Advertisement

Orange County to Speed Foster Child Adoptions

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Orange County has embraced a controversial policy that seeks to nearly double the number of adoptions over the next year while spending less time trying to reunite foster children with troubled parents.

The policy reflects the growing view of many social workers that children suffer from repeated and long-term institutionalization and are better off being placed immediately in permanent adoptive homes.

But it has also opened an emotional debate over how far officials should go in attempting to reunite families, leading some critics to suggest that the new rules make it too hard even for parents who are capable of caring for their children.

Advertisement

The adoption push is being driven in part by changes in state law and by increases in federal funding, which the county will use to recruit adoptive parents and speed up the adoption process.

The Social Services Agency has set an ambitious goal: increasing the number of adoptions from 241 this year to 468 by next June.

*

At the same time, the agency has cut from one year to six months the time that it spends trying to reunite parents with foster children younger than 3.

In some cases involving abusive and neglectful parents, social workers and family law judges are not even bothering with reunification and are moving swiftly toward finding permanent homes for the children.

“There is certainly a belief that we’ve placed an overemphasis on reuniting families in the past and lost sight of the fact that children were growing older while all this was going on,” said Mary Harris, deputy director of children’s services. “The longer we wait, the harder it is to find them permanent homes.”

The stricter rules regarding reunification were developed by state legislators in response to several highly publicized cases involving children who were killed after being reunited with abusive parents.

Advertisement

*

Harris and other county officials said the adoption push should eventually provide some relief to the severely overcrowded Orangewood Children’s Home, the county’s only emergency shelter for abused and neglected children. It should also help the county’s overburdened foster care system, they added.

To meet the goal of 468 adoptions, the county will focus special attention on older children, siblings, black and Latino youths and others considered more difficult to place.

The effort has won praise from some children’s services organizations and from some couples considering adoption who hope the changes will result in a faster, friendlier adoption process.

“From what I know of the system now, there is a lot of waiting that turns people off,” said Cindy Castro, an Anaheim computer operator who with her husband, Luis, is considering adopting a child. “It would be great if they had more people around to answer questions and get through the red tape quicker.”

But others said the new policies place too much emphasis on adoption.

“I don’t think six months is enough time to make such an important determination,” said Tony Testa, president of Fathers United for Equal Justice, a group that helps fathers in custody and adoption cases. “When you are deciding whether a child is permanently taken from the natural parents, you want to have an intensive investigation, not a cursory one. They need to devote more time, not less.”

State laws that went into effect in January placed a variety of limits on family reunification, including shifting the burden of proof to parents to demonstrate that their children will not suffer if they are returned to them. The laws also make it more difficult for parents who are drug addicts or have been convicted of violent crimes to regain custody of their children.

Advertisement

John Dodd, an adoption attorney based in Tustin, said that he supports tougher rules for abusive parents but that the new laws place impossible barriers against those who are genuinely trying to be good parents. He said the six-month time limit does not provide enough time for parents to complete the drug classes and other requirements that social workers place on them.

*

“Part of the problem is that some parents don’t seem to understand the seriousness of their own situation. It takes them a while to understand they could lose their child,” Dodd said. “You can’t give them forever, but I think it’s ridiculous to give them six months when drug programs take longer than that.”

The issue has divided officials in Los Angeles County, where social workers have expressed fears that the push for more adoptions leaves them with less time to carefully scrutinize each person who wants to adopt.

Despite the concerns, Orange County officials said the new policy will benefit children by moving them more quickly from the foster care or emergency shelters to permanent adoptive homes.

*

“There has been a lot of feeling that the laws favor parents too strongly over protecting kids and providing them with permanent homes,” said Larry Leaman, head of the Social Services Agency. “Kids can be bounced through the system for years while parents are given chance after chance to show they are responsible.”

Leaman said his office has received complaints for years from foster parents and relatives complaining that children were being reunited with unfit parents. Others have criticized the extreme measures taken to keep parents in contact with their children, including trips to prison for children whose parents are incarcerated.

Advertisement

Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman William G. Steiner, a former director of Orangewood, also endorsed the changes. “This is important because it will provide permanency to children whose lives are filled with uncertainty,” he said.

Adoption experts said the biggest challenge presented by the new initiative is finding enough adoptive parents to meet the demands in Orange County. Right now, for example, there are 43 children legally free for adoption but only 23 prospective families.

*

The county will rely heavily on outside adoption agencies that specialize in placing black, Latino and emotionally troubled children.

One of the agencies, the Institute for Black Parenting, has found success by meeting potential parents at their homes, working evenings and weekends and waiving adoption fees.

“We try to work with families on their own turf rather than having them come into the office. We don’t even get busy until after 5 p.m.” said Zena Oglesby Jr., executive director of the Los Angeles-based group.

“Money alone won’t bring more adoptions,” he added. “We have to change the way we operate as a profession and become more user-friendly.”

Advertisement

County officials admit that the prospective parents sometimes face long delays before interviewing with social workers but said the situation should improve as they hire 15 new workers.

“We’ve not always been able to work with people quickly, and that has been a frustration to some people” interested in adopting, Harris said.

Castro said she was so confused about the process for public adoptions that she recently looked into gaining custody of a orphan from a foreign country. But she said she was encouraged by the impending changes.

“It would be nice to adopt locally where there is the real need,” she said.

Advertisement