Sunday, January 24, 2010

Overhaul of Kansas foster-care system urged

Posted on Wed, Jan. 13, 2010 10:55 PM

By DAVID KLEPPER
The Star’s Topeka correspondent


TOPEKA Legislation to end Kansas’ privatized foster care system is the latest volley from lawmakers who say the state lacks oversight over the contractors managing such child welfare services.
Dozens of parents who lost custody of their children have complained to lawmakers in recent weeks that the state and its contractor caseworkers remove children without giving sufficient reason or the chance to appeal.
The legislation would stop the state from signing new deals with the foster care contractors. The Johnson County lawmaker behind the new legislation said it’s meant to force contractors to answer questions if they want to keep the state’s business.
“We’re certainly going to get their attention,” said Rep. Mike Kiegerl, an Olathe Republican. “There’s a lack of oversight, a lack of transparency. Nobody ought to have the kind of power these caseworkers have.”
The contractors and the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services say they’re happy to address lawmakers’ concerns.
They note that local police and judges also play a key role in deciding when a child should be removed.
SRS officials promised to investigate the complaints raised by parents. But they stand by the privatized system, which was the first of its kind in the United States when it began in 1996.
“We feel like we have made a lot of accomplishments since privatization,” said SRS spokeswoman Michelle Ponce.
Kyle Kessler, a spokesman for contractor KVC Behavioral HealthCare, said his company will “provide any information that is requested.”
To reach David Klepper, call 785-354-1388 or send e-mail to
dklepper@kcstar.com.
Posted on Wed, Jan. 13, 2010 10:55 PM

1 comment:

  1. There is simply no ethical justification whatsoever to prohibit law-abiding citizens from raising their own children. Unless both parents are incarcerated, deceased, or missing, the children should be in their custody. Anything else is nothing short of government oppression.

    80% of the children in SRS custody have law-abiding parents who could and should be raising them. Instead, the government forces these sad children to be raised by the cold, heartless, incoherent, inconsistent and unstable "system", supposedly under the guise of "helping" the families that they are actually oppressing.

    Some say, "the road to hell is paved with good intentions". When I see social workers, I see the truth in that statement.

    ReplyDelete