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For the state and county agencies that directly oversee foster care, some parts of the bill are mandatory -- for example, demonstrating greater effort to keep siblings together, improve foster children's health care and minimize the need for them to switch schools. Other provisions will be optional for the states, notably participating in the new guardianship program for relatives and extending foster-care support past age 18. The level of state activity may hinge part on how their child welfare budgets weather the current economic turmoil. "We're going to have a tougher time with implementation by the states then if we didn't have this crisis," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, a key Senate backer of the bill. "It might add a couple of years to full implementation." As encouragement to the states, the bill calls for doubling the per-child bonuses they receive for placing foster children in adoption. Richard Wexler, executive director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform, says this could aggravate an already worrisome phenomenon. "That means an even greater incentive for quick-and-dirty, slipshod placements, for placements more likely to disrupt, and for the creation of more legal orphans, as states rush even faster to terminate parental rights," Wexler said in an e-mail. Adoption advocates acknowledged that mistakes can be made in placement, and said the bill's new provisions should be accompanied by effective vetting of prospective adoptive parents. "Not all who volunteer for adoption or foster care have the most noble motives," said Chuck Johnson of the National Council for Adoption. "We need to do a better job screening them." Despite its broad scope, the new act does not tackle the front end of the child-welfare problem -- it contains no prevention initiatives to combat neglect and abuse so fewer children are removed from their families in the first place. "Once again, America's child welfare establishment has refused to put its money where its mouth is," Wexler said. "In this big new bill they're all cheering about, there is not one new idea, not one new word, and not one new penny for keeping families together."
[Associated
Press;
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