DCFS director held in contempt for 7th time in 10 weeks
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[March 19, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – For the seventh time in 10
weeks, a Cook County judge found Illinois Department of Children and
Family Services Director Marc Smith in contempt for failing to comply
with a court order.
DCFS was ordered by a judge in March 2021 to move a 16-year-old boy who
has low intellectual functioning and cognitive delays from his temporary
shelter to a placement to meet his needs, according to the Cook County
Public Guardian’s Office, who represents the boy in court.
Despite a court order entered a year prior and the agency’s own
recommendation for a residential placement appropriate for him and his
abilities, the boy remains in a temporary placement.
“This boy has spent every major holiday in the last year stuck in a
place unable to provide him the care and nurturing he needs,” stated a
release from Cook County Public Guardian Charles Golbert’s office.
On Thursday, Cook County Judge Patrick T. Murphy found Smith in contempt
for failing to move the boy and fined him $1,000 a day for every day the
boy remains in temporary housing. The fine was stayed until March 24.
“DCFS and our private partners have aggressively been attempting to
locate homes for those children. They had been doing it for months.
There was no ignoring of the need of those children. And the truth is it
takes a lot of negotiation with many providers for them to be able to
develop the resources to care for those individual children,” Smith told
a Senate appropriations committee on Thursday.
It was hours before Smith faced a seventh contempt order from Murphy. In
two of the seven cases, the contempt order was purged when the kids were
placed in their recommended setting. Those two cases involved:
An 8-year-old girl placed in a locked psychiatric hospital unnecessarily
for more than seven months.
A 13-year-old boy kept in a “temporary” shelter in Mt. Vernon – nearly
five hours away from his family – for nearly five months. Before the
shelter, DCFS placed him in a utility room in an office.
In the other four previous cases, the contempt order remains in place
and the children remain in their present settings. Those cases involve:
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DCFS Director Marc Smith has been held in contempt of
court for the seventh time in 10 weeks. (Capitol News Illinois
illustration)
A 17-year-old boy who was placed in a locked psychiatric hospital for
more than four months beyond medical necessity.
A 16-year-old girl housed in 25 different places in two months,
including hospitals, emergency shelters, a shelter in Indiana, and
temporary foster homes. Before that, she was in a locked psychiatric
hospital for nearly two months after it was recommended that she be
moved.
An 11-year-old girl medically approved for discharge from a locked
psychiatric hospital for nearly a year waiting for a transfer to a
residential placement.
A 15-year-old girl placed in a locked psychiatric hospital since
December 6, 2021 – approximately three months waiting for transfer to a
specialized foster home.
Each of the seven children in these cases is represented by the Cook
County Public Guardian’s Office. The orders for contempt were signed by
Judge Murphy, who served for 25 years as the Cook County Public
Guardian.
DCFS has placed 356 children statewide in inappropriate settings for an
average of 55 days, Golbert said. There were so many children that
Murphy, the presiding judge over the child protection division, created
a separate “beyond medical necessity” or “stuck kids” docket.
A court order in one of the contempt of court cases filed against Smith
noted that in 2020, DCFS had 314 wards in psychiatric hospitals beyond
the date of discharge. In 2014, there were 75 DCFS wards in mental
health facilities beyond the date of discharge. That number doubled in
2015 to 168.
Golbert has said that holding a state agency director in contempt of
court is extraordinarily rare. In the more than 30 years that he has
been practicing in juvenile court, he could not recall a single prior
instance where a judge held the DCFS director in contempt.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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