JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Making it clear on foster care

by

20150202

Hun­dreds of chil­dren in T&T face the harsh re­al­i­ty of hav­ing nowhere to call home or no loved one to give them prop­er care and at­ten­tion. Many of these chil­dren have been abused or aban­doned. Some are giv­en a chance at life at the var­i­ous chil­dren's homes through­out the coun­try but some­times even this set­ting may not be con­ducive to their men­tal and phys­i­cal sta­bil­i­ty. It is the hope of the Chil­dren's Au­thor­i­ty that a well thought out and ef­fec­tive fos­ter care sys­tem will soon change this.

The staff of the Chil­dren's Au­thor­i­ty is hope­ful that be­fore the end of Feb­ru­ary, the au­thor­i­ty will be ful­ly func­tion­al and that the Chil­dren's Act will be pro­claimed in par­lia­ment.

Last De­cem­ber, it put ad­ver­tise­ments in var­i­ous news­pa­pers look­ing for peo­ple who may be in­ter­est­ed in the new fos­ter care sys­tem. More than ten peo­ple have al­ready re­spond­ed. The ex­ist­ing fos­ter care sys­tem was cre­at­ed as a pi­lot project, about two decades ago, and has nev­er been of­fi­cial­ly com­mis­sioned to this day.

"We haven't re­al­ly had a prop­er fos­ter care sys­tem in Trinidad so the rea­son you haven't heard much about it is that it re­al­ly in a le­gal sense didn't ex­ist," said Chil­dren's Au­thor­i­ty chair­man Stephanie Daly, as she spoke with the T&T Guardian at the au­thor­i­ty's head of­fice on Wright­son Road, Port-of-Spain. "What we had was a pi­lot project which I think was in­for­mal for quite a long time. It was per­haps for­malised a bit more in 1995. It was a fair­ly closed project, it wasn't some­thing which was look­ing to ex­pand or to pro­vide greater op­tions and re­sources for peo­ple who had to place chil­dren. It wasn't un­til this leg­is­la­tion, the Chil­dren's Au­thor­i­ty leg­is­la­tion that it be­came a leg­isla­tive im­per­a­tive and it is one of our re­spon­si­bil­i­ties to set up and man­age that sort of sys­tem."

It should be not­ed that there is a ma­jor dif­fer­ence be­tween be­com­ing a fos­ter par­ent and adopt­ing a child as adop­tion is for­ev­er and is the com­plete re­place­ment of a par­ent, while fos­ter care usu­al­ly comes in­to play when the state has to place chil­dren be­cause they don't have a fam­i­ly mem­ber who can take prop­er care of them and on­ly ex­tends to age of 17, she ex­plained.

There are usu­al­ly two op­tions when it comes to plac­ing a child, one is find­ing a place at a com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dence and the oth­er is plac­ing chil­dren with in­di­vid­ual fam­i­lies. Based on the two avail­able op­tions Daly be­lieves it would be bet­ter if chil­dren are placed in a fam­i­ly en­vi­ron­ment.

The fos­ter care sys­tem will of­fer this along with a lot more flex­i­bil­i­ty than com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dences be­cause any fam­i­ly that a child is placed with will usu­al­ly be very fo­cused on that par­tic­u­lar child and that par­tic­u­lar child's needs and abil­i­ties, she con­tin­ued.

She said: "I think it's pret­ty gen­er­al­ly ac­cept­ed that be­ing placed in a fam­i­ly en­vi­ron­ment has a bet­ter po­ten­tial for suc­cess for the child than as op­posed to in­sti­tu­tion­al care. It's a much less ex­pen­sive op­tion be­cause the in­sti­tu­tion­al care is dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly ex­pen­sive and that's not just our ex­pe­ri­ence but a world­wide ex­pe­ri­ence."

Di­rec­tor of the au­thor­i­ty, Shar­i­fa Ali-Ab­dul­lah added: "We are go­ing to go out again and in fact do much more in terms of pub­lic ed­u­ca­tion be­cause the pi­lot sys­tem has re­al­ly been a well kept se­cret. A lot of peo­ple do not know about the pi­lot sys­tem. We need to ed­u­cate about fos­ter care. The fos­ter care sys­tem would al­so be much quick­er for plac­ing chil­dren than try­ing to de­vel­op ad­di­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dences and try­ing to staff them."

They are look­ing to build a data­base of at least 25 in­ter­est­ed care-givers to add to a reg­istry, Ali-Ab­dul­lah con­tin­ued. An­oth­er ma­jor chal­lenge that they are fac­ing right now, be­side the pass­ing of the leg­is­la­tion, is de­ter­min­ing what type of stipend should be of­fered.

