Short-term Care in Foster System Costing Taxpayers Millions

This is Kathey and Rob Raskin of Las Vegas, and today on our blog StopDHR Corruption we’d like to discuss the exorbitant cost of emergency placement foster care through DSHS in the State of Washington. Once again, child protective organizations are at it, thinking of new ways to profit from wrenching families apart. With hotel placements costing approximately $2,100 per night, over the past two years the State of Washington has spent $3.6M housing foster kids in hotels in just the last two years, which is much more expensive than the $600 per night that is needed to pay for “exceptional cost placement.” When you consider the fact that many of these children may not have needed to be removed from their homes in the first place, the amount of wastefulness in this situation is staggering.

 

A Better Alternative

We, Kathey and Rob Raskin, can think of much better ways this money could have been spent, and the first thing that comes to mind is spending it on resources to keep families together rather than paying foster parents who may just be in it for the money to warehouse these children, who are already so vulnerable. In just four homes in Washington in 2006, foster parents received $412K for these emergency placements. Many of the families whose children have been removed simply need more resources and help, but when you consider the greed and corruption of child protective agencies, it is not surprising that the state is electing to distribute the money to the system instead of to families in crisis.

Where Are Kansas’s Missing Foster Children?

Child protective services in Kansas has admitted that over 70 of the foster children who are entrusted in their care are currently missing, their whereabouts unaccounted for after they left their foster placements. One foster care contractor, KVC Kansas, is missing 38 children, and another, Saint Francis Community Services, is missing another 36. Some of these kids return to their biological families, but others will meet more terrible fates, often becoming the victims of human traffickers. We, Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, find this unacceptable, so please join us in our quest to have these organizations held accountable.

 

What Is Being Done?

One official with KVC Kansas claims that the number of children missing is only one percent, which is comparable to the national average, but this, too, is unacceptable. Children in the foster care system are more than twice as likely to run away as other kids, and these are often children who were wrenched away from their families through no fault of their own. They deserve more than this, especially when you consider the fact that top officials were not even aware these kids were missing. With no system of checks and balances in place and not nearly enough protections provided for these children’s rights, it is far too easy for kids to fall through the cracks. In the meantime, these organizations are working closely with the families of the missing children, foster care contractors, law enforcement agencies, and schools to try to locate these children before any harm comes to them.

 

Contact us, Robert and Kathleen Raskin, if you have a story you’d like to share with Stop DHR Corruption. Together we can bring an end to the injustices in these corrupt organizations.

New York CPS Worker Resigns After Girl’s Death

We are Kathey and Rob Raskin of Las Vegas, and while we are saddened to bring you yet another tragedy involving a child who was failed by the system, this story also has a silver lining—a former CPS worker has resigned due to the case of the murder of Brook Stagles, and now she is devoting her time to raising awareness of the situation that caused a three-year-old child to slip through the cracks, resulting in her murder. Former Monroe County CPS worker Jessica Lucus used to love her job, but she has since resigned due to what she described as a “toxic work environment” that contributed to the girl’s death when workers failed to protect her.

 

Too Late for One Child

The child’s father, Michael Stagles, has since plead guilty for his role in the death, and he has been sentenced to federal prison. His girlfriend, Erica Bell, who was not the toddler’s mother, was convicted of murder and manslaughter in the child’s beating death. The child’s mother and the mother’s family tried and failed to gain custody of the child prior to her death as a result of blows she received to her abdomen, and in the two weeks preceding the death the Monroe County Department of Human Services’ Child Protective Services unit has received two reports of abuse perpetrated against the toddler.

 

Lucus was not able to save poor little Brook Stagles from the monsters who abused and killed her, but we, Kathey and Rob Raskin, hope that Ms. Lucus’s actions will help save other children in the future.

