NEW
ADVOCACY RESOURCES
Child Welfare
Workforce; Human Services Workforce; Data
on Children & Families
CHILD WELFARE WORKFORCE:
GAO Report
The U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO)
recently released a report on promising practices for creating
a stable and highly skilled child welfare workforce. GAO
interviewed close to 50 child welfare practitioners and
researchers, including many social workers and NASW members;
conducted extensive site visits in four states; analyzed
close to 30 Child and Family Services Reviews required
under the Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA); and reviewed
close to 600 exit interviews completed by child welfare
staff across the country. Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA) and Rep.
John Greenwood (R-PA) requested the report.
This report builds a case for strengthening
the child welfare workforce by identifying (1) the challenges
child welfare agencies face in recruiting and retaining
child welfare workers and supervisors, (2) how recruitment
and retention challenges have affected the safety and permanency
outcomes of children in foster care, and (3) workforce
practices that public and private child welfare agencies
have implemented to successfully confront those challenges.
Title IV-E Partnerships
One of the promising practices
identified in the report is the use of university partnerships
to train current workers and prepare social work students
for positions in the child welfare profession. According
to the report, more than 40 state agencies have formed
training partnerships with schools of social work through
the use of federal Title IV-E dollars and state contributions. Such
partnerships have been shown to improve recruitment,
reduce turnover, and improve worker competence.
Other promising practices identified in the
report include accreditation, enhancements to supervision
and mentoring, use of hiring competencies, realistic job
previews, and recruitment bonuses.
The GAO report, “HHS Could Play a Greater
Role in Helping Child Welfare Agencies Recruit and Retain
Staff,” is available online at www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-357
HUMAN
SERVICES WORKFORCE: Casey Foundation Report & Brookings
Survey
A second
report by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, together with
a survey by the Brookings Institution’s Center
for Public Service, build a similar case for strengthening
all sectors of the human services workforce. The Casey
Foundation report looks at workers not only in child welfare,
but also youth services, childcare, juvenile justice, income
support programs, and employment and training programs. The
total number of human services workers is conservatively
estimated at three million.
The Casey
report provides information about the workers, themselves,
the challenges they face, and
how those challenges might be overcome, covering issues
like compensation, support, and training.
The report
documents what social service professionals have long known—workers are underpaid, over-worked,
and frustrated. They often receive poor supervision, have
insufficient education to match the demands of the job,
and have limited opportunities for professional growth
and advancement. According to the report, “These widespread
problems not only undermine the effectiveness of system
reform efforts, they reveal inefficient use of our public
resources and present very real risks to the welfare of
already vulnerable families and children.”
The Brookings
survey provides a more detailed portrait of the workforce
based on a survey of over 1200
employees conducted last summer.
The survey
lays out two possible futures. “One
involves a slow but steady erosion of talent due to inaction
and continued under-investment, even disinvestment in the
industry’s human capital. … The other future involves a
recommitment to the work force, and to the children, youth
and families it serves.” Recommitment would require making “long-overdue” investments
in recruiting and retaining high quality workers.
A copy
of the Casey report, “The Unsolved
Challenge of System Reform: Condition of the Frontline
Human Services Workforce,” is available online at www.aecf.org/initiatives/hswi
A copy of the Brookings survey is available
online at www.brook.edu/gs/cps/light20032603.htm
LOCALIZED
DATA ON CHILDREN AND FAMILIES: New Online Resource
A new project funded by the Annie E. Casey
Foundation provides in-depth, local-level data on the well-being
of America's children and families on a single Web site.
The new system, CLIKS: County, City, Community-Level Information
on Kids, can be a valuable resource for community leaders,
policymakers, service providers, parents, and advocates
concerned with the lives of children and families.
CLIKS allows users to access state-specific
inventories of local data on children from sources including
health departments, human services agencies, and schools.
Tools like community profiles and color-coded maps and
graphs allow users to create a snapshot of their town,
city, or county. Examples of the localized information
available include:
- The number of children who are victims
of child abuse
- The number or percent of children who
receive TANF, Medicaid, food stamps, free or reduced-price
lunches
- The number of juvenile arrests and detentions
The new CLIKS data is available on-line at http://www.aecf.org/cgi-bin/cliks.cgi
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