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A new study shows health disparities cost Texas billions of dollars; Senate rejects impeachment articles against Mayorkas, ending trial against Cabinet secretary; Iowa cuts historical rural school groups.

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Report: KY Foster Youth Need Better Supports for Success

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Wednesday, November 14, 2018   

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - New research reveals the instability faced by Kentucky young people in foster care, and the negative outcomes they may experience in their transitions to adulthood.

"Fostering Youth Transitions," a data brief released Tuesday by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, showed that moving in and out of foster-care placements, unstable placement settings and leaving foster care without finding a permanent family can create barriers to well-being.

These kids desperately need adults in their lives to help guide them into adulthood, said Nikki Thornton, director of program operations for True Up in Louisville, which assists young people as they transition out of the system.

"So, not having those supports in place - with housing, with education, with employment, with just social skills - across the board," she said, "you see negative outcomes when our young people don't have support people in their life as they're going through these transitions."

About 31 percent of Kentucky children in foster care are ages 14 to 18, or slightly more than 4,000. The data show 69 percent of them will age out of care.

Challenges faced by foster youths are exacerbated by race, since young people of color enter the foster-care system at higher rates than their white peers and are more likely to experience three or more placements, said Leslie Gross, director of the foundation's Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative, which works specifically to improve outcomes for foster youths ages 14 and older.

"All young people, regardless of race, ethnicity or ZIP code, deserve the relationships, resources and opportunities to ensure their well-being and success," she said, "and so we know that we must work with communities and other stakeholders to change what is happening for youths of color."

Thornton noted that this data is the first of its kind, and said she hopes it sparks a conversation about the need to advance policies and practices that can give foster youths their best shot at life.

"Our community cannot help them, or help us as advocates, if they don't know the need," she said. "If they don't really understand that - just because on paper it looks really good, but they don't really understand all these other misses. There is a real need to help our foster youth, and I think a lot of people would want to do that, if they just knew."

According to the data, 80 percent of Kentucky foster youths get their high school diploma or GED, compared with 76 percent nationally. However, just 33 percent of Kentucky's foster youths have found employment, compared with about 50 percent nationally.

The report is online at aecf.org.


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