Texas' Foster Care System Is Grossly Mismanaged
"These things are just so inexcusable," a judge said. "It's hard to understand."

At a Wednesday court hearing, Judge Janis Graham Jack of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas sharply criticized the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) for poor practices within its residential foster care facilities, including the mishandling of psychotropic drug prescriptions for children in custody.
The DFPS has been coming under scrutiny in recent years for alleged mismanagement and abuse within its foster care facilities. "Does this not set off alarm bells for you that…you all cannot monitor the psychotropic drugs?" Jack asked DFPS Commissioner Stephanie Muth.
A court monitor's report released late last month found numerous instances of DFPS residential foster care facilities violating state guidelines for giving children psychotropic drugs, at times prescribing medications wantonly and at others failing to refill children's prescriptions. The violations ranged from failure to give children medication at the right time of day to several cases where children were given medication only recommended for use in adults. According to the report, "numerous children at multiple sites were prescribed four or more psychotropics," which state guidelines list as a criterion for a medical review, yet only 28 percent of these had ever received such a review of their medication.
"I need a plan. They are not getting medications. They are overmedicated," Jack told Muth on Wednesday. "They don't have adequate diagnosis or reasons for these drugs. Just because your placements don't know how to handle children doesn't mean they should be drugged like this to the point the monitors said some of them are almost catatonic."
Improper medication management hasn't been the only issue plaguing DFPS facilities. Court monitors made 10 reports of abuse and neglect following site inspections last year. However, several of these allegations appear to have been insufficiently investigated.
"These things are just so inexcusable. It's hard to understand," Jack said. "I can't say and neither can the monitors that you will find that there was abuse in these cases. The problem is they're not adequately investigated."
For several years, the DFPS has been coming under fire for mismanagement. In 2015, Jack ruled that Texas had violated the constitutional rights of foster children by unreasonably putting them in harm's way while in DFPS custody. Since that ruling, Jack has frequently pushed the state to do more to ensure the safety of children held in foster care, holding state officials in contempt of court on multiple occasions, according to The Texas Tribune.
A new measure being considered by the state Legislature takes scrutiny of DFPS facilities into account. Under House Bill 730, DFPS agents would have to notify parents of their rights before beginning an investigation, and the agency would also face new limits on when it can encourage parents to sign "child safety plans" (which critics call coercive). The bill's author, state Rep. James Frank (R–Wichita Falls), "said he wants to cut down on children being unnecessarily placed in an overburdened foster care system already under fire for failing the children in its care," reported The Texas Tribune.
"We always want to make sure to remove kids when they're in danger," Frank told the Tribune. "But I think it is becoming clear, in a lot of cases, we're removing kids and putting them in situations that are worse than they were in."
But while the new legislation aims to prevent unnecessary family separation, the children who still end up in foster care could face traumatic, and even abusive, placements.
"We still don't have anything but bad news for these children," Jack said on Wednesday. "There's an injunction in place that you must put these kids in placements free from the risk of unreasonable harm….Apparently without a specific remedy for psychotropic drugs they are not going to keep them from risk of unreasonable harm for the administration of drugs."
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Raising the next generation of mass shooters.
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The fact that so many children are being given psychotropic drugs at all is probably the real crime.
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Many of these government-run child and family "protective" services are poorly run. Emma, may I introduce to you the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS), if you think the Texas one is bad. IL-DCFS has actually killed kids in its care.
https://www.governing.com/community/illinois-child-welfare-system-may-be-worse-than-ever
The agency’s troubles have been laid bare in juvenile court, where a judge ordered DCFS Director Marc Smith to be held in contempt of court seven times this year for failing to find appropriate placements for children.
For more than three decades, DCFS has operated under federal court oversight due to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois calling for reform in the child welfare system.
“In the best of states, with the best fiscal situation, with continuity and a really heavy priority on making government work, (DCFS) is a really tough agency to do a good job with,” Redfield said. “Drop that into what Illinois has looked like since the 1990s, and it’s really tough.”
“In the more than 30 years that I’ve been practicing in Juvenile Court, I cannot recall a single prior instance where a judge held the DCFS director in contempt,” Golbert said in a statement. “And now it’s happened [seven] times in [10] weeks. That’s how dysfunctional DCFS has become.”
They've had directors convicted of theft and sued for, of all things, child support. From 2014:
https://will.illinois.edu/news/story/dcfs-director-once-pleaded-guilty-to-theft-was-sued-for-child-support
Gov. Pat Quinn’s new director of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services pleaded guilty to stealing from clients of a West Side social service agency and later became embroiled in a child-support battle over a daughter he said he never knew he’d fathered, records show.
Arthur D. Bishop, 61, had a felony theft charge pending against him when then-Gov. Jim Edgar’s administration hired him as a DCFS caseworker in 1995. He’d been accused of bilking patients of the Bobby E. Wright Comprehensive Community Mental Health Center out of more than $9,000, fighting the case for more than two years before pleading guilty to a reduced charge of misdemeanor theft.
Bishop, an ordained minister, was in the news in the late 1990s when he was a DCFS caseworker involved in a high-profile custody battle involving the boy known as “Baby T.” Ald. Edward Burke (14th) and his wife Anne Burke, now an Illinois Supreme Court justice, ultimately won guardianship of the child.
O’Connor filed the paternity case against Bishop in March 2003, with the court summons listing his Maywood home and his DCFS office. Bishop hired Marina E. Ammendola — the lawyer who represented the Burkes in the Baby T case.
O’Connor, who didn’t have a lawyer, said she sued Bishop to get him to help with college expenses for Erica, who’s now a medical assistant.
As for killing kids...
https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/former-dcfs-caseworker-supervisor-who-worked-arrested-on-child-endangerment-charges-in-connection-with-a-j-freund-case/
A former Illinois Department of Children and Family Services caseworker and his supervisor who both worked on the A.J. Freund case have been arrested on child endangerment charges.
Acosta and Polovin were both fired last fall for their handling of A.J.'s case, along with DCFS caseworker Kathleen Gold. The 5-year-old was killed in April 2019, and his parents were later charged with his murder. His mother has pleaded guilty and is serving time in prison.
The DCFS report also revealed significant discrepancies between the deplorable conditions police had found inside the since-demolished home, and the conditions the DCFS investigator noted one day later. The investigator ultimately deemed allegations of neglect unfounded, "due to lack of evidence for cuts, welt and bruises allegation."
The DCFS timeline also revealed that Cunningham was being investigated for her behavior as foster parent, before A.J. was born. In June, 2012, she was accused of abusing prescription drugs and neglecting her foster child.
Foster care has been horrible in this country forever.
If Texas' system is set up like that in my state and the one next to us (probably is a common model) the root of the problem lies in the massive amounts of cash the department get for every child within their system. This strongly favours three things: getting more IN to the system, keeping them there longer, spendig as little as possible in all classes of resource, to keep the green river of cash flowing.
It is a system DESIGNED to fail the target "customers" of the system.
And yes, children "raised" in this wretched environment ARE far more likely to end up going berko and doing very "antisocial" things.
I had a friend who was in a foster home in the sixties. As soon as he was old enough he joined the service to get away.
That was during Vietnam.
Like join gangs?
Texas foster care is grossly mismanaged because everything is bigger in Texas.
That must be why you love the federal government.
Could be worse - see my posts about Illinois's DCFS above.
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Can you give an example of a well managed foster care system in the US?
It's all about GREED! The federal government funds state sanctioned kidnapping - steal a kid from their parents & get that federal stipend! Adopt that stolen kid out & you will receive another federal stipend.
That's what makes these parents who cry about their kids education so damn stupid; crying about those mandatory reporters has not come home to roost as of yet, but just wait. Soon we will start hearing stories of parents who complained about their school and then were subsequently investigated by DCFS, CPS, whatever they call themselves.