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I'm reposting an article I found on the net here, as an alert.
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Your Child is Worth Money to the State
July 31, 2001
by Wendy McElroy, mac@ifeminists.com
For Heidi and Neil Howard, giving birth to a terminally ill baby seemed punishment enough. But that was before the Massachusetts Department of Social Services stepped into their lives.
The department came knocking at the door to their home in the form of a "home visitor" sent by the hospital when the Howards' first baby girl was born with terminal health problems.
According to the Massachusetts News, the "home visitor" was a social worker who found the home in disorder. The kitchen was in the process of being remodeled. Over Heidi's objections and without identifying the true purpose of the call, the "home visitor" opened closets and quizzed her about her marriage. Then, she filed a report about the messy home and "stress" in the family – stress undoubtedly caused by having a dying child.
Their situation was complicated by a restraining order that Heidi says she was blackmailed into filing: the DSS allegedly threatened to remove their two boys, 10-year-old Christopher and five-year-old Ethan, if Heidi did not register a complaint against her husband even though she insisted no abuse had occurred. With a restraining order on file, the DSS seized the boys in November 1999.
In February 2001, another daughter, Jessica, was seized from her nursing mother on the grounds that the other children were already in DSS custody. No court hearing has been held on the two boys. Chester Darling, an attorney for the Howards, has called the DSS "an agency ... that can kidnap children almost with impunity."
The Howards' case is not unique. Cases like theirs are occurring more frequently because state agencies now have a financial incentive to separate children from their parents and put them up for adoption.
The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 is explicit about the rewards. Under a section called "Adoption Incentive Payment," the act says a state can receive as much as $4,000 for adopting-out a child. There is even a provision offering technical assistance "through grants or contracts ... to assist States and local communities to reach their targets for increased numbers of adoptions and, to the extent that adoption is not possible, alternative permanent placements, for children in foster care."
The money from incentives, grants, and contracts goes directly into the coffers of child protection agencies when they adopt-out children.
Who benefits? "Social workers, diagnosticians, attorneys, foster homes and group homes, to name a few," says Susan Jackson of CPS Watch, a watchdog organization that monitors Child Protective Services. "These folks are fed by a child abuse industry to the tune of well over $12 billion."
Collectively, they form the Child Abuse Industry.
CPS Watch has been carefully monitoring child abuse investigations since 1998, the year after passage of the Adoption and Safe Families Act. Alaska, it found, reported 15,703 child maltreatment referrals from a child population of 192,261 – or one report for every twelve children – that year.
In 1998, according to a federal Department of Health and Human Services report, Kansas removed 1,872 children from their homes. But only 1,104 of the investigations substantiated the charges of abuse. The report states that 272 children were removed from families for reasons "unknown" in Ohio the same year.
In a recent issue of Social Work: Journal of the National Association of Social Workers, Leslie Doty Hollingsworth cautioned her colleagues about the ethical line they may be crossing.
"Because there are strong financial incentives to increase adoptions, practitioners may be compromised ethically if required to work for reunification and adoptive placement simultaneously," writes Hollingsworth, who teaches at the University of Michigan School of Social Work.
Some organizations believe that the threat to families is severe enough to warrant active non-cooperation with government agencies. For example, the Home School Legal Defense Association – which believes home schoolers are being particularly targeted – tells members of their community to contact them immediately for legal assistance if approached by a social worker.
But the warning came too late for the Howards.
The DSS wanted to put baby Jessica up for adoption, but on July 16th, Judge Robert Belmonte of the Framingham Juvenile Court ordered the baby returned to her parents. At last report, the DSS maintains that the two boys should be adopted out but seems willing to let an aunt and uncle become the adoptive parents.
That way, at least, the DSS would still receive its "adoption incentive payment."
www.ifeminists.com/introduc...0731.html
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Your Child is Worth Money to the State
July 31, 2001
by Wendy McElroy, mac@ifeminists.com
For Heidi and Neil Howard, giving birth to a terminally ill baby seemed punishment enough. But that was before the Massachusetts Department of Social Services stepped into their lives.
