Between 2008 and 2011, more than
seventy children who passed through the Los Angeles County
Department of Children and Family Services have died due to child
abuse or neglect. Many of the lives and deaths of these children
have been rigorously documented by Los Angeles Times
reporter Garrett Therolf
and by the paper’s invaluable Homicide Report blog.
Spurred at last into action by the death in 2013 of a
third-grade boy,
Gabriel Fernandez, who was tortured to death by his mother and
her boyfriend in Palmdale despite at least six child abuse claims
logged against the boy’s mother with DCFS, the Los Angeles County
Board of Supervisors assembled a Blue Ribbon Commission to come up
with a series of sweeping reforms for the child welfare agency.
Preliminary recommendations coming out of the Commission at the
end of December included hiring hundreds more social workers,
yanking up the standards of training, and constructing a
cross-agency database so social workers could more adequately check
medical and criminal files of foster parents. There was even
mention of a child welfare czar, a single public administrator
anointed with the power to impose reforms across agencies. County
Supervisors assured the media and public that they were prepared to
implement wide scale changes.
And then at a meeting of the Board of Supervisors, it seems as
if the urgency—and money—to take on the Commission’s “life-saving”
reforms has dried up. The Commission’s calls for immediate action
on their preliminary recommendations were met with phrases like
“cost neutrality” and “economic feasibility” and “doing
what is being recommended with existing resources.” Ultimately,
the board
only approved one of the Commission’s initial recommendations:
to install a member of law enforcement at local DCFS offices to
expedite background searches for emergency placement foster
parents. They said they’d wait for a final report in April to
consider the rest. The Commission, in turn, explained that the
recommendations would not be changing for the final report.
Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas endorsed the Commission’s
recommendation to have a nurse attend DCFS house visits that
involve infants. And then the board voted against the motion, until
further fiscal analysis could be made.
READ MORE:http://www.theawl.com/2014/02/meet-some-of-the-children-who-died-in-los-angeles-because-the-citys-child-protection-system-is-broken
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