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November
20, 2002
Dear
Governor:
As
you enter the next four years of your administration,
you have the opportunity to further
enhance you state’s efforts to combat child abuse and
neglect. While you will be making decisions about
allocating scarce resources,
empowering
the child welfare system to protect every vulnerable child
in your state should be a top priority. The Child Welfare
League of America and the National Association of Social
Workers urge you to pay close attention to the struggles
your state’s child welfare system faces in its efforts
to care for abused and neglected children and their families,
and
provide the resources necessary to ensure that the needs
of your state’s most vulnerable children are met.
Public
child welfare agencies make life and death decisions for
children and families with complex needs while striving
to meet extensive legal mandates. Unfortunately, there
are limited resources allocated for achieving mandates
and strict federal penalties and law suits awaiting agencies
that do not.
In
recent years, there have been a number of high profile
reports of child fatalities and other tragedies for children
and families involved with the child welfare system. Often,
these high profile tragedies resulted in litigation and
increased public scrutiny of the system. The persistence
of preventable child fatalities, reports that children
have been lost while in custody of the state, and continuing
difficulties finding permanent living arrangements for
children and youth within reasonable timeframes, are all
indicators that this nation has not yet made an adequate
investment in protecting children and youth. Vulnerable
children and families should not suffer the consequences
of limited resources devoted to their futures.
Society
has high expectations for frontline human service workers,
yet severe labor shortages make it difficult for child
welfare agencies to hire and maintain an adequate workforce.
Child welfare positions are particularly demanding and
stressful, often involving unreasonable workloads and
low pay in comparison to jobs in other sectors that require
comparable amounts of education and responsibility. Consequently,
it is difficult to attract the most qualified employees
with professional training and experience, and turnover
and vacancy rates among child welfare agencies are often
alarmingly high.
State
public agencies across the country report:
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An
average vacancy rate of 12.9% for state agency child
welfare workers, with one state reporting a maximum
vacancy rate of 91.3%. The average turnover rate is
11.5% for child welfare workers in state agencies, with
one state reporting turnover as high as 28.6%.
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An
average vacancy rate of 8.5% for Child Protective Services
Investigators, with one state reporting a maximum vacancy
rate of 45.5%. The average turnover rate is 15.6% for
Child Protective Service Investigators, with one state
reporting a turnover as high as 54.5%.
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An
average vacancy rate of 4.1% for supervisory positions,
with one state reporting a maximum vacancy rate of 32.6%.
The average turnover rate is 8.4% for supervisory positions,
with one state reporting turnover as high as 30.8%.
Many
public child welfare agencies have responded by entering
into contracts that transfer responsibility for providing
some, or all, services to private nonprofit child welfare
agencies. These private agencies, however, are facing similar
workforce issues and often are unable to match the salaries
and benefits offered by public agencies. Consequently, private
agencies report even higher vacancy and turnover rates than
public agencies.
Where
does this leave the children state and county child welfare
agencies are charged with protecting? Excessive caseloads
that average twice the number of cases recommended by
recognized national standards of practice and insufficient
supervision and training, make it difficult to adequately
investigate allegations of child abuse and neglect, make
placement decisions insuring permanency and safety in
children’s lives, and provide the treatment and monitoring
required to protect these children. As a result, child
welfare systems face the crisis of child deaths and children
“lost” within the system with more frequency and become
preoccupied with addressing these crises rather than striving
to improve a struggling system.
As
Governor, you have the power to improve this situation.
Take the steps needed to insure that children in your
state’s child welfare system are cared for as you would
provide for your own children. Commit to hire an adequate
number of social workers and other child welfare professionals
to ensure that the children and families involved in the
child welfare system receive the attention and services
they deserve. Commit to reasonable caseloads and workloads,
with adequate compensation. Compensate workers for formal
education and reward them for valuable experience or participation
in continuing education or certification programs designed
to improve job performance. Make a long term, state-wide
commitment to meet national standards of service.
We
encourage you to make child welfare one of the first areas
of focus of your new term. Both CWLA and NASW stand ready
to support you as you take on this challenge.
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Shay
Bilchik
President/CEO
Child Welfare League of America
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Elizabeth
J. Clark, PhD, ACSW, MPH
Executive Director
National Association of Social Workers |
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CWLA • 440 First Street, NW • Third Floor •
Washington, DC 20001-2085
202/638-2952 • Fax: 202/638-4004 • www.cwla.org
NASW • 750 First Street NE, Suite 700, Washington, DC
20002-4241
(202) 408-8600 • www.socialworkers.org |
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