Foster Children Lawsuit Against Arizona Will Proceed

This is Rob and Kathey Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we have good news for foster children in the state of Arizona, where a judge has granted class-action status to a lawsuit that, if successful, will improve conditions. This federal lawsuit against the foster care system was originally filed over two years ago, and the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System is also named. The point of the suit is to ensure the children in the system will have their needs met, because unfortunately the way things are now, being in the system is putting these children at greater harm than if they were still with their parents. As we know all too well, this is often the case across the country.

Details of the Case
This case was changed to a class-action suit because it was the only way the specific children involved in the case will not need to be identified by name. The reason this was necessary is because of the original ten kids involved in the case, most have been adopted, but the verdict in the case could still protect the rest of the kids who are caught in the corrupt system. According to Arizona’s latest reports, the state had approximately 17,000 children in foster care as of March 31 of this year. All of these children, as well as children who enter into the system in the future, will be affected by this case, and they are being represented by the Phoenix law firm Perkins Coie and two non-profit child advocacy groups.

The trial is expected to begin in the spring of 2018, and we, Rob and Kathey Raskin, hope these kids get justice.

Feds Criticize Conditions in Oklahoma Group Homes

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, and we are here again today to continue to expose corruption within the CPS and DHR systems. This week’s news comes from Oklahoma, where agents of the state performed on-site monitoring on over 20 group homes, but this did not involve making sure the homes complied with state or federal requirements, an oversight that is substantial when you consider that these requirements directly affect the safety and health of the children who are in their charge.

Serious Violations Were Found
Once you consider the violations that were found within these group homes, it is clear that the safety of the children was not a priority. In the various group homes that were inspected, a number of troubling issues were found, from mold to rotted food to windows with broken glass. Some other issues that were identified in the report are peeling paint, holes in walls, exposed wiring, expired fire extinguishers, and emergency exits that were blocked by furniture and garbage. Even the vehicles that are used to transport children in the foster care group home systems are unsafe, and the issues found within them included broken lights and mirrors, broken seat belts that were merely tied to the doors, missing gas caps, and trashed interiors.

Officials from OKDHS claim their staff is well-trained and does not need further training to maintain standards, but we, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, strongly disagree. These children have been removed from their families through no fault of their own, and they deserve better than this.

Winnipeg Foster Father Charged

We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we bring you yet another tragic story about a child who was failed by the system. On September 26 a 22-year-old Winnipeg man was arrested and caused with criminal negligence after he brought a 10-month-old baby boy to the hospital with a serious head injury. The child died later that day, raising questions about what happened and how anyone who would kill a child could have been allowed to become a foster parent.

Many Unanswered Questions
Officers were called to the hospital after medical professionals noted that the baby’s injuries were suspicious, as is hospital protocol. It is unknown at this time whether or not the child and the foster father were related, because the man’s identity is being protected in order to protect the identity of the child. Another unanswered question is whether or not it is acceptable for someone this young and inexperienced to act as a foster parent in the first place.

Manitoba’s Child and Family Services Act requires foster parents to be at least age 18, but someone so young may not yet have the maturity to deal with the pressures of foster parenting. All foster parents must undergo a criminal background investigation, but unfortunately for this child and many others, if this is the first time the foster parent is charged with harming a child, there will be no prior record. The next child might have been protected due to the record this young foster father will most likely have now, but for this ten-month-old boy, sadly, it is too late.

Has your family been harmed by child protective service agencies? Let us, Robert and Kathleen Raskin, know in the comments.

Great News for Las Vegas Foster Kids

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin of Las Vegas, and today we are pleased to announce that a program right here in our city that provides foster children with attorneys so their interests will be protected has received important funding. Foster children are often involved in civil cases due to neglect, abuse, and the termination of parental rights. Clark County officials have voted to increase the funding for a program that allows these kids to have legal representation by $1.4M.

The Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada Children’s Attorneys Project
It was a recent increase in the fees associated with court cases that prompted the need for more funding, because the Clark County Commissioners have passed a bill that requires the courts to appoint attorneys to the children in these cases. According to Barbara Buckley, Executive Director of the Legal Aid Center, “Having an attorney means your case isn’t forgotten, that you are not forgotten. If anyone deserves that, it’s these kids.” There are approximately 3,000 children of all ages in the foster care system in Clark County today. While the majority of these children will only be in foster care temporarily, there are others who will end up in long-term care and in the courts, so you can really see why there is a need for this kind of assistance.

We, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, wholeheartedly agree, and we are always pleased when we see others who are also working to help protect children’s and families’ rights.

DHS Caseworker Charged with Falsifying Information

We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and at our website StopDHR Corruption, our focus is on bringing cases of injustice in the organizations that are charged with protecting children to light. Today we are happy to report that one corrupt worker in Colorado has received a 22-count indictment against her for charges related to falsifying information. Although this worker has now been stopped, it is too late to undo the damage she has caused to families.

The Case Against Richelle Schultz
Richelle Schultz is a former Jefferson County child welfare case worker who claimed she had conducted interviews in a dozen cases in which it was later discovered no such interviews had taken place. The disgraced caseworker entered the falsified information into a database that contained information that was used to resolve cases, leaving families vulnerable as a result of her blatant lies. Schultz was formally charged with 10 counts of forgery and 12 counts of attempting to influence a public servant. Schultz was employed with the organization in a role that required her to investigate complaints of abuse and neglect between December of 2015 and July of 2016. The incidents happened between April and June of 2016.

Schultz has turned herself into the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, and her next court date will be October 2. We, Robert and Kathleen Raskin, are eager to learn what her sentence will be, but whatever it is it will not be long enough to make up for the harm she has caused.

Foster Parent Screening Process Reviewed

After recent tragedies involving foster care parents in both Perry and West Des Moines resulted in the deaths of two teenage girls who had been adopted, Iowa Department of Human Services director Jerry Foxhoven is ready to implement stricter screening processes that will write accountability into the contracts for the organizations that have been charged with screening foster families in Iowa. We, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, think it’s about time.

Making Sure They Get Good People
Democrat Senator Matt McCoy of Des Moines is concerned that agencies such as Lutheran Social Services are winning contracts and taking money to screen potential foster parents and to conduct initial home visits, and this represents a conflict of interests that could be leading to the acceptance of foster parents who should never have been admitted into the program. The fact that foster parents receive state subsidies can also lead to profit-based motives, leading people to become foster parents for a check rather than because they are truly concerned about the welfare of the children in their charge.

Senator McCoy said, “We need more transparency and we need to ensure they are the type of people we want to entrust these already damaged and abused children with,” and we, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, couldn’t agree more. Join us in our fight to hold these groups accountable and to finally put watchdog organizations into place that will help restore the rights of children and families who have been harmed by these corrupt organizations.

Kids Aging Out of Kentucky Foster Care Faced with Choices

We are Robert and Kathleen Raskin, and today we’d like to discuss a system that is helping to prevent young adults who have aged out of the foster care system from falling through the cracks. In the state of Kentucky, foster children who have reached the age of 18, which is the age of majority, have the option of recommitting to the state until they reach the age of 21. Approximately $3M per year is spent on services for foster kids between the ages of 18 and 21, and this includes many benefits like the waiving of college fees, free housing, life-skills training, one-on-one counseling, and grocery stipends. Despite this innovative program, the vast majority of foster children who age out of the system choose to go it on their own.

Family or Freedom
Why don’t more of these at-risk young adults accept the help that is offered to them? When you consider what many children go through in the foster care system, it’s not surprising that these kids are choosing to leave it despite the possibility of extended benefits. In one interview a foster mother in the state said, “You can put everything on a golden platter and hand it to them, but if it’s not family or freedom, they won’t take it.”

These individuals are seeking families and the freedom to finally not be controlled by the system, and it is clear that improvements to the system need to be made if they want to make any headway with the former foster children of the state. We hope you join us, Robert and Kathleen Raskin, in our quest to hold child protection organizations accountable. Once these issues are addressed, perhaps more of these Kansas kids will be willing to accept help.