30 United States The Economist June 11th 2022
Fostercare
Relative safety
D
anielkelly, anassistantprofessorof
stemeducationatTexasTechUniver
sity,spentnearlytwoyearsina carehome
asa teenager.Whenhewas 17 hisgrand
mother,whohadlongsoughtcustody,took
himin.Shemadesurehefinishedschool
andhelpedhimstarta businessandbuy
hisfirsthouse.“Ifshehadnotinterceded,
thereisnowayI wouldbewhereI am,”he
says.“Icannotimaginea scenarioinwhich
myoutcomewouldhavebeenpromising.”
Amongthemanywaysinwhichchil
drenincaregetofftoa badstartisintheir
education.Abouthalfdonotfinishhigh
school.Only3%geta collegedegree.Living
witha relative,however,especiallyatthe
agewhena childismovingoutofthecare
systembuthasnotyetfinishededucation,
canmakea crucialdifference.
Researchshowsthatchildrenwhohave
been removed from their parents but
broughtupbyrelativesdobetterinmyriad
otherways.Theyarelesslikelytohavea
criminalrecord orbecome homeless(as
morethan aquarterofthose who have
beeninfostercareorinstitutionsdo).Re
searchalsosuggestswhythatmightbeso.
Relativesarelesslikelythanfosterparents
torequestthatpoorlybehavedchildrenbe
removed.Andtheyaremorelikelytotake
ingroupsofsiblings,who areroutinely
separatedinthecaresystem.
About424,000childrenareincarein
America,mostofthemwithfosterparents.
Becausedemandforfosterparentsexceeds
supplyinmany places,recruitment and
vettingcanbeinadequate. Toomany chil
drenendupingrouphomes,meant as a
stopgap,forthelongterm.
A growingawarenessthatfamily place
mentsarepreferablehasprompted federal
andstatelawswhichsaytheyshould be
prioritised.Yetit doesnothappen enough.
CaseyFamilyProgrammes,a charity that
workstoreducetheneedforfoster care in
America,saysnearlya thirdofchildren re
movedfromthecareoftheirparents are
placedwithrelatives.Butina handful of
states,fewerthan10%areplaced with fam
ily.Whydoesit nothappenmore?
Grandmotherknowsbest
Thefirstproblemconcernsthe way “kin
ship”careisregulated.Ifthearrangement
isnotformalisedinsomeway, relatives
cannotaccessthefundingandother sup
portgiventofosterparents.The majority
ofchildrenwhoaretakenintocare come
fromlowincomefamilies,which helps to
explainwhyblackchildrenmake up 14% of
thechildpopulationbut23%ofthe foster
carepopulation.
Onesolutionistomakeit easier for rel
ativestobecomelicensedasfoster parents.
Thiscanbeanonerousprocess,some parts
ofwhichmakelittlesensewhen applied to
relatives.Arequirementtoprovide a cer
tainamountoflivingspace,for example,
shouldnotpreventawomanliving in a
modesttwobedroomflatfrom taking in
her four grandchildren. Such stipulations
make it likelier that a child will be separat
ed from siblings and end up with strang
ers, miles away from each other and from
home. Some states now issue provisional
licences that allow relatives to take in chil
dren while becoming licensed; others have
waived some licensing requirements for
relatives altogether.
Sixto Cancel, the founder and chief ex
ecutive of Think of Us, a nonprofit group
that works with children in care, says even
when requirements are loosened many
relativecarers are hesitant about becom
ing licensed foster carers. It puts them at
the mercy of a court system that too often
makes bad decisions, he says. He cites the
example of a grandmother in Texas who
had her six grandchildren taken away after
a court decided she was unable to cope.
After a long court battle she has just got
three of them back. It is better, he says, to
pay relatives as if they were foster parents
without requiring them to become li
censed (as happens in some places).
Poverty itself can be a reason why chil
dren are removed from their families.
America has one of the highest childpov
erty rates in the industrialised world. Ma
ny people who work with children say it is
commonly assumed that a child living in a
house in which the electricity has been
turned off or the fridge is empty should be
removed. It would often be better (and
cheaper) to provide financial support, says
Mr Sixto, including to those family mem
bers who might take a child in. Tracking
down relatives and establishing that they
are able to look after children takes time
and effort. In many cases it also means
finding them extra help.
Mr Sixto has direct experience of this.
When he was 11 months old he and his four
siblings were removed from their mother
and separated from one another. Mr Sixto
went through a brief and disastrous adop
tion, followed by periods of homelessness
and foster care. Later, as an adult, he
tracked down his mother’s case notes. He
reads them often, he says, and sees noth
ing in them that suggests he and his sib
lings would not have been better off if they
had stayed with her and she had been given
“more support and less judgment”.
Yet it was another experience that con
vinced Mr Sixto that authorities should
make greater efforts to find relatives of
children who are taken into care. Three
years ago he discovered he had several
aunts and uncles on his father’s side. He
had no idea they existed. They had no idea
he existed either (nor did his father). One
of his aunts, who lived only 58 miles
(93km) away from one of the foster homes
in which he had spent several years, had
fostered and adoptedseveral children, he
learned. She toldhimshe would have done
the same for him.n
WASHINGTON, DC
Why care systems should strive harder to keep children in the family
Just one of the 424,000 in America