [PDF]
March 16, 2006
  Drugs and the Law:
Race, Politics, Prisons and Justice in New York State [PDF]
March 10, 2006
  Working Toward a Common Goal:
Safe, Supportive Schools for Every New York Teen [PDF]
March 2, 2006
  The Race for Mayor 2005:
Of Politics and Policy [PDF]
October 27, 2005
  Taking Care of New York's Children (I):
Rethinking Child Care [PDF]
October 25, 2005
  Averting Crisis: Community Strategies for
Supporting Families and Preventing
Homelessness [PDF]
October 20, 2005
  The Puzzle That Follows Progress: Reinventing Child Welfare in NYC [PDF]
December 14, 2004
  Medicaid: Can New York Control Spending? [PDF]
February 25, 2004
  Milano Dean's Forum on Governance and Civil Society [PDF]
February 9, 2004
  The Media and The Mayor: Does Spin Make the Man?
February 13, 2003
  Breaking the Cycle: Homeless Families in New York Today
October 1, 2002
  Carried Away: Resolving New York's Garbage Crisis
September 17, 2002
   
 

January 10, 2008

The Center for New York City Affairs and the Center for an Urban Future are pleased to announce the release of the Winter 2008 issue of Child Welfare Watch.

Against the Clock: The struggle to move kids into permanent homes (PDF | 4.56 MB)

Edited by Andrew White, Kendra Hurley and Barbara Solow

New York City is charging a growing number of families with abuse and neglect, leaving Family Court overwhelmed and more children spending longer periods in foster care. This edition of Child Welfare Watch reports on the difficulties of moving children out of foster care in a timely manner in the wake of Nixzmary Brown’s murder, two years ago tomorrow.

New York City’s Family Court is in crisis, with case backlogs growing and judges unable to hold many routine hearings in a timely manner. The number of abuse and neglect filings against parents by city attorneys has leapt a remarkable 150 percent since the child abuse murder of 7-year-old Nixzmary Brown in January 2006, and the court has been unable to handle the increase. Despite the Permanency Law of 2005––which aimed to get children out of foster care faster––kids in New York City are staying in foster care longer. For children in foster care for the first time, the median length of stay before returning home rose from 8.2 months in fiscal year 2005 to 11.5 months in fiscal year 2007.

On the two-year anniversary of the murder of Nixzmary Brown, the Winter 2008 issue of Child Welfare Watch explores the challenges of moving the city’s foster children into safe, permanent homes quickly, a decade after federal laws sought to improve foster care systems nationwide. Highlights of the report include:

  • The large increase in petitions filed in Family Court by city attorneys is driven in part by an increase in foster care placements. Such placements are up more than 40 percent since 2005. An even larger factor is the unprecedented increase in requests for court-ordered supervision of families under investigation. These families are expected to participate in services while remaining under city oversight.
  • After a 10-year decline, the number of New York City children in foster care living with relatives is becoming more common. Last year, the number of foster children living in these “kinship” homes grew by 18 percent. Yet because it is still a form of foster care, the NYC Administration for Children’s Services can’t consider kinship care a “permanent” home for children.
  • Thirty-five states and the District of Columbia offer subsidized guardianship as a way to support relatives raising kin’s children outside the foster care system. A pending federal bill could make it available in all states, including New York.
  • There were 752 “legal orphans”children with no legal ties to birth parents and not placed in pre-adoptive homesin New York City in 2006. Although controversial, reversing their parents’ loss of parental rights may help some of these older children find safe, permanent homes.

“The Administration for Children’s Services policy agenda contains many elements that deserve wide support,” the editors conclude. “But the mayhem in Family Court had better be addressed soon, or these latest reforms will likely stumble.”

The 15th edition of Child Welfare Watch also looks at proposed legislation to help parents in prison and residential substance abuse treatment centers hold onto their children, as well as a city program that asks foster parents of infants to prepare to adopt as they simultaneously help the babies’ parents bring their children home.

Download Child Welfare Watch Volume 15 (PDF | 4.56 MB)

Download Child Welfare Watch Volume 14 (PDF | 372 KB)

If you would like to receive a hard copy of this or any previous issue of the Watch, please call 212 229 5418 or email centernyc@newschool.edu.

Child Welfare Watch is published jointly by the Center for New York City Affairs at The New School and the Center for an Urban Future. The Watch provides news, analysis, investigative reporting and data on New York’s public and private sector services for children and families, and is produced by a team of professional journalists and graduate students. The Child Welfare Watch advisory board, comprised of professionals in the human services field, parents, researchers and former public officials, develops policy recommendations based on the findings of the project’s reporters and editors. These recommendations are included in each edition.

This issue is made possible thanks to generous grants from the Child Welfare Fund, the Ira W. DeCamp Foundation and the Sirus Fund.

 


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