Foster Kids are Being Over-Medicated with Psych Meds

We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we’d like to bring attention to the thousands of foster children who are being placed at risk by taking psychiatric medications they don’t need. While we understand kids in the system have often been abused and many face a host of psychiatric and emotional issues, medication is not always the answer. However, far too often, meds are all these children are getting when it may not be the best answer.

 

Disorders like oppositional defiant disorder, anxiety, depression, attachment disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, and ADHD are seen all too often in the system, and children can take many pills each day to keep their disorders under control. But what happens when the medication is doing more harm than good? Foster parents may not have much say in the matter, and biological parents have even less input.

 

Nearly 80% of kids who enter the system suffer from psychological issues. Far too often the system does what is easier instead of what is right, and the kids are paying for it. These medications can have serious side-effects that can impact children’s health, and a recent report from the Department of Health and Human Services found that kids are taking pills they don’t need.

 

It’s time to fight for foster children’s right to adequate healthcare, and now! Won’t you join us in our quest to hold these agencies accountable?

Do You Have a Personal DHR or CPS Story?

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin, and we are dedicated to bringing injustices in our country’s corrupt child protection service organizations to light. We have decided that sharing the latest news simply isn’t enough, and we are ready to take our coverage of this issue to the next level.

Has your family been harmed by one of these organizations? We’d like to hear your story. (Anonymously, of course. We won’t post any of your identifying information.) Instead, what we hope to do is let the public see firsthand the lasting damage these organizations do in the name of meeting their quotas.

We want to hear from you if you:

Have lived through the terror and humiliation of being investigated.

Have had a child placed in foster care or put up for adoption.

Were a child who was unjustly thrust into the system.

Were lied about by investigators and in court.

Were a child who was harmed in foster care.

Are a whistle-blower who works within the system.

If this describes you, we want to hear your story.

Please write to us on Facebook at @StopDHR

 

Abuse of Oregon Foster Children Leads to Lawsuit

The State of Oregon placed very young and vulnerable foster children in a home with a teen who was a sexual predator, and now they will pay for it. We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and once again we are bringing you a story about foster children and families who are fighting back against the corrupt child protective services system in court.

According to a $5 million lawsuit filed by guardians of the victimized children, the state knew the boy, who was 13 years old at the time, had a history of being sexually abusive. Despite this, they moved him into a home with young children, including five-year-old and seven-year-old girls who had been sexually abused in the past and were developmentally disabled.

The boy was not supervised around these children, and the state did not at any point suggest he should be. This, despite warnings from a foster parent about the child’s disturbing behavior both at home and at school. The boy molested both girls, raping the older one, and he threatened them with violence if they told. Now the Oregon Department of Human Services is being charged with negligence

The foster children named in the case are suing for:

  • $50K for each girl for counseling both now and in the future
  • $2.5M for isolation, nightmare, and psychological trauma

The state was directly responsible for the ordeal these poor children went through, and now they will pay—literally—for their negligence.

Kansas DCF Fails to Meet Safety Standards

Despite being responsible for keeping the foster children of Kansas safe, the Department for Children and Families managed to fail an astounding 16 safety standards in the past year alone. This is why we, Kathleen and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, are dedicated to raising awareness of the need for a system of checks and balances within our woefully inept and corrupt child protection agencies.

The DCF is tracked using a reporting system that is rated based upon 30 measurements of performance. That means more than half of these measures were not up to standard, and that is completely unacceptable. The troubled agency has implemented new initiatives they claim will lead to improvements, but this remains to be seen. So far changes in leadership have not led to marked improvements for these vulnerable children.

Here are some sobering facts about what children in Kansas’s foster care system can expect, according to a July 2017 through June 2018 report:

  • Children stayed in an average of 8.9 foster homes per 1,000 days in foster care. This number is more than double of the expected standard of just 4.12 days.
  • The agency is far from reaching their goal of having children adopted in less than two years. In fact, they only reached their goal 17.6% of the time, compared to a standard of 26.8%.
  • Children were only able to remain in the same school 15.7% of the time, compared to a standard of at least 25%.
  • The agency aims to assess the needs and strengths of families within a 30-day window, but they have only managed to hit their target 66% of the time.

Kansas DCF clearly has a long way to go, but they have a duty to these children they are obligated to fulfill. With 4,200 children placed in foster care in the state in the last year alone, these improvements are imperative.

