‘Invest in Families Instead’: A Renewed Call to Divest the Child Welfare System
In the popular imagination, the story of child welfare in America goes like this: Acting on a report of abuse or neglect, a representative of the agency (which may go by the name 鈥渃hild welfare,鈥 鈥渃hild protective services鈥 or 鈥渇amily services鈥) visits a family, determines the veracity of the report and, if necessary, finds the victims a new home with a loving foster family. End of story.

Unfortunately, this seemingly positive result comes at a high cost. Family separation is devastating. after finds high levels of developmental and psychological problems in the lives of children who have been taken from their parents鈥攁nd the trauma is both more severe and more common with Black children.
The human cost is great, and so is the financial toll. While states and cities generally administer family services, it鈥檚 telling that the federal government spends on foster care and adoption than reuniting families.
The story we tell ourselves leaves out a lot, and placement with a foster family doesn鈥檛 always result in a happy ending.
A new project launched by the (CSSP) in conjunction with the , called , seeks to highlight the racial inequities in the existing system and to bring about structural change. Kristen Weber and Alan Dettlaff from upEND share about the initiative, especially as it concerns babies and toddlers. (According to , almost 200,000 children, or more than a quarter of those in the system, are three years old or younger.)
鈥淎ll of our systems suffer under a racist society,鈥 says Weber, CSSP鈥檚 director of Equity, Inclusion and Justice. 鈥淲e formed upEND to dismantle the current child welfare system that is entrenched with racist history, policies and practices. And we have committed to working with parents, advocates and others to reimagine new ways to keep children safe and support families without relying on interventions that are coercive and can result in family separation.鈥
Weber, an attorney with years of experience representing children in the child welfare, juvenile justice and educational systems, says upEND鈥檚 design work involves not just listening to the voices of those affected but partnering with them on reimagining systems.
The 鈥渇oundational intervention鈥 of the current system, University of Houston鈥檚 Dettlaff explains, is taking kids away from their families. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a myth that the system is helpful, and the media perpetuates the myth by highlighting only the extreme cases.鈥 He acknowledges that instances of brutality and deprivation exist but maintains that the majority of cases represent neglect that is better addressed by means other than separation, which should be considered a last resort.

鈥淲e know that neglect largely stems from poverty,鈥 he says, 鈥渟o direct payments to parents could be more efficient and beneficial than stipends paid to foster parents.鈥
UpEND is asking existential questions: Why does state intervention come first? Why not partner with families and communities?
鈥淐hildren belong with their parents,鈥 says Dettlaff. As currently configured, the system 鈥渃auses harm to children every day.鈥 He notes that Children and Family Services 鈥渁cts as an arm of the police鈥濃攁 circumstance that, for many observers, links it with larger systems plagued by racism.
Weber and Dettlaff are two of six authors of a recent paper in the Journal of Public Child Welfare with the blunt title It presents damning evidence of a chain of consequences jeopardizing the well-being and long-term prospects for Black children.
- Black children are more likely to be reported for suspected maltreatment than white children.
- Allegations involving Black children are more likely to proceed to investigation and significantly more likely to be substantiated than those involving white children.
- Black children are more likely to be removed from their homes and placed into foster care than white children.
Too often, what we desperately want to believe as the 鈥渆nd of the story鈥 is a mirage. found that young children involved in the welfare system, those most in need of developmentally appropriate education and care, often are denied these supports.
In the alternative orientation promoted by upEND, communities are 鈥渇irst responders鈥 for families in crisis. This approach is patterned after Black and Native American communities that historically have shown resilience and resourcefulness in addressing maltreatment, often when government agencies have turned a blind eye. By shifting the government鈥檚 involvement upstream to providing the benefits and work supports proven to reduce maltreatment, upEND鈥檚 policy recommendations could be both more humane and more cost-effective.
UpEND was already in the works before the current wave of Black Lives Matter protests and calls to defund or abolish the police in the wake of George Floyd鈥檚 death, but the climate gives new momentum to a mission that goes back to Brenda Scott鈥檚 1994 book Out of Control: Who’s Watching Our Child Protection Agencies, which called for scrapping the system. Dorothy Roberts鈥檚 Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare (2001) equipped activists and advocates to understand the racial dimensions of the crisis.
鈥淭he word abolition can be scary,鈥 Dettlaff acknowledges. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not just about tearing down. It鈥檚 about creating new systems, new structure, a new society.鈥
This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 社区黑料. Learn more here.