The department came knocking at the door to their home in the form of a "home visitor" sent by the hospital when the Howards' first baby girl was born with terminal health problems.
According to the Massachusetts News, the "home visitor" was a social worker who found the home in disorder. The kitchen was in the process of being remodeled. Over Heidi's objections and without identifying the true purpose of the call, the "home visitor" opened closets and quizzed her about her marriage. Then, she filed a report about the messy home and "stress" in the family – stress undoubtedly caused by having a dying child.
Their situation was complicated by a restraining order that Heidi says she was blackmailed into filing: the DSS allegedly threatened to remove their two boys, 10-year-old Christopher and five-year-old Ethan, if Heidi did not register a complaint against her husband even though she insisted no abuse had occurred. With a restraining order on file, the DSS seized the boys in November 1999.
In February 2001, another daughter, Jessica, was seized from her nursing mother on the grounds that the other children were already in DSS custody. No court hearing has been held on the two boys. Chester Darling, an attorney for the Howards, has called the DSS "an agency ... that can kidnap children almost with impunity."
The Howards' case is not unique. Cases like theirs are occurring more frequently because state agencies now have a financial incentive to separate children from their parents and put them up for adoption.
The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 is explicit about the rewards. Under a section called "Adoption Incentive Payment," the act says a state can receive as much as $4,000 for adopting-out a child. There is even a provision offering technical assistance "through grants or contracts ... to assist States and local communities to reach their targets for increased numbers of adoptions and, to the extent that adoption is not possible, alternative permanent placements, for children in foster care."
The money from incentives, grants, and contracts goes directly into the coffers of child protection agencies when they adopt-out children.
Who benefits? "Social workers, diagnosticians, attorneys, foster homes and group homes, to name a few," says Susan Jackson of CPS Watch, a watchdog organization that monitors Child Protective Services. "These folks are fed by a child abuse industry to the tune of well over $12 billion."
Collectively, they form the Child Abuse Industry.
CPS Watch has been carefully monitoring child abuse investigations since 1998, the year after passage of the Adoption and Safe Families Act. Alaska, it found, reported 15,703 child maltreatment referrals from a child population of 192,261 – or one report for every twelve children – that year.
In 1998, according to a federal Department of Health and Human Services report, Kansas removed 1,872 children from their homes. But only 1,104 of the investigations substantiated the charges of abuse. The report states that 272 children were removed from families for reasons "unknown" in Ohio the same year.
In a recent issue of Social Work: Journal of the National Association of Social Workers, Leslie Doty Hollingsworth cautioned her colleagues about the ethical line they may be crossing.
"Because there are strong financial incentives to increase adoptions, practitioners may be compromised ethically if required to work for reunification and adoptive placement simultaneously," writes Hollingsworth, who teaches at the University of Michigan School of Social Work.
Some organizations believe that the threat to families is severe enough to warrant active non-cooperation with government agencies. For example, the Home School Legal Defense Association – which believes home schoolers are being particularly targeted – tells members of their community to contact them immediately for legal assistance if approached by a social worker.
But the warning came too late for the Howards.
The DSS wanted to put baby Jessica up for adoption, but on July 16th, Judge Robert Belmonte of the Framingham Juvenile Court ordered the baby returned to her parents. At last report, the DSS maintains that the two boys should be adopted out but seems willing to let an aunt and uncle become the adoptive parents.
That way, at least, the DSS would still receive its "adoption incentive payment."
www.ifeminists.com/introduc...0731.html
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 13, 2007 - 8:27 PMaw geeez louise.....Child "protective" Services are so jive-ass they oughta be thrown out of the Jive Ass convention!
I've worked in the helping professions i one form or another myentire adult life, mostly as mental health counselor, teacdher, emergency social services provider, that sort of thing..I'm a scoolteqacher now taking premed classes...and I honestly think the CHild "protective agencies are so coppupt they need to be completely shut down and re-figured. individual workers have far too much discretion and no requirement for standards or training..you don't need a college degree in social work to be a CPS worker (in a lot of places I don't think you need a degree at all), just a know it all who wants to tell other people how to raise their kids.