He added: "We have to de­ter­mine the quan­tum. At present the providers re­ceive be­tween $1,500- $5,000 per month, per child. The $5,000 would re­fer to spe­cial chil­dren with spe­cial needs. We are look­ing at all the bud­get re­vi­sions to see what would be the al­lo­ca­tion for fos­ter care, to see what would be a rea­son­able stipend to pay to par­ents. We have ac­tu­al­ly con­duct­ed quite a bit of re­search in­to best prac­tice and there are some ju­ris­dic­tions where some peo­ple do not re­ceive a stipend and oth­er places where they do."

The chal­lenge lies in mak­ing sure that what­ev­er stipend is agreed on is an ap­pro­pri­ate amount. One of the bench­marks be­ing used so far is the cost of keep­ing a child in a chil­dren's home as com­pared to fos­ter care. For in­stance, at the four ful­ly sub­sidised homes, or even the Youth Train­ing Cen­tre, it cost ap­prox­i­mate­ly $10,000 per month to pro­vide for a child, Ali-Ab­dul­lah re­vealed. She be­lieves, based on the sev­er­al stud­ies that have been con­duct­ed so far by the au­thor­i­ty, that it would be much cheap­er to care for a child stay­ing with fos­ter par­ents.

Al­so, fos­ter care would have the added ben­e­fit of be­ing able to help even more dis­placed chil­dren from the more re­mote ar­eas of the coun­try. This would be a great im­prove­ment be­cause of the 50 chil­dren's homes in T&T; there are none in the south east area. In fact, there are on­ly three chil­dren's homes in the whole east­ern area from To­co all the way down to Moru­ga.

Daly chimed in: "Be­cause it is new we will be eval­u­at­ing as we go. Lo­ca­tion will be a fac­tor when se­lect­ing a place­ment for a child. If they are in school you want them to con­tin­ue with their school­ing with­out dis­lo­ca­tion. The au­thor­i­ty is not just sit­ting and wait­ing for leg­is­la­tion to pass and we have al­ready be­gun to ed­u­cate key stake­hold­ers on how the new sys­tem will work."

Ali-Ab­dul­lah echoed sim­i­lar sen­ti­ments and added that it was im­per­a­tive that all the peo­ple who would be af­fect­ed by the new fos­ter care sys­tem ful­ly un­der­stand how it works for it to be ful­ly ef­fec­tive.

She said: "We don't want to wait un­til we pro­claim and then do all of this be­cause there must be tran­si­tion, so we are go­ing to be­gin as­sess­ing the chil­dren cur­rent­ly in fos­ter care at our ser­vice cen­tre where we have our so­cial work­ers, doc­tors and psy­chol­o­gists al­ready in place."

A lot of care will be tak­en to en­sure that chil­dren are not hurt even more through the new sys­tem and there will be sev­er­al dif­fer­ent mon­i­tor­ing tools for those who are se­lect­ed. A li­cens­ing and mon­i­tor­ing de­part­ment will be set up and will use var­i­ous mon­i­tor­ing tools like unan­nounced calls, vis­its at nights and on the week­ends. These sur­prise vis­its could be con­duct­ed at least twice a month.

One of the ma­jor changes that the au­thor­i­ty is look­ing for­ward to is the move away from the dor­mi­to­ry type fa­cil­i­ties so that there can be an in­tro­duc­tion of small­er group homes which will help cre­ate more love and at­ten­tion for a dis­placed child.

There is no in­ten­tion to in­tro­duce the sys­tem and not en­sure that it gives all the ben­e­fits that a child needs as well as the cor­rect sup­port to fos­ter par­ents, Daly said.

"We are look­ing at pro­vid­ing on­go­ing sup­port whether it is a helpline or train­ing for par­ents dur­ing the time that they would be fos­ter­ing chil­dren or pe­ri­od­ic ses­sions to re­al­ly pro­vide that type of sup­port."

Al­so present at the in­ter­view was Christalle Gemon the act­ing deputy di­rec­tor of Care, Le­gal and Reg­u­la­to­ry Ser­vices who as­sured that en­tire fos­ter care sys­tem would be based on a care­ful­ly pre­pared guide.

The as­sess­ment is very sci­en­tif­ic be­cause they have de­vel­oped as­sess­ment tools which takes in­to con­sid­er­a­tion the his­to­ry and the back­ground of the ap­pli­cant. The as­sess­ment tools are aimed at de­ter­min­ing how ef­fec­tive a per­son would be as a fos­ter care provider.

In the lead up to the pro­gramme, there will be rig­or­ous train­ing of staff which in­cludes look­ing at re­al life cas­es, she said.

