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			 “When I took office, DCFS was in shambles from a lack of 
			leadership and direction,” Governor Rauner said. “Today, under the 
			direction of Director George Sheldon, the agency has made an 
			impressive transformation to ensure we are protecting our state’s 
			most vulnerable children.” 
 Within the last year, DCFS has reduced the number of children in 
			shelter care by 50 percent and instituted a new directive to ensure 
			no child under the age of six spends the night in a shelter. DCFS 
			has also reduced the use of deep-end residential treatment and 
			partnered with the Cook County Sheriff’s Department to create the 
			Child Recovery Unit.
 
 In addition, DCFS increased its federal reimbursement for services 
			provided to youth aged 18-21 by $20 million for FY16, and the state 
			is expected to receive an additional $16 million in subsequent 
			fiscal years by fixing a paperwork issue.
 
 DCFS is also part of the state’s IT transformation by implementing 
			the 360 Initiative. It is a platform that brings multiple databases 
			together to ensure caseworkers have the whole picture of a family’s 
			situation more quickly and efficiently.
 “In the last year, we’ve 
			accomplished a lot to improve Illinois’ child welfare system. These 
			initiatives are just a starting point; we must also change the way 
			we think about our youth in care,” DCFS Director Sheldon said. “DCFS 
			is supporting new legislation to provide children in foster care 
			more normalcy and to recognize the strong bond a child and foster 
			parent may develop. We also must recognize the hard-working women 
			and men at DCFS who are striving every day to restore families, and 
			give children hope for their future and set them on a path for 
			better lives.” [to top of second 
            column] | 
            
			 
				 
The bills supported by DCFS are SB 2371/HB 5551 which expand the definition of 
“fictive kin” to include foster parents, and SB 3041/HB 5665 which enable foster 
parents and caregivers to act as “prudent parents” and make decisions to give 
children a more normal life.
 These transformations are part of the vision Governor Rauner laid out in his 
State of the State Address. The purpose is to improve how we provide health and 
human services in Illinois to produce better outcomes for our most vulnerable 
residents.
 
				 
			[Office of the Governor Bruce Rauner] 
			
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