I posted a true and horrifying tale on another Tribe.net forum about a Lao family here in SF Bay area who must wish they;d never come to such a barbaric country.
I;ve known people who got investigated for being vegetarian because the CPS worker thinks all kids should be entitled toeat at McDonalds.
I've known people who got investigated for taking their chubby child out for a 9rare) ice cream cone because the CPS worker thinks kids SHOULDN'T eat "junk food" ever.
I have a friend who was labeled "manipulative" by these damned workers for telling her 9 eyar old son she loved him in the presence of a CPS worker.
I could go on and on. I sepnt five eyars going in and out of courto behalf of twin boys who have what I think is a very ood relationsip with teir mother for no real reason except that one or two workers took a dislike to this woman and interpreted everything she did as evidence of her "bad parenting."
I;ve worked with abused children. I've loved many who were severely abuse as children.
I live in mild fear of the Child Rescuers. most of the time.
I better get back to schoolwork.
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 13, 2007 - 9:05 PMThis is horrible. Where the hell were these guys when that baby girl died of starvation at 6 months (only 3.5lbs?) from being fed soy milk and apple juice her whole babyhood. Isn't that what these people are supposed to be looking out for. Not ripping innocent families apart. GEEZ! -
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 13, 2007 - 10:46 PMYeah, it seems like they ignore the bad families and persecute the good.
Did you know DSS finds it an issue worth investigating when a child has got food all over her face because she's two and just ate a chocolate bar? Yeah, our case worker when I was on disability called DSS on us because our child had food on her face. I hate to say it, but just try keeping food off of Corde's face. She's four and just eating bread she can have a mess circling her mouth. She could be eating things that shouldn't be able to make any mess. I wouldn't be surprised if I got a visit because Corde's hair is often tangled because she won't let me near it with a brush. On top of that, you look at it the wrong way and it tangles. Of course it's not going to be perfect 24-7!
Meanwhile, DSS never responded to a call about a woman who used to lock her son in his room not even letting him out when he said he had to pee because obviously he must be lying (he'd taken to peeing in the corner of his room and burying it with his books, drawings, and toys). They didn't take away a child who had been under investigation several times for being malnourished, allowed in the care of a mother that was forbidden by the courts from taking part in her child's life, though I don't know why, and the horrible state of their apartment. There were cat droppings everywhere, bed bugs that the people who lived there wouldn't deal with. The place was always filthy to the point that I didn't want to sit down when I walked in, never mind actually let my child play there. Granted, I've lived in places like that (and feared DSS coming to investigate because our room mates wouldn't clean up after themselves and had the house piled waist high with trash bags of random stuff).
And people wonder why I fear DSS/CPS. It's kind of a scary system. The people who should be left alone are harassed and those who should be kept after are ignored. It doesn't make sense. It's like the military, I wish I could just get in there and overhaul the system. Help more kids who need it, not the kids who don't. I know they've got to rely on reports they get in from other people, but please! That doesn't explain why they're picking on families that have no problems and not staying in contact with those who need it. -
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sun, October 14, 2007 - 12:58 PMthis is an outrage...they did an investigation on your family over a kid with a dirty face??????
you;d think any department head at SOcial Services, with any integrity at all would call in whoever was responsible and said...we don;t have time or funds for this...all kids are messy eaters sometimes. now if you;re really concerned will you leave a box of wipes or a bar of Ivory for this lady and call it quits?