Strate­gies have been de­vel­oped which will help ad­dress the reg­u­lar­ly oc­cur­ring prob­lems that are usu­al­ly as­so­ci­at­ed with fos­ter care around the world. In the event that all the pro­to­col is fol­lowed and there is still a break­down in the re­la­tion­ship be­tween the child and the fos­ter par­ent, there are mech­a­nisms in place to en­sure an easy tran­si­tion for both par­ties in­volved said act­ing Team Lead of Fos­ter Care, An­juli Tewari.

"Built in to the sys­tem we would take in­to con­sid­er­a­tion place­ment break­down be­cause it is very like­ly that some­times chil­dren will act out, there­fore we do have mech­a­nisms in place to of­fer sup­port, to do me­di­a­tion, to even maybe have a sys­tem like a time­out. Our first ini­tia­tive would be to sup­port the re­la­tion­ship not to have that child re­moved. We do have sys­tems in place to ad­dress place­ment break­down."

She ad­mit­ted though that if at the end of the day a re­la­tion­ship is deemed un­fix­able there is a pro­ce­dure in place to re­view the case and try a bet­ter place­ment op­tion.

HOW THE SYS­TEM WILL WORK

Christal Chap­man, Se­nior Le­gal As­so­ciate with the Chil­dren's Au­thor­i­ty, broke down how the en­tire sys­tem would work, from ap­pli­ca­tion to se­lec­tion.

The ex­pres­sions of in­ter­est will be pub­lished, and a more de­tailed pack­age will be for­ward­ed to re­spon­der. This pack­age would con­tain an ap­pli­ca­tion form and oth­er doc­u­men­ta­tion that high­lights the roles and re­spon­si­bil­i­ties of a fos­ter par­ent.

The per­son then has to sub­mit a med­ical cer­tifi­cate at­test­ing to their phys­i­cal and men­tal well be­ing. This can be ob­tained from a pri­vate doc­tor. They then have to sub­mit a po­lice cer­tifi­cate of good char­ac­ter which would have been ob­tained with­in the last six months pre­ced­ing the ap­pli­ca­tion.

The per­son will then have to sub­mit the con­tact in­for­ma­tion for two ref­er­ences and al­so pho­to iden­ti­fi­ca­tion.

Once the com­plet­ed ap­pli­ca­tion form and all the oth­er re­quired doc­u­ments are sub­mit­ted, the in­for­ma­tion is then ver­i­fied and the process be­gins by open­ing a file for that ap­pli­cant and start­ing the ini­tial stages.

The first stage of the screen­ing would be a home vis­it to as­sess the suit­abil­i­ty of not just the ap­pli­cant but the ap­pli­cant's home. As part of that screen­ing process both the ap­pli­cant and their fam­i­ly mem­bers as well as the home, the premis­es and the en­vi­ron­ment will be re­viewed.

The ap­pli­cant has to be able to pro­vide for the health, ed­u­ca­tion and the gen­er­al wel­fare needs of the child. Once the ini­tial screen­ing is done at the home, a more in depth in­ter­view is con­duct­ed with the ap­pli­cant.

Back­ground checks on mem­bers of the house­hold out­side of the ap­pli­cant are al­so part of the process which means any adult liv­ing in the house­hold or any­body in a vis­it­ing re­la­tion­ship and any reg­u­lar vis­i­tors who do not live at the home will be in­ves­ti­gat­ed.

The au­thor­i­ty re­ceives re­ports at each stage of as­sess­ment. A fi­nal re­port is then com­plet­ed and sub­mit­ted to the board for their ap­proval. The board will then come to a de­ci­sion.

If the ap­pli­cant is ac­cept­ed they will be added to an ap­proved reg­is­ter of fos­ter par­ents. The per­son is then trained by the au­thor­i­ty.

The train­ing will be used to high­light par­ent­ing skills, be­hav­ioral needs of chil­dren and child de­vel­op­ment is­sues. Those who are un­der­tak­ing spe­cial­ist roles with chil­dren with cer­tain spe­cial­ist needs may re­ceive more in-depth train­ing.

Once the per­son is placed on the reg­is­ter, they can be added to the list of ap­proved par­ents that can now be matched with a po­ten­tial child in need.

Things like prox­im­i­ty to school­ing, cul­tur­al and re­li­gious back­ground of the fos­ter car­er are al­so tak­en in­to con­sid­er­a­tion be­cause the au­thor­i­ty will try as much as pos­si­ble to have a child re­main in the same back­ground that they are fa­mil­iar with as much as pos­si­ble.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored