
Press Release | |
| May 14, 1997 | |
FOSTER CARE'S "PERVERSE INCENTIVES" HARMFUL TO KIDS, STALL ADOPTIONS |
WASHINGTON, D.C. More than half a million American children are in government-run foster care. A report issued today by the National Center for Policy Analysis criticized the current system as a government holding tank and a biased monopoly that frustrates attempts at placing many of those children with new families.
While thousands of families are waiting to adopt children, fewer than half the eligible foster children were adopted in 1996, according to the Dallas-based public policy institute.
"The federal government reimburses states for foster care on a per-day, per-child basis, said NCPA president Dr. John C. Goodman. This creates a perverse incentive that rewards states for keeping children in foster care whether it's the best thing for them or not.
Conna Craig of the Institute for Children, and author of the new study, pointed out other flaws in the current system, including:
"Every child is adoptable, Craig said. You can ask private agencies all around the country. They're recruiting families for children of all racial backgrounds and ages, children with every type of disability.
"Responding to this issue demands an unusual combination of personal empathy and public policy, said Dr. Merrill Matthews, NCPA vice president for domestic policy. Long-term foster children have a high incidence of winding up on public assistance or winding up in jail. Then, the system almost goes out of its way to reunite them with biological families that are, if anything, worse than the foster environment. We make the best solution, adoption, the hardest.
Among the reforms recommended by the NCPA and the Institute for Children:
For more information, to arrange an interview with Dr. Matthews or Conna Craig, or to obtain a copy of NCPA Brief Analysis No. 228, Languishing in Foster Care, contact Katy Menges in the NCPA's Dallas office at 972/386-6272 or Joan Kirby in the NCPA,s Washington office at 202/220-3082.
The National Center for Policy Analysis is a public policy research institute founded in 1983 and internationally known for its studies on public policy issues. The NCPA is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, with an office in Washington, D.C. Internet: http://www.public-policy.org/~ncpa.
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