DCFS director: ‘Stuck kids’ docket a problem years in the making
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[May 10, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Department of Children and
Family Services Director Marc Smith has faced nine cases of contempt of
court in recent weeks for failing to comply with a judge’s order to
place the state’s most vulnerable children in an appropriate setting.
In a recent interview with Capitol News Illinois, he outlined the scope
of the problem and why it’s not new or easy to solve.
The contempt charges center around children in state care that are held
in psychiatric or other facilities beyond medical necessity. The
children represent a small but challenging population for the child
protection agency, Smith said. Of the 20,000 children in the care of
DCFS, Smith said about 0.2 percent qualify as being held beyond medical
necessity – often referred to as “stuck kids.”
“These children are the outliers of the outliers,” Smith said.
Children who are psychiatrically hospitalized are in secure facilities,
behind locked doors for most of the day, going outside for an hour a
day. Most do not receive schooling and cannot participate in
extra-curricular activities.
The difficulties in placing the children in more appropriate facilities,
Smith said, have been compounded by prolonged state disinvestment in
DCFS, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the deficiencies at other state
agencies.
Gov. JB Pritzker has repeatedly pointed to the fact that 500 placements
for high-need children were erased amid a two-year budget impasse under
former Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner. That’s partially because DCFS
supportive services are run through private sector groups and
non-profits, which cut specialized programs, including programs for
mentally ill or developmentally delayed children, in response to funding
uncertainty.
Smith took over at DCFS in 2019 at a time when the agency was trying to
convince the outside groups to consider reinvesting in Illinois and
adding programs to support children and their families.
Then, the pandemic hit, increasing the number of children in need of
specialized care and further straining the system.
A study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that COVID-19 impacted
disabled children by keeping them out of congregate settings, such as
school. Students with disabilities may not have had access to necessary
supports during the pandemic, leading to disruption in their behavioral
therapies and education.
And their parents, who, the data show, are generally experiencing higher
rates of stress, depression and anxiety than other parents, were dealing
with providing around-the-clock care for their children amid other
pandemic stressors.
From March to October 2020, mental health-related emergency department
visits increased 24 percent for children ages 5 to 11 and 31 percent for
those ages 12 to 17 compared with 2019 emergency department visits,
according to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.
Despite those increases, the state was still behind in the supportive
services available for children ready to be discharged from hospitals to
residential care or family-like settings.
As a result, Smith said, children lingered in these settings rather than
time-limited, treatment-intensive intervention programs that would allow
them to stabilize then return to their families with needed supports and
services.
Even with recent budget increases – Pritzker and lawmakers have
increased the DCFS budget by at least $100 million each year since 2019,
including by $250 million this year – the effort to build back the lost
placements has been slower than the decline. From 2019 to 2021, DCFS
added 90 specialized placements. So far this year, DCFS added 37 more.
Within the next 60 days, 24 more placements will be available, Smith
said.
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Department of Children and Family Services Director
Marc Smith participated in an interview last week with Capitol News
Illinois.
“We are working very hard to identify qualified residential treatment
providers, increasing the skill set of providers and making sure that
there is enhanced case management and educational and development areas
for these children,” Smith said.
As well, Smith said, more than one-third of these children come into
care because their parents are unable to find supportive services for
the children to come home. These are parents that want to care for their
child, are not accused of abuse, but lack the help they need to provide
that care after their children are discharged from a medical facility.
“As a parent, it would be heartbreaking to surrender your child to a
government agency because you could not provide appropriate care,” Smith
said.
That means the state’s approach must go beyond DCFS, he said.
A group from DCFS, the State Board of Education and the departments of
Human Services, Healthcare and Family Services, and Juvenile Justice are
studying ways to improve children’s behavioral health through
interagency communication, creating new programs and improving existing
ones.
In October, Illinois was approved for participation in a new federal
program through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’
Children’s Bureau. The Family First Title IV-E Prevention Program was
created by the Federal Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018. Illinois is among
17 states and the District of Columbia to submit its plan in compliance
with the act and have it approved.
Smith said it will increase Illinois’ funding and flexibility to operate
programs aimed at strengthening and supporting families to keep children
safely at home and out of foster care.
The five-year plan, developed with DCFS and 200 service providers, will
create programs for parenting skills, drug abuse treatment and mental
health services, among others. The goal is to keep children out of
foster care while improving the quality of care and shortening the
amount of time spent in state care.
“It will allow us to reimagine child welfare in Illinois,” Smith said.
The nine contempt charges from Cook County Judge Patrick T. Murphy, who
presides over the “stuck kids” docket, have drawn headlines and
scrutiny, including calls for audits of DCFS and for Smith’s ouster.
Agency sources, however, said Smith’s departure may undermine private
agencies’ confidence at a time when the state is engaged in negotiations
for increased programing.
Pritzker continues to support Smith, saying his resignation wouldn’t
solve anything.
While Smith has faced a $1,000 daily fine for each day a child remains
locked in an improper facility, an appellate court has stayed those
citations and fines. It’s been over two weeks since Smith has received a
new contempt citation.
The “stuck kids” docket, meanwhile, continues to meet every Thursday in
Cook County Court for children in the state’s custody who are in
psychiatric facilities for weeks, months and, for at least one child,
for almost a year after doctors discharged them.
Charles Golbert, Cook County’s Public Guardian, is one of the state’s
most vocal critics of DCFS. He’s given voice to the extreme placement
shortage crisis. Last year, DCFS forced 356 of its children to languish
in locked psychiatric hospitals unnecessarily for an average of 55 days
each, totaling more than 50 years of children’s lives in just a year.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is 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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