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Georgia Department of Human Services/ Division of Family & Children Services:

Georgia Department of Human Services/ Division of Family & Children Services: Strategies for Improving Child Welfare Services. Presenter: Sharon L. Hill, PhD, DFCS Division Director Date: February 20, 2014. Georgia Department of Human Services. Vision, Mission and Core Values.

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Georgia Department of Human Services/ Division of Family & Children Services:

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  1. Georgia Department of Human Services/ Division of Family & Children Services: Strategies for Improving Child Welfare Services Presenter: Sharon L. Hill, PhD, DFCS Division Director Date: February 20, 2014 Georgia Department of Human Services

  2. Vision, Mission and Core Values Vision Stronger Families for a Stronger Georgia. Mission Strengthen Georgia by providing Individuals and Families access to services that promote self-sufficiency, independence, and protect Georgia's vulnerable children and adults. Core Values • Provide access to resources that offer support and empower Georgians and their families. • Deliver services professionally and treat all clients with dignity and respect. Manage business operations effectively and efficiently by aligning resources across the agency. • Promote accountability, transparency and quality in all services we deliver and programs we administer. • Develop our employees at all levels of the agency.

  3. Strategic Leadership Plans for All DFCS Section & Regional Directors

  4. Strategic Leadership Plans for All DFCS Section & Regional Directors • We worked together to develop common outcomes for each Focus Area • All directors have developed strategies, action plans and measurable goals for each Focus Area • Individual presentations on plans • Personal leadership development goal for each director • Monthly update on plans

  5. Strategic Leadership Plans for All DFCS Section & Regional Directors • We worked together to develop common outcomes for each Focus Area • All directors have developed strategies, action plans and measurable goals for each Focus Area • Individual presentations on plans • Personal leadership development goal for each director • Monthly update on plans

  6. Strategies for Improving Child Welfare Practices • Implement statewide 24/7 centralized intake system in Georgia, creating uniformity and standardization of response to reports of abuse and neglect (CPS Intake Communication Center) -System implemented in 8 of the 15 regions -Ability to monitor phone calls -Greater assurance that all reports are documented in SHINES Status: Currently 8 of 15 regions live; completed hiring of additional staff; readiness plan developed for future implementation • Review cases that have been “screened out” in the last 12 months Oct 2012 – Oct 2013 / then ongoing - Quality Assurance Team, Centralized Intake and Regional & County staff Status: Reviews completed on approximately 2,500 cases; all screen outs to centralized intake are reviewed • Provide intensive training for staff to improve interviewing and investigative skills -Georgia Child Advocacy Centers will train DFCS case managers on how to interview children to gain the best information in order to make best decisions regarding their safety Status: Contract finalized; training will begin March 3, 2014 6

  7. Strategies for Improving Child Welfare Practices, cont’d • Provide intensive training for staff to improve interviewing and investigative skills -Georgia Public Safety Center will provide training DFCS case managers on how to interview adults in order to best determine their capacity to provide care for their children. Status: Contract not yet finalized; anticipated training date for May 2014 •  Establish internal safety panels to review/staff investigations and Family Support cases prior to closure to ensure decisions are appropriate for safety of children -DFCS subject matter experts from around the state • Establish an External Review Team to conduct review and provide recommendations to DFCS for practice enhancements -Tom Rawlings and Melissa Carter (both were formerly in the role of Office of the Child Advocate) • Predictive Analytics to identify risky factors that may increase likelihood of future injury to child -Andy Barclay, statistician, working with DFCS on this - 7

  8. Strategies for Improving Child Welfare Practices • Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) -Dr. Jordan Greenbaum and Dr. Nancy Fejma: Child Protection Health Team to provide training and consultation to staff around medical concerns as well as physical abuse • Casey Family Programs -Permanency Roundtables (multi-disciplinary staffing of children in foster care) -Cold Case Project (review of children who have been in foster care for extended periods of time) • National Resource Center for Child Protection -Consultation on developing Safety Response System (practice model) *Staffing plan developed to hire 175 child welfare staff by June 30, 2014; pending legislative approval. 8

  9. Federal Outcomes Comparison: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kansas and Tennessee

  10. Timeliness of Reunification: FFY2008-FFY2011 Exits to reunification in less than 12 months: Of all children discharged from foster care to reunification in the year shown, who had been in foster care for 8 days or longer, what percent was reunified in less than 12 months from the date of the latest removal from home? National median = 69.9% Source: FY08-FY11 Child Welfare Outcomes Report Data (12/21/2012)

  11. Timeliness of Reunification: FFY2008-FFY2011 Exits to reunification, median stay: Of all children discharged from foster care to reunification in the year shown, who had been in FC for 8 days or longer, what was the median length of stay (in months) from the date of the latest removal from home until the date of discharge to reunification? National median = 6.5 months (lower score is preferable in this measure) Source: FY08-FY11 Child Welfare Outcomes Report Data (12/21/2012)

  12. Timeliness of Reunification FFY2008-FFY2011 Re-entries to foster care in less than 12 months: Of all children discharged from foster care to reunification in the 12-month period prior to the year shown, what percent re-entered foster care in less than 12 months from the date of discharge? National median = 15.0% (lower score is preferable in this measure) Source: FY08-FY11 Child Welfare Outcomes Report Data (12/21/2012)

  13. Timeliness of Adoption: FFY2008-FFY2011 Children in care 17+ months, adopted by the end of the year: Of all children in foster care (FC) on the first day of the year shown who were in FC for 17 continuous months or longer, what percent was discharged from FC to a finalized adoption by the last day of the year shown? National median = 20.2% Source: FY08-FY11 Child Welfare Outcomes Report Data (12/21/2012)

  14. Achieving Permanency for Children in Foster Care for Long Periods of Time Exits to permanency for children with TPR (termination of parental rights): Of all children who were discharged from foster care in the year shown, and who were legally free for adoption at the time of discharge , what percent was discharged to a permanent home prior to their 18th birthday? A permanent home is defined as having a discharge reason of adoption, guardianship, or reunification (including living with relative) . National median 96.8% Source: FY08-FY11 Child Welfare Outcomes Report Data (12/21/2012)

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