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Now that the O'Brien budget is official, and folks have had a chance to see what's coming, they're starting to speak up about the ugliness ahead. Richard Wexler, the ED of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform had a piece in the Concord Monitor, about the elimination of the program that gave low income parents legal representation during hearings regarding cases where child abuse is alleged.
The overwhelming majority of parents who lose their children to foster care are nothing like those in horror stories that make headlines. Far more common are cases in which poverty is confused with "neglect." Other cases fall between the extremes, the parents neither all victim nor all villain.
Poverty is confused with neglect. That's a statement that should make every one of us weep.
That doesn't mean no child should ever be taken from her or his parents. Rather, it means that foster care is an extremely toxic intervention that must be used sparingly and in small doses. But New Hampshire has been prescribing mega-doses of foster care, taking away children at a rate 25 percent above the national average when entries are compared with the number of impoverished children in each state.
That's an astonishing statistic.
The cut won't even save money. Foster care is expensive. Where parents get high-quality representation it saves money by reducing the time children languish in care - not by getting "bad parents" off, but by ensuring that families get the help they need to stay together safely.
I worked for the Head Start program back in the 70's, and it is my utterly anecdotal observation that this is true. Sometimes families just need help. Sometimes parents need to unlearn the parenting skills they learned from their parents.
Given all the rhetoric we heard this session about the "rights" of parents, it's shocking to hear that they don't give a fig for the rights of low income parents. Apparently this legislature ran out of concern somewhere between attempting to force food stamp recipients to undergo drug testing and while forcing teenaged girls to serve as involuntary incubators.
It seems that unless you have money, you have no rights under the O'Brien junta.