Orphanage Scandal: Nuns Abused Kids for Decades

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, and it’s stories like these that compel us to continue our crusade against corruption in the institutions that are bound to protect children. St. Joseph’s Catholic Orphanage first opened in the mid-1800s, but it is only now that the full scope of the horrors and abuse the orphans who were kept there were subjected to is known.

 

Now grown, children who were held in the facility are coming forward to report shocking abuse, including one account of a nun who was witnessed pushing a small boy out a window. Orphans’ injuries were not treated properly, a child drowned, children were cut and sexually abused, and that is just the beginning of the horrors that have been revealed in the long, detailed report.

 

In light of recent allegations of abuse involving over 300 members of the Catholic clergy, this report could not have come to light at a worse time for the church, who declined to give a statement in this case outside of confirming that they are doing everything they can to ensure children are protected today. That is simply not enough, and more needs to be done to put these priests behind bars to set an example.

 

How were these nuns able to abuse children for so many decades and get away with it? In the past it was more difficult to know when vulnerable children were put in harms way, but in today’s modern era we have the internet at our disposal, making it more difficult for would-be abusers to get away with it. Today it is inconceivable that so many thousands of children were put at risk. Let’s keep the heat turned up on organizations like CPS and DHR to make sure nothing like this can happen again in the future!

Foster Children Need Better Access to Healthcare

Foster children have the same health care needs as any other children, and in many cases they have even greater needs due to neglect and abuse. Why haven’t measures to make sure children in the system can access the healthcare they need been put in place? That’s what we, Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, are asking today.

 

Many foster parents are faced with the challenge of finding health care for children who suffer from a wide range of issues, from the more run-of-the-mill scrapes and sore throats to complex issues like chronic illnesses and psychological trauma. Foster children are covered by Medicaid, and since the 2010 Affordable Care Act those foster kids are guaranteed coverage until age 26.

 

Although foster kids technically have access to health care, the problem is there are a shortage of providers who accept it. This is especially problematic when it comes to mental health providers, which is a serious concern for both foster children and parents because approximately one-half of all kids in the system have been diagnosed with a mental health disorder.

 

Children in foster care are twice as likely to be diagnosed with developmental delays and learning disorders. The children of opioid addicts have been entering the system in increasing numbers, and this too has resulted in a increased need for medical and psychological intervention.

 

Foster parents also report finding coordinating decisions about medical treatment between agencies and the biological parents to be difficult. Unstable lifestyles can also make coordinating healthcare difficult, with paperwork often being lost during frequent moves from foster home to foster home or back and forth between foster care and their biological families.

 

In a handful of states, a separate program has been implemented that has higher reimbursement rates, making it more attractive to providers. These plans also allow children to keep the same coverage when they are moved to different homes, even if they are in completely different parts of the state. We can only hope more states will move to this model. Health care is one of many issues these already vulnerable children should not be burdened with.

Kentucky’s Foster Care Numbers Soar

We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we would like to ask the State of Kentucky why their foster care numbers are unacceptably high? The average CPS caseworker in the state is handling 19 to 33 cases. There is no way the children involved in those cases are getting the care they need when the workers are stretched so thin, and this puts children who are wards of the state at serious risk.

It’s been a little over a month since House Bill 1 went into effect, which was meant to overhaul the foster care and adoption system. The average time it takes to reunite families who have been torn apart by the system has doubled in recent years, and this delay is causing psychological harm to children, especially when reunification therapy proves to not be nearly enough to undo the damage that has been done.

House Bill 1 established the Child Welfare Oversight and Advisory Committee, which is designed to give grandparents and other relatives who are caring for children who have been removed from their homes more rights. Under this bill, foster parents would also have more input into the process. With so many providers who aren’t qualified, it remains to be seen whether this move will help or harm children.

Recent budget increases of $14M are expected to allow the department to hire more workers and other personnel. Currently there are 230 new positions and 100 existing ones that need to be filled. With retention being a problem, simply filling the seats will not be enough. The department will have to improve conditions and policies if they want to attract new workers and keep them.

Kentucky Ranch Will Keep Foster Siblings Together

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we are happy to bring you a bit of good news about the future of foster children in America. Kentucky children who are placed into foster care together as sibling groups may have a better alternative in the near future, because Sunset Children’s Services of Louisville has plans to open a new foster care facility that is based upon a visionary model that will keep vulnerable children together with their siblings.

