For
Immediate Release
February 17, 2003 |
Contact
NASW Public
Affairs Office
Lahne Mattas-Curry
Cynthia Woodside
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NASW
Supports Legislation Providing College Loan Forgiveness
for Social Workers in Child Welfare
Washington — The
National Association of Social Workers (NASW) commends
Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-OH) and Senators
Mike DeWine (R-OH) and John D. “Jay” Rockefeller, IV (D-WV)
for introducing legislation targeted towards bringing more
highly trained professional social workers into child welfare
while reducing the high turnover among social workers already
in the field.
According
to NASW Executive Director Elizabeth J. Clark, PhD, ACSW,
MPH, “This legislation is long overdue,
and NASW—representing
150,000
social workers—thanks
the Members for recognizing the need to attract and keep
more highly trained professional social workers within
the field of child welfare.”
The public
has high expectations for child welfare workers, yet severe
labor shortages and high turnover
rates make it difficult for states to hire and maintain
a workforce that can adequately care for the most vulnerable
children.
“Vulnerable children and families ultimately
suffer the consequences of limited resources. By providing
loan forgiveness, this legislation takes a significant
step toward building a more effective child welfare system—one
that can deliver on the promise of improving child safety,
permanence, and well being,” Clark adds.
A survey
conducted by NASW in 1994 on students' career choices found
that students who were not attracted
to the child welfare field generally cited low salaries,
large caseloads, insufficient opportunities for professional
growth, and the system's lack of resources and effectiveness. In
terms of promising incentives, the most frequent responses,
particularly among students who were not planning child
welfare careers, focused on the forgiveness of student
loans and better salaries.
Recently,
NASW, along with the Child Welfare League of America (CWLA),
urged states to commit to hiring
an adequate number of social workers to ensure that children
and families involved in the child welfare system received
the attention and services they deserve. They were also
asked to commit to creating reasonable caseloads and workloads
with adequate compensation. Currently, the average child
welfare worker caseload is twice that recommended by recognized
national standards of practice. NASW also urged states
to compensate workers for formal education and reward them
for valuable experience or participating in continuing
education or certification programs designed to improve
job performance.
Clark
is hopeful that this legislation will encourage social
workers who otherwise may have gone into
other fields to consider child welfare. “Our children
are the most vulnerable citizens and it’s our responsibility
to take care of them to the best of our ability,” she concludes.
For more information regarding social workers
in child welfare, or the legislation, please contact NASW
Public Affairs at media@naswdc.org.
The
National Association of Social Workers (NASW), in Washington,
DC, is the largest
membership organization of professional social workers
with 153,000 members. It promotes, develops and protects
the practice of social work and social workers. NASW
also seeks to enhance the well being of individuals,
families and communities through its work and through
its advocacy
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