I'm a pretty messy adult, and I swear it's only because I'm middle calss and speak like an educated person (and know how ot organize politically if push comes to shove) that they haven't given me, or my kid, any shit yet...
kind of funny. my mother's kind of messy (and her parents were even nmore so) and my dad's the neatnik of the family (and his mother was one too...dad died when he was little but I get that my "real" grandpa was a bit of an obsessor by nature anyway and that's maybe what killed him...)...my folks are almost 81 and 78 now and they;'e worked it out...and I took ater my mom's side of the family.
and no one's been hassling me and my kid's a bright, high-achieving, friendly, happy-most-of-the-time thirteen year old now...
now don;t disability case workers have any REAL: people to help, uh, like with disability issues?
sorry, this is one issue where the right and the left are all reading on the same page...these people need to GET OUT OF OUR HOUSES...our living rooms, our bedrooms, our laundry rooms...and actually HELP peple who have seriousproblems...isn;t that why we pay tazes?
uggha ughha ughaa...
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 20, 2007 - 11:28 AMMy personal experience with what we call DHS here was a nightmare turned real. My husbad was working for a man who was our friends father who had diabetes and needed some help around the house. He worked there for 2 days before realizing this guy was nuts and stopped helping him. Two days later my husband was sitting at home watching my son when there was a knock at the door. DHS had recieved a complaint that we were manufacturing drugs in our bathroom and that our homes conditions were deplorable. My husband told her that was rediculous and he wouldn't submit to allowing an agent of the state into our home with out a warrent. She left and came back 15 minutes later with the police and they forced their way into our home to of course find a clean home, no drug lab, a full fridge and a well cared for child. They took pictures of my son, questioned my husbad with the police right there and then put in their report that his behavior was suspicious because he was angry that they invaded our home. She called me came back 3 times unanounced, turned our home and life upside down for 3 months, caused us undue stress and ultimately came to the conclusion that the alligations were done out of anger for my husbands leaving his employment. Even after all was said and done and they agreed that my son was loved, and well taken care of in a suitable home for a child they are continuing to invade our home every six months because he is under the age of 5. Now he goes to a city public charter school and they monitor his progress and development daily, why would they need access to our home? I asked the woman about our consitutional right and her answer was that having children basically makes those rights null and void and even if it's found that the complaint was falsely submitted we have no rights any more and they can enter our home at their discretion. The worst of it is when this happened I was talking to several of my friends only to find that it had happed to 3 others with the same result. It makes me so angry everytime I think about it. Meanwhile, a week later they found some poor nine year old locked in a cage in the basement in another part of the city. That kid suffered unneccessarily for an additional week why they wasted their time with me. What a bunch of BULL SHIT!!!! -
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 20, 2007 - 5:41 PMmoral of the story. NEVER TRUST ANYONE WHO WORKS FOR the GOVERNMENT. ie, social workers, police officers, judges, especially polititians, and their secrataries, do not trust teachers or doctors or lawers, DO NOT TRUST THIS dESTABLISHMENT! -
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sat, October 20, 2007 - 8:27 PMI just have to say something on the "never trust anyone who works for the government" bit there, don't blame them. I've known many good people who work for the government, cops, social workers, case workers for disabiliy and homeless shelters, even a couple lawyers. They were good people trying to do their best. I'm kind of surrounded by "the establishment" right now as I live on a military post. Teachers, not all of them are bad. Not all doctors are bad. I think this kind of general blanket statement is just as bad as saying everyone who looks Middle Eastern is a terrorist, all blacks and hispanics are in gangs, and all Japanese people are good in math and science. It's like saying everyone who shaves their head is a skinhead. Everyone in the military is a Christian.
However, this is how I know the system to go in the US at least...
DSS (or CPS) receives a report. They select a case worker and dispatch them to make a call on the house. They ask if they can come in and start their investigation. They take all the information they can and investigate the case as fully as they can. In most cases if they can't find anything, they go away and leave you alone. That's what they did in both cases for my daughter. The most we got is a referral for Early Childhood Development for my daughter because at nearly three she still wasn't talking. She was tested and they found the only thing she needed work on was speech and they tried to help where they could for that, but we volunteered to go through that. In many cases they leave you alone if it's unfounded.
