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US: State scapegoats parents, workers in New Jersey child
welfare scandal
By Robert Berezny and John Levine
18 November 2003
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The discovery of four badly malnourished boys in a foster home
in Collingswood, New Jerseya working-class inner suburb
of Camdenhas plunged the state child welfare agency, the
Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS), into a crisis that
has received national attention.
The case began when 19-year-old Bruce Jackson was found foraging
through a neighbors trash in search of food following the
neighbors call to police in the early morning hours of October
10. A police search of the house where young Jackson lived led
to the discovery of three other boys, who by some accounts looked
like famine victims, generally emaciated and with distended stomachs.
When first removed from the home, none of the boys, ages nine
to 19, stood more than four feet tall or weighed more than 45
pounds. The children were removed from the custody of their adoptive
parents, Raymond and Vanessa Jackson, and hospitalized.
The Jackson case is the latest in a series of DYFS abuse scandals
in New Jersey. It came to light only days after the state had
completed a case-by-case review of nearly 14,000 casesmandated
by a class-action settlement stemming from a 1999 lawsuit filed
by an advocacy group, Childrens Rights Inc. of New York.
The state announced that it had found only 31 cases requiring
further review. None of them involved the seven adopted and foster
children who lived in the Jackson home.
After interviews with the boys, the police claimed that the
refrigerator in the Jackson home had been kept locked, and that
they were fed a meager diet of pancake batter and cereal. None
of the boys attended public school, and it was also reported that
none had any seen a doctor or dentist in five years. Moreover,
it was established that DYFS workers had logged 38 visits to the
Jackson residence in the previous two years, including 10 in the
previous eight months, and had reported nothing amiss. In fact,
the Jacksons were only days away from adopting a foster girl who
had been in their care.
The parents had apparently made no attempt to hide the condition
of the boys, bringing them regularly to activities at the church
they attended. They told investigators what they had previously
told visiting caseworkers as well as members of their church,
that the boys had eating disorders and other medical problems.
On October 27, as the case rapidly ballooned into another statewide
scandal, nine DYFS caseworkers and supervisors who were connected
with the Jackson casesome of whom had never even seen the
boys or the Jackson homewere suspended without pay pending
their firing. On the following day, Bruce and Vanessa Jackson
were arrested on assault and child endangerment charges.
The reaction of state officials was an attempt to cover up
the governments responsibility by unloading full blame onto
the family and state caseworkers. Press conferences were held
and ringing denunciations issued. New Jersey Governor James McGreevey,
having only recently weathered a DYFS crisis this past February
when a seven-year-old Newark boy was found dead in a filthy basement
along with two other badly abused boys, lashed out at DYFS caseworkers:
What rational human being can conduct a safety assessment,
look at children, the four boys in dire circumstances, and accept
the representation of the parents that they have eating disorders?
Its ludicrous. Its nuts.
Similarly, Gwendolyn Harris, head of the NJ Department of Human
Services, remarked: Its deplorable. Its unacceptable.
I am faced with the understanding that I have staff that is either
incompetent, uncaring, or who have falsified records. The
states leading newspapers trumpeted the arrests of each
of the parents on over a dozen charges apiece, along with the
multiple firings at DYFS.
Following their suspension, the caseworkers were called to
a closed-door meeting in the State capitol where the disciplinary
charges lodged against them, including loafing, idleness,
and neglect of duty, among others, were read aloud
individually and presented on official forms that read you
neglected your responsibilities for clients, followed by
the boys initials. The hearing had all the trappings of
a drumhead proceeding, held only for the purpose of publicly scapegoating
workers and supervisors. At least two of the workers at the hearing
had not been involved with the Jackson case since 2000.
Within days, a House Ways and Means subcommittee in Washington
got into the act, holding a hearing at which big business politicians
from both parties could add their expressions of outrage
to those of the New Jersey Governor and other state officials.
Whatever the failings of the caseworkers involved, the comments
and actions of the federal and state authorities reeked of hypocrisy.
The level of hysteria in the official response was directly proportional
to the authorities own responsibility for the failure of
the child welfare system expressed in the Jackson case.
Investigations of past abuse cases, and especially the class
action suit filed by Childrens Rights in 1999, have repeatedly
shown that DYFS workers caseloads are far too high, and
that the workers lack the experience and training necessary to
deal with the problems they face. Eight out of 10 caseworkers,
frontline supervisors and casework supervisors have less than
five years experience; and one in four caseworkers is a
trainee with less than one year of experience. The caseworker
who was in the most direct contact with the Jacksons at the time
the scandal erupted was a 29-year-old woman in her first year
as a full-time social worker.
