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The national call to action and the Texas response

The national call to action and the Texas response. The Honorable Rob Hofmann, Associate Judge, Child Protection Court of the Hill Country, and Chair, Texas Blueprint Implementation Task Force

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The national call to action and the Texas response

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  1. The national call to action andthe Texas response

  2. The Honorable Rob Hofmann, Associate Judge, Child Protection Court of the Hill Country, and Chair, Texas Blueprint Implementation Task Force • Kathleen McNaught, Assistant Staff Director of Child Welfare, American Bar Association Center on Children and the Law, and Project Director, Legal Center for Foster Care and Education Presenters

  3. The Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 • National Summit – “Child Welfare, Education and the Courts: A Collaboration to Strengthen Educational Successes of Children and Youth in Foster Care” (November 2011) • The Uninterrupted Scholars Act of 2013 The national call to action

  4. Amends Title IV (Parts B and E) of the Social Security Act Broad-reaching amendments to child welfare law Important provisions promoting education stability and enrollment for youth in care Changes child welfare law, but cannot be fully realized without collaboration from education system 42 U.S.C. 675(1)(C) Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008

  5. Amends Title IV (Parts B and E) of the Social Security Act Broad-reaching amendments to child welfare law Important provisions promoting education stability and enrollment for youth in care Changes child welfare law, but cannot be fully realized without collaboration from education system 42 U.S.C. 675(1)(C) Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008

  6. Every child’s case plan must include “assurances that the placement of the child in foster care takes into account the appropriateness of the current educational setting and the proximity to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement” Child welfare agency must coordinate with school to ensure child remains in the same school unless not in the child’s best interest Child welfare agency may use federal funds (to reimburse some of the costs for some of the children in care) to provide reasonable travel for children to remain in their school of origin Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 6

  7. If remaining in same school is not in child’s best interests, child’s case plan must include assurances that the child welfare agency and local education agency will: • provide immediate and appropriate enrollment in a new school; with • all of the educational records of the child provided to the school Fostering Connections, cont. 7

  8. Child welfare agencies have heightened responsibilities to focus on and address education issues Can’t do what they are obligated to do without access to education information and collaboration with education partners Not just critical for serving individual children; also key for system-level collaboration and approaches Bottom Line 8

  9. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and Department of Education brought together 52 state teams with state leaders from the fields of child welfare, education, and the courts Teams developed short and long-term goals to move their state collaboration forward November 2011 National Summit

  10. Effective January 14, 2013 Amends the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) Creates a new exception to FERPA that permits schools to release education records without parental consent to a representative of a state or local child welfare agency, or tribal organization Applies when the agency or organization is “legally responsible” for the child’s “care and protection” Clearly includes children in foster care living in out-of-home care Uninterrupted Scholars Act

  11. The issue of the education needs of children in foster care has been growing in emphasis at the national as well as state levels Momentum to implement change in Texas is hitting at the right time to benefit from the wave of national momentum and to serve as a state model There is a lot to learn from other jurisdictions as well Bottom Line

  12. www.fostercareandeducation.org • “Getting Started” page • Database • Listserv • Areas of Focus: Fostering Connections, Special Education, Data & Information sharing • News & Updates

  13. www. Google Search

  14. Collaboration between ABA, Casey Family Programs, and Annie E. Casey Foundation, in conjunction with the Juvenile Law Center and Education Law Center-PA • A national technical assistance resource and information clearinghouse on legal and policy matters affecting the education of children and youth in out-of-home care www.fostercareandeducation.org Listserv, Training Materials, Conference Calls, Webinars, Publications, Searchable Database

  15. 2007: Supreme Court establishes Permanent Judicial Commission for Children, Youth and Families • 2008: Fostering Connections passed by Congress • 2009: 3rdNational Judicial Leadership Summit -- Texas team adopts state action plan for improving education outcomes for foster children • 2010: Supreme Court creates Education Committee • 2012: The Texas Blueprint released • 2013: The Implementation Task Force begins its work The texas response

  16. “This ‘Wait’ has almost always meant ‘Never.’ We must come to see, with one of our distinguished jurists, that ‘justice too long delayed is justice denied.’” Martin Luther King, Jr. Letter from Birmingham Jail (1963) Justice delayed is justice denied

  17. Judicial leadership at the highest levels of the State of Texas • The Education Committee’s charge: • Identify and assess challenges, needs, and current best practices • Develop a collaborative model • Recommend • Publish The Power of a Supreme Court Order

  18. Inability to Remain in the Same School • Lack of Seamless Transitions Between Schools • Not Ready to Learn When Entering School • Lack of Equal Access and Lack of Additional Supports • More School Dropout, Truancy, and Disciplinary Actions • Not Involved and Not Empowered • Lack of Clear Education Advocates and Decision-makers • Barriers to Post-secondary Education Challenges for youth in foster care

