ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN AND FAMILIES
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING |
SUBJECT: |
Oversight of Foster Care Services |
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PURPOSE: |
To examine the oversight and quality of foster care services delivered by local social services districts and contracted voluntary agencies. |
Thursday, November 13, 2008 |
Thursday, December 11, 2008 |
In New York State foster care services are state supervised and locally administered. The Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) is charged with oversight of foster care services provided by local social services districts, which may provide those services directly or through contracts with private agencies, also known as voluntary agencies. Services provided to foster children and their families are often referred to as "case planning services." Case planning includes, but is not limited to, providing services or making the appropriate referrals to children and family members, ensuring foster children are receiving timely and appropriate health and behavioral health care services, supervising family visitation, monitoring foster homes to ensure that children are safe in placement, certifying of foster homes and parents, assisting in the adoption process, providing independent living services, assisting foster care youth in obtaining appropriate educational services and/or scholarships, entering of progress notes, development of appropriate permanency goals for the children, attending court appearances and completing permanency reports. These services are essential in ensuring that foster children receive a high quality of care and experience the best outcomes possible. A few local districts throughout the state choose to provide case planning services to children and families through "direct foster care" instead of contracting with a voluntary agency. The trend statewide has been for local districts to move away from direct foster care and to assign case planning responsibility to voluntary agencies. Currently the New York City Administration for Children's Services (ACS) contracts out to voluntary agencies to handle case planning for the entire foster care population. The quality of case planning services a foster child and family receive, whether from a district or voluntary agency, directly impacts the health, well-being and permanency of that child. As ACS continues to expand Improved Outcomes for Children (IOC) and place additional responsibility on voluntary agencies, monitoring of these agencies is increasingly important. While local districts and voluntary agencies perform much needed services to thousands of foster children throughout the state, OCFS, ACS, and child welfare advocates have consistently reported on the varying degrees of case planning performance. Measuring, tracking and holding districts and agencies accountable for the quality of the services they deliver is essential. Doing so requires that OCFS and local social services districts have detailed insight into the quality of care foster children and families are receiving. While local districts may employ various performance measurements tools, OCFS is ultimately responsible for ensuring that these tools are adequate and that high performance standards are met by districts and agencies throughout the state. The quality of care children receive while in foster care is vital to their ability to live happy and healthy lives. Therefore, it is imperative that local districts hold voluntary agencies accountable, and that OCFS hold local districts and voluntary agencies accountable, for the quality of services foster children are receiving. Despite some agencies across the state reportedly performing better over time, advocates continue to report that foster children are not receiving medical services, foster parents are overburdened and under-prepared, children continue to age out of the foster care system into homelessness, and casework documents fail to provide necessary information about foster children. In summation, foster children continue to fall through the cracks. The Assembly Committee on Children & Families and the Assembly Subcommittee on Foster Care are interested in hearing from OCFS, local social services districts including ACS, court officials, law guardians, advocates and foster care agencies on the mechanisms currently used to monitor the quality of foster care services delivered by voluntary agencies, as well as local districts, and where access to and delivery of services can be improved. Foster parents and children are also welcome to share their perspective on the quality of foster care services they have experienced. Please see below for a list of subjects to which witnesses may direct their testimony. Persons wishing to present pertinent testimony to the Committee at the above hearing should complete and return the enclosed reply form as soon as possible. It is important that the reply form be fully completed and returned so that persons may be notified in the event of emergency postponement or cancellation. Oral testimony will be limited to 10 minutes. In preparing the order of witnesses, the Committee will attempt to accommodate individual requests to speak at particular times in view of special circumstances. These requests should be made on the attached reply form or communicated to Committee staff as early as possible. In the absence of a request, witnesses will be scheduled in the order in which reply forms are postmarked. Ten copies of any prepared testimony should be submitted at the hearing registration desk. The Committee would appreciate advance receipt of prepared statements. In order to further publicize these hearings, please inform interested parties and organizations of the Committee's interest in hearing testimony from all sources. In order to meet the needs of those who may have a disability, the Assembly, in accordance with its policy of non-discrimination on the basis of disability, as well as the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), has made its facilities and services available to all individuals with disabilities. For individuals with disabilities, accommodations will be provided, upon reasonable request, to afford such individuals access and admission to Assembly facilities and activities. |
SELECTED ISSUES TO WHICH WITNESSES MAY DIRECT THEIR TESTIMONY:
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PUBLIC HEARING REPLY FORM Persons wishing to present testimony at the public hearing Oversight of Foster Care Services are requested to complete this reply form as soon as possible and mail it to:
Jennifer Marrero |
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I plan to attend the following public hearing on Oversight of Foster Care Services to be conducted by the Assembly Committee on Children and Families and the Assembly Subcommittee on Foster Care on November 13, 2008. | |
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I plan to attend the following public hearing on Oversight of Foster Care Services to be conducted by the Assembly Committee on Children and Families and the Assembly Subcommittee on Foster Care on December 11, 2008. | |
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I plan to make a public statement at the hearing on November 13, 2008. My statement will be limited to 10 minutes, and I will answer any questions which may arise. I will provide 10 copies of my prepared statement. | |
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I plan to make a public statement at the hearing on December 11, 2008. My statement will be limited to 10 minutes, and I will answer any questions which may arise. I will provide 10 copies of my prepared statement. | |
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I will address my remarks to the following subjects: |
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I do not plan to attend the above hearing. | |
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I would like to be added to the Committee mailing list for notices and reports. | |
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I would like to be removed from the Committee mailing list. | |
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I will require assistance and/or handicapped accessibility information. Please specify the type of assistance required: |
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