The recommended number of cases for a single DYFS worker is
15; the statewide average in New Jersey for this year is 33. Experts
appointed by the New Jersey Legislature, the same body that publicly
humiliated the nine DYFS employees, determined that DYFS needs
over 1,000 additional caseworkers, supervisors and aides to function
properly, and at least 300 more workers just to bring caseload
averages in line with national standards.
Despite the media vilification of the Jackson parents, the
states case against them is by no means firmly established.
Though the boys have gained weight since being removed from the
home, several experts have contradicted the states accusation
that the parents deliberately neglected the boys. There are indications
that the parents may merely have been incapable of dealing with
the boys medical conditions.
Members of the immediate family, including their adopted children,
have spoken in the parents defense, and the pastor at the
New Testament church that the Jackson family attended said that
the children regularly participated in church activities and appeared
energetic. He has also seconded the Jacksons claims that
the boys had complicated medical conditions. Medical experts noted
that, while malnutrition certainly played a factor in their overall
condition, the fact that the boys have gained weight does not
necessarily mean they didnt have medical conditions or eating
disorders. The states claim that genetic testing on the
boys had ruled out the possibility of eating disorders was also
swiftly refuted by a Columbia University professor.
The principal problems in the Jackson caseall of them
dismissed as the individual responsibility of the parents and
caseworkershave their roots in the social catastrophe created
by poverty, budget cuts and social polarization in New Jersey
and throughout the US.
The boys, and many thousands of other children like them, end
up in the foster care system in the first place because the combination
of economic and social problems facing their families proves insurmountable.
The disintegration and forcible dissolution of families produces
the need for a growing system of foster care, in New Jersey and
elsewhere.
DYFS, which will investigate a childs living conditions
on the request of the childs teacher, for instance, has
the authority to remove children from the custody of parents if
it concludes that they have been abused or that the parents cannot
properly provide for them. Parents who are unemployed, who do
not have access to health care, who cannot earn enough to pay
for basic needs, who are unable to devote enough time to their
child because of job pressures, whose psychological tolerance
for the frustrations of raising of a child is instead consumed
by the stress of being unable to make ends meetare not offered
meaningful assistance, but are sometimes confronted with losing
their family.
The growing child welfare scandals are the direct result of
the systematic weakening of the foster care system by the very
same officials who now feign outrage over its latest publicized
failure. Since the 1990s, the prevailing approach to social
problems such as child welfare, public assistance, and school
retention and graduation rates, to name a few, is to simply make
them invisible by manipulating the manner in which they are measured.
Much as welfare rolls have been slashed by forcing
the poor into minimum wage jobs or alternate means of survival,
and much as high school dropout statistics and graduation rates
are improved in urban schools by forcing students
out of school and then not counting them, so the states have dealt
with the growing need for foster care by packaging financial incentives
on both the federal and state level that will make it possible
to expedite adoptions out of the foster care system. This enables
the state both to save money and also to hide the extent of the
crisis
In 1997, a federal law offering $6,000 for every adoption a
state could achieve in the excess of the number they completed
the year before went into effect. Meant to encourage states to
move children more speedily from foster care to adoption, it had
precisely that effect: in New Jersey, annual adoptions doubled
from 621 in 1998 to 1,364 in 2002.
Many of these adoptions, however, were carried out in a way
that risked new and worse problems. The Southern Adoption Resource
Center, the DYFS office that oversaw the Jackson case as well
as all other cases in six southern New Jersey counties, had been
closed in 2002 for violations of the agencys own internal
regulations. It failed to interview all family members prior to
adoption and did not conduct follow-up interviews every six months
as required. It was allowed to continue operating under a temporary
certificate, and it is likely that, given their heavy caseloads,
workers were unable to keep up with these standards. Given the
growth in the states adoption numbers, and the fact that
$6,000 was collected for each one placed over the year before,
the state was benefiting financially from the offices practices,
and had little interest in enforcing more rigorous procedures.
The state itself offers several hundred dollars per month for
each adopted or foster child under the age of 18. One foreseeable
outcome of this policyespecially given the level of caseworker
overload limiting the ability of the workers to seriously evaluate
the adopting families and conduct appropriate follow-up workis
that children often end up in families that are least prepared
to give them what they require. Under conditions of deepening
social deprivation facing large segments of the population, some
of these families are completely dependent upon these state grants
for their survival.
While the exact circumstances in this case may not yet be clear,
this element definitely appears to be a factor in the Jackson
story. The $374 to $473 per month that the Jacksons received for
housing, food and transportation for each of their five adopted
and foster children under age 18 was the only source of income
supporting an 11-member household. As it was, the Jackson family
was in dire financial shape. With no adults employed, the family
owed some $9,000 in back rent on their house, had lost gas service
and had been without electricity since late spring of this year.
See Also:
US: More than 1 million more in poverty in 2002
[13 September 2003]
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