Sunrise is the state’s largest private foster care provider, housing a total of 9,000+ foster kids. The president of the organization, Dale Shuttles, said, “We often see sibling groups broken apart physically and emotionally by separate foster placements because homes aren’t large enough to house them together.”

Splitting sibling groups apart during a time when these children need each other more than ever is a common practice in foster care due to a lack of available space. Sunrise is addressing this issue by developing a portion of a 130-acre farm so it will have two five-bedroom foster care facilities on the grounds. This was made possible thanks to a generous land donation from educator Judy Huls Singleton.

Solid Rock Children’s Ranch will provide a safe and nurturing environment for children in need. The children will be introduced to cutting-edge animal and plant therapies that can help ground them while they are in transition and improve their outcomes. We need more innovative, generous, and forward-thinking people like these who are willing to step-up to the plate for these kids, and we are glad to see Kentucky has so many good people who are doing just that.

Father Sues New Hampshire DCYF Over Toddler’s Death

When 21-month-old Sadence “Sadee” Willot died on September 7, 2015, her mother was charged in her death, later pleading guilty to second-degree murder. However, as far as the child’s father Christopher Willott is concerned, justice has not been served because the New Hampshire Division for Children, Youth, and Families is also complicit in the crime because their negligence contributed to her death. We, Kathleen Raskin and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, Nevada, agree that the department is partially responsible, and it’s time to hold them accountable.

A Young Life Cut Tragically Short

Before Sadee was found unresponsive at her mother’s Manchester home, the child had been subjected to a great deal of abuse. The toddler had been the victim of emotional abuse, neglect, and numerous serious beatings that resulted in contusions and broken bones. In the final attack that claimed her life before she ever really even had a chance to live, the child’s mother, 23-year-old Katlin Paquette, pushed her into a bathtub, inflicting fatal head injuries.

Paquette is serving a sentence of 21 to 42 years, but what of the caseworkers who were charged with protecting this child yet failed time and again to intervene despite numerous complaints? Sadee’s father, Christopher Willott, wants to make sure they are also charged in the child’s death. Concerned calls about Sadee’s well-being began shortly after the girl’s birth, and workers had visited the home multiple times, yet they failed to adequately investigate or to take any measures that would have spared the child’s life.

This is the second suspicious death involving DCYF in the past two years, and it’s time to step in to do something about this problem before a third New Hampshire child perishes. We wish Mr. Willott success in his court battle, and we hope to see justice done not just for Sadee, but also for the many other children who are harmed each year when the system fails them.

Los Angeles DCFS Audited After Child’s Murder

How were a ten-year-old boy’s mother and her boyfriend allowed to torture him to death after the abuse had been reported multiple times? That’s what we, Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, would like to know. We started our website StopDHR so we can raise awareness of corruption and incompetence in the child protective services organizations that too often harm the very children they are charged with protecting.

California state officials plan to conduct an audit of DCFS in Los Angeles after the child, Anthony Avalos, was tortured to death because his mother and her boyfriend believed he was gay. The details of what this little boy endured are heartbreaking, and there were numerous opportunities for agencies from DCFS to the police to step in and protect him, but the system broke down and failed to stop the abuse. Thirteen times the authorities were notified, and thirteen times they did nothing.

This is all too often the case, but it still remains to be seen whether or not the investigation will actually uncover anything or if they’ll just sweep the details of their ineptitude under the rug. This is far from an isolated instance, and in fact there was a similar case in 2013, when eight-year-old Gabriel Fernandez was also brutalized and murdered because his mother and her boyfriend suspected he was gay.

Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident,” their letter to the audit committee said, referring to the 2013 death of 8-year-old Gabriel Fernandez, who was also tortured and abused for months by his mother and her boyfriend, allegedly because he suspected Gabriel was gay. The last audit of LA’s child welfare department was six years ago, so this new audit is overdue.

 

Specifically the audit will deal with whether or not DCFS has adequate protections in place to serve the LGBTQ youth who may have an especially difficult time in the system and with caretakers due to their sexual orientation. Will the root deficiencies in the system finally be identified and improved? Only time will tell. What we know now is that this absolutely must not happen to another child.