  19. Education Committee members The Honorable Patricia Macias, Chair Judge, 388th District Court, El Paso, TX The Honorable Cheryl Shannon, Vice-Chair Judge, 305th District Court, Dallas, TX Howard Baldwin Former Commissioner, DFPS, Austin, TX Joy Baskin Director, Legal Services Division, TASB, Austin, TX Claudia Canales Attorney, Law Office of Claudia Canales P.C., Pearland, TX James B. Crow Executive Director, TASB, Austin, TX Lori Duke Clinical Professor, Children’s Rights Clinic, UT School of Law, Austin, TX Anne Heiligenstein Senior Policy Advisor, Casey Family Programs and Immediate Past Commissioner, DFPS, Washington, D.C. The Honorable Rob Hofmann Associate Judge, Child Protection Court of the Hill Country, Mason, TX April McWilliams** Former Foster Youth, CPS Youth Specialist, DFPS, El Paso, TX Carolyne Rodriguez Senior Director of Texas Strategic Consulting, Casey Family Programs, Austin, TX Robert Scott Commissioner, TEA, Austin, TX Vicki Spriggs* Chief Executive Officer, Texas CASA, Austin, TX Dr. Johnny L. Veselka Executive Director, TASA, Austin, TX *Joe Gagen (until 2012) Former Chief Executive Officer, Texas CASA, Austin, TX **Estella Sanchez (until 2010) Former Foster Youth, San Antonio, TX

  20. Members of four Subcommittees • Judges • Child Welfare • State Education Agency • CASA • Foster Parents/Child Placing Agency • ECI • Head Start • Association of School Boards • Disability Rights • Appleseed • Foster Youth Justice Project • Juvenile Probation Commission • Higher Education Coordinating Board • Workforce Board • Kids’ Attorneys • Parent Attorneys • Former Foster Youth • Casey • Children’s Shelter • Homeless Education Office • Education Attorney • Drop Out Prevention • Charter School • Association of School Administrators • Educators • School Counselors • 4-year universities • Youth services

  21. Judicial Leadership • Patricia Macias, El Paso • Cheryl Shannon, Dallas • Rob Hofmann, Child Protection Court of the Hill Country • Bonnie Hellums, Houston • Ron Pope, Richmond • Phil Vanderpool, Pampa • Karin Bonicoro, Child Protection Court of Central Texas • Angela Ellis, Houston • Richard Garcia, San Antonio • Virginia Schnarr, Sabine Valley Child Protection Court • Alyce Bondurant, North Texas Child Protection Court • Kim Brown, Fort Worth • Kevin Hart, South Plains Child Protection Court

  22. 1. Children and youth in care are entitled to remain in the same school when feasible 2. Children and youth in care experience seamless transitions between schools 3. Young children in care receive services and interventions to be ready to learn 4. Children and youth in care have the opportunity and support to fully participate in all developmentally-appropriate activities and all aspects of the education experience 5. Children and youth in care have supports to prevent school dropout, truancy, and disciplinary actions and to re-engage in the education process 6. Children and youth in care are involved and empowered and prepared to self-advocate in all aspects of their education 7. Children and youth in care have consistent adult supportto advocate for and make education decisions 8. Children and youth in care have support to enter into and complete post-secondary education Challenges become guiding principles

  23. http://texaschildrenscommission.gov/PDF/TheTexasBlueprint.pdfhttp://texaschildrenscommission.gov/PDF/TheTexasBlueprint.pdf

  24. Judicial Practices • Data and Information Sharing • Multi-Disciplinary Training • School Readiness • School Stability and Transitions • School Experience, Advocacy, and Supports • Post-Secondary Education 30 recommendations in 7 areas:

  25. Geomapping – foster homes within school districts • Expedited home studies for teachers interested in fostering • Listserv for school district foster care liaisons • GAL or CASA as the surrogate parent, if child eligible for Special Education • Judicial consideration of education during CPS hearings • Begin post-secondary education discussions in middle school • Include more education information in DFPS court reports • Multi-disciplinary training Small sampling of suggested strategies

  26. Texas TRIO • DFPS Education Portfolio to include pre-K records • Texas-specific Foster Youth and Education Website • Multi-Disciplinary Training • DFPS and school policy and practice changes • Exploring data-sharing • Identifying school districts with many foster students • Legislative changes A good start

  27. Created by Supreme Court order in December 2012 • Duration of 2 years • Develop an implementation plan, which shall include phases for implementing the prioritized recommendations and strategies • Includes: • Hon. Rob Hofmann, Child Protection Court of the Hill Country, Mason, Chair • Hon. Alyce Bondurant, Child Protection Court of North Texas, Wichita Falls • Sarah Abrahams, Casey Family Programs • Joy Baskin, Texas Association of School Boards • Cathy Cockerham, Texas CASA • Lori Duke, Clinical Professor, Children’s Rights Clinic, UT School of Law, Austin • Jenny Hinson, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Austin • Julie Wayman, Texas Education Agency • Others as identified by the Chair, including a representative of the Texas Association of School Administrators, an attorney who represents parents in  child abuse and neglect proceedings, a youth formerly in foster care, and a representative of a child placement organization Implementation Task Force

  28. Judiciary • Child Protection Services • Educators and School Administrators • Parents • Children and youth • Community • CASA Who needs to be at the table to overcome these barriers?

  29. What should you take from Texas Blueprint and the collaboration begun by the Education Committee? • We want your help. Where the rubber meets the road….

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