Chattanooga Times Free Press

DCS seeks $26.6M for suitable places for abused children to stay

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

The Tennessee Department of Children’s Services is seeking an immediate infusion of $26.6 million from the state legislatur­e to address a crisis in care that has left children sleeping on office floors and in hospital beds because there are no other places for them.

In making the request Monday before the House Finance, Ways and Means Committee, Commission­er Margie Quin said every night between three and 30 children in Tennessee are sleeping in makeshift settings, a problem chronicled in media reports for more than a year and highlighte­d last month in a scathing audit by the comptrolle­r, who concluded the department was placing some children in harm’s way.

“Your support will mean an immediate reduction of children in state offices and stabilizat­ion of the provider network,” Quin said Monday.

The department’s emergency request — which is in addition to its annual request for an increase in next year’s budget — includes $20.4 million to provide a pay boost to private facilities in Tennessee that provide mental health, substance abuse and other care. The funds would open up 118 beds for children, Quin said. Many of the children sleeping in offices are there because they require specialize­d care, but Children’s Services has traditiona­lly paid those facilities far less than other states.

“By increasing the provider rate, Tennessee is able to compete in the market with other states who are paying more per day, per bed than we are, as much as $100 per day,” Quin said, adding those beds would reduce the time youth spend in offices and transition­al homes.

One hundred seventy Tennessee children taken into the custody of Children’s Services have been sent to out-of-state treatment facilities because the state cannot afford to pay in-state providers the same rate they are getting from other states’ child welfare department­s.

The funding request also includes $4.1 million to create 48 new assessment beds at private agencies that contract with the department. Clinical assessment­s of children coming into custody would help Children’s Services correctly identify where those youngsters should be placed, Quin said.

The department also is hoping to boost foster care payments for families that take in some of the hardest-to-place children: teens and large sibling groups.

Quin told lawmakers teens coming into state custody have to wait an average of 22 days before the department can place them — typically staying in state offices or transition­al homes.

Quin told lawmakers $1.2 million could bring 400 more of those harder-toplace children into foster care, boosting foster care payments from $29 or $30 per day to $50 per day, with a $2,000 bonus after six months.

“I’m not going to sit here and tell you this is going to fix it,” Quin said. “I will know more in six to nine months. I don’t think this is going to fix the problem, but I think (it will) move the needle.”

The request does not increase pay for relatives who step forward to take in children removed from their homes, something that concerned Rep. Sam McKenzie, a Knoxville Democrat. Lawmakers expanded the ability of relatives to care for children and foster children with state aid last year.

“You say you struggle with our children who are in this position. Having someone close to the family who, with a few dollars, might actually be able to take these children or these groups of children in would be an asset,” he said. “Just expanding that great program recently passed by the last assembly would be something to consider.”

Quin’s request also includes no increase in pay for caseworker­s.

That also concerned some lawmakers.

“My understand­ing was something different,” said Rep. Patsy Hazlewood, R-Signal Mountain, who is chairwoman of the committee. Hazlewood told Quin there was a real concern among lawmakers about raising caseworker pay, given the most recent reports they received of 600 caseworker vacancies.

“I would just ask ... the department to (seriously consider) Rep. McKenzie’s comments,” she said in drawing the meeting to a close. “We passed legislatio­n in the last session to enhance caregiver, relative caregiver, to enable grandparen­ts, uncles, aunts, whatever to take care of a child. As you continue to look at ways to get that placement time down, 22 days is a long time for a child to be (left unattended).”

Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

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