Exploring and developing our
promise of a permanent family for every child.
What Do You Think? ©
May
2003
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Volume 4, Issue # 7
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Topic:
Imagine Permanence Being as Intuitive as Safety
Ideas: If permanency were that intuitive in child welfare services, it
would start at the agency’s front door; there would be urgency about family
connections for all children and youth; and every program, every staff would
think of it as essential to their jobs.
Discussion: Families
have resources that the “Teflon touch” of protective and other child welfare
services have been letting slide away.
As if by magic, when protective service workers touch a family, many
folks step back, some with relief and some from fear. As we move toward
placement others get pushed back. The bureaucratic hoops and often insensitive
scrutiny of willing family resources is intimidating even for the hardiest who
persevere. It takes months for non kin
and even kin to reach “certified”. If
permanency were as intuitive as safety we would find a way to grab those
friends, family members and others to keep them involved. If those folks around a child held the key to
their safety what would we do differently?
The need for a child
(including teens) to be safe is never put off until a more convenient
time. In fact it is virtually part of
everything we do for the children in our care.
We may have to make time to write up the safety plan, but we can’t
conceive of putting off insuring that a child is safe just because of the
shortage of time for the write-up.
Imagine that same urgency for a child’s family connections. What might
we do differently at each service planning meeting? How might we plan differently? Who might we
involve and how soon? If we can only
think of permanency as a child’s security, we can link the two in the intuitive
description of “safe and secure”.
When permanency is as
intuitive as safety, it’s everybody’s job.
Is safety someone else’s job because “this is a treatment program”, “an
independent living service” or “housing and career focused”? Many of our non program
staff don’t even know what permanency is for children and youth in their own
agencies, but they do know safety. How
might administrative and support staff be involved differently if they all
recognized that permanency is essential?
What will it take to make permanency as intuitive as safety?
What
Do You Think?