However, there are many cases where if someone spiteful keeps leaving anonymous tips then they stick around longer. I think in cases where there's talk of drug use, DSS needs to keep checking in, even if there's no evidence of drug use. Unfortunately, in some cases after so many months of the problem being taken care of and things looking better, then tend to move on unless they hear another complaint. Unfortunately they rely on someone telling them when something is going on. There are a lot of people who would just watch something happen without saying anything. The woman I knew who used to lock her son in his room got away with doing it for years. Even though everyone knew she did it, no one reported it. No one reported it because they were all afraid she would know it was them and then they'd no longer be friends, would be kicked out and have to live on the street, or whatever. There are so many reasons people don't report these things. The sad part about it is often times when it comes down to it, most people aren't willing to make a report when they know they should. I didn't report the kid who was locked in his room all day until after I was no longer living with the woman. I sat there and bit my tongue when she would lock him in there and instead let him out the moment she walked out the door. I should have called DSS the first day she didn't, but I was too afraid of losing my home and my job. I know someone who was friends with a mother who used to beat her kids fairly bad and she never said anything because she was afraid that the kids would be beat severely because obviously they said something to the teacher or their doctor or something. This is unfortunately a reality in a lot of cases. They can only help the people they know to help.
I hate to say it, but as much as there's a lot wrong with the system, the biggest flaw is that not enough people do their part. There are too many people who wouldn't report a woman being mugged on the street or a shooting, never mind child abuse or neglect. That's the really sad part about all of this... -
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Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sun, October 21, 2007 - 1:07 PMI agree with much of what you say but I'm on the other side of the fence about how, as you put it,
"I think in cases where there's talk of drug use, DSS needs to keep checking in, even if there's no evidence of drug use."
partly because I think the drug wars have been more horrible in their effects than the drug abuse they supposedly protect against. thre can be "talk" of anything. as you mention, people do make accusations out of spite or confusion or jsut because they think there's nothing better to do.
when you get right down to it, I'd even go so far as to say that most chidlren would be better off with a parent with a drug use issue than being taken away and put in foster care and having their parent go to prison.
my own feeling is that when there's no "evidence" there's probably no harm. this is especially true about substances that alter consciousness...part of why repeated drug testing is so absurd and invasive is that if someone isn't acting impaired on the job, why should we CARE whether he or she has metabolites that say maybe they had some recreational marijuana with friends three weeks ago on their own time???
I'm glad you and your daughter got off without major hassle by the system. as opeople have reported here, not everyone who is a good parent is so lucky.
we all have different ideas of what is an appropriate and loving home. I;ve been told by strangers (whose business it isn;t) that I'm either too strict ortoo permissive...sometimes in the same setting!
I think as you say there are good people working even in the most corrupt of systems. I applaud them for doing all they can to be honest and compassionate and maybe bring a little humanity to a place where it;s lacking.
but I don;t want the DSS or its equivalent investigating me or my neighbors because there's "talk" ofd rug use, or of how I have a messy laundry room, or because my child is constitutionally slender and I'm a vegetarian and so is she, or because my neighbor has weird tattoos,or for any other reason, really.
I;ve heard that the military's equivalent of CHild Protective SErvices is one bureaucracy a family does NOT want to have as an adversary! heard a few tales that are pretty hair-raising.
well, I need to get back to work. jsut musing, really... -
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This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.
Re: Your Child Is Worth Money to the State
Sun, October 21, 2007 - 7:36 PMI can't help but wonder if DSS prefers to take kids who have not come from abuse because they know that they will be easier to adopt out than children who have known abuse. I am also disturbed by these stories that I have read. I have only made one report to CPS before, and nothing ever came of it. When I was nine years old, my mother sent my brother and I to live with an aunt for the summer. Turns out the woman was crazy and kept us for a year before returning us to our mother. During that year CPS was called on my aunt, for goos reason, a number of times, and even though we had a mother who loved us and was fighting to get us back, they never even attempted to remove us from an abusive home. I can't help but wonder what service they are doing for the public when good homes are invaded repeatedly, and true abuse is allowed to persist even when physical evidence is present.
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