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Report: Washington State's Family First Policy Working

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015   

SEATTLE - When children can't live with their parents, Washington's "Family First" policy is to place them with another family - either with relatives or a foster family - and it's working.

According to a new Annie E. Casey Foundation report, 94 percent of the more than 10,000 Washington children in the state system are placed in family settings.

But Lynn Urvina, who serves as a Kinship Navigator, said a foster family receives from $400 to $900 a month per child - while a relative receives no more than $305 a month and must be low-income to qualify. She said that makes it tough for some families to step up.

"They want to take them in, but it gets to the point where Grandma's not going and buying her blood pressure medicine or whatever she has to do - not paying her power bill - so that she can buy food and clothes for the kids," Urvina said. "And she shouldn't have to do that."

The Casey Foundation report says child-welfare agencies should prioritize recruiting, retaining and supporting kinship caregivers. It says placement within a child's family helps the child stay connected to his or her culture and, often, to siblings as well.

Kinship Navigators around the state help people who end up with relatives' children learn how to navigate the child-welfare system.

Urvina, who also is raising a granddaughter, said they're less likely than foster parents to have social workers involved and more likely to have to deal with the court system.

"I meet the most amazing families," she said. "I mean, sometimes they're really discouraged, and they're struggling. But if I can encourage them along the way and connect them with resources, and sometimes, just explain ... what it is they have to do to meet the requirements to get a benefit or something."

Alternatives for getting help with training and expenses were among the topics at the Pacific Northwest Caregivers Conference in Grand Mound over the weekend.

Today is Kinship Caregivers Day in Washington, acknowledging the role of relatives in raising children.

The report is online at aecf.org. A list of Kinship Navigators is at dshs.wa.gov.


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