Mayor De Blasio - Racism Does Exist in Child Welfare in NYC
Yesterday, Mayor De Blasio stated that racial bias does not exist in NYC's child welfare system. Respectfully, Mayor De Blasio, I disagree. Below is an article I wrote on the subject for City Limits in 2014 (https://citylimits.org/2014/04/11/does-poverty-cause-child-abuse/).
Cornell University released a large study last month positing that poverty causes higher instances of child abuse and neglect. Considering the advance publicity, it seemed to me that the average reader might overlook the crucial role that socioeconomic and racial biases play in determining which families come under the scrutiny of the child welfare system to begin with.
While poverty is widely recognized as a risk factor in abuse and neglect cases, it is by no means a cause of abuse and neglect. Children are just as likely to be abused or neglected in wealthy homes as in poor ones. However, wealthier white families are simply not under the same scrutiny that brings families of color of low socioeconomic status to the attention of child welfare authorities.
Is this increased scrutiny due to societal or systemic factors that make living conditions worse for minority families? Or is it due to implicit biases? Disproportionate minority representation of children of color in foster care is a complex one with many contributing factors. But as much as people may want to deny it, this is due in part to implicit bias and choices that are made by decision-makers who encounter these families. Consider the brief released in June 2011 by University of Chicago research institute Chapin Hall, which argued that that foster care placement is needed to protect black children from the “self-destructive behavior” that occurs in “racially segregated impoverished enclaves.”
Racial prejudices, biases and assumptions contribute to the fact that 97 percent of children in New York City foster care are children of color. According to a leading researcher in the field, Dorothy Roberts, author of “Shattered Bonds,” “[t]he fact that the system supposedly designed to protect the children remains one of the most segregated institutions in the country should arouse suspicion.” This is most clearly demonstrated by the documented decisions that medical professionals make when they encounter abuse and neglect in families of color. The data in the books “To the End of June: The Intimate Life of American Foster Care” (Cris Beam) and Roberts’s “Shattered Bonds” illustrates this point:
Black women have been reported to health authorities at delivery 10 times more often than white women, even though studies show that drug use is relatively equal, for instance, between blacks and whites (9.5 percent and 8.2 percent respectively), and that more pregnant white women use drugs than pregnant black women (113,000 versus 75,000).
Doctors failed to detect abusive head trauma twice as often in white as compared to minority children.
Even reviewing neutral e-rays for fractures, hospitalized minority toddlers were five times more likely to be evaluated for child abuse, and three times more likely to be reported for child abuse, than white children.Any child protective attorney can attest to the truth of this statement. New York City Family Courts, which handle child protective cases, are courts of the poor where white families are a significant minority. White families are given the benefit of the doubt when allegations of abuse and neglect arise, and, as noted in the statistics, they simply do not suffer the same scrutiny by mandated reporters. In addition, they have less contact with the mandated reporters at schools, mental health facilities, welfare offices and hospitals, resulting in fewer calls to the Administration for Children’s Services. Factors such as homelessness, unemployment and welfare enrollment bring poor families into greater contact with more bureaucracies and caseworkers. In addition, living in a poor neighborhood with drug use and street crime where there is greater police presence increases a family’s visibility to police scrutiny.
One of the only cases in which I represented a young white child of white parents involved a mother from England who was addicted to heroin. I came to call it my “heroin chic” case. Three times, the mother was found with the young child on a street in the classic “heroin high” pose—a blissful and euphoric state in which she was nodding out while standing up, slowly falling forward and displaying seemingly amazing acts of balance before slowly standing straight up again, her child by her side.
Was this mother immediately arrested and the child removed from her care by the Administration for Children’s Services? No, not the first two times. Emergency personnel who responded escorted the mother home and ACS offered the mother drug-rehabilitation services , with which she refused to cooperate. It wasn’t until the third time when the mother passed out on the street and the child was injured that a case was finally filed against the mother in family court. Had this been a child of color, it is much more likely that the child would have been immediately removed from the mother’s care when she was first found nodding out in the street.
I had this case during a time where there were hundreds of neglect cases being filed in family court involving allegations of marijuana use under the theory that marijuana was the gateway to hard drugs. Frequently, neglect charges were brought solely based upon recreational use and then other allegations were added later to bolster the neglect claims. And a small portion of these marijuana cases involved children being placed into foster care. Needless to say, these cases all involved families of color.
The racial and socio-economic prejudices, biases and assumptions that result in a disproportionate amount of children of color being placed into foster care in New York City are systemic and institutional issues, and they are larger issues than those of us in the family court who work on child protective cases can address. This bias that exists goes beyond foster care and implicates society as a whole.
Certainly, as the Cornell study shows, poverty is a strong risk factor in abuse and neglect cases. But it should never be assumed that abuse and neglect predominately occurs in poor homes or that children will be better off in foster care than in so called “impoverished enclaves” where they may live.
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8 年I agree, and I sat in ER one day and watched a white mom who son got burned as she sat in car (high) while he was by exhaust and got burned...no one questioned her at all but as a former substance abuse counselor, it was clear, even with her Channel jacket, that she was not all there...neglect. I also saw another woman that night come in with her child but SHE had... "back pain" and got oxycoton....like that....it was clear she was an addict but her Gucci shoes and nurses who are not well versed on behavior AND body lango....just wanted her to NOT be in pain....no one noticed the poor child got NO attention...had these been black woman, CPS and accusations ...but as time goes on and addiction and mental illness become more obvious....we will all see color has nothing to do with it and ALL kids need love, attention, respect and a home that is safe and allows them to grow into decent human beings....as a foster youth my baby brother got places and adopted off quick, as he was a red head with freckles...race does play a part in why SO many black kids are in foster care..i know many other rich families who should have been in care...
Business Owner at Sha-Manic Healing LLC & Founder of FPA-Foundation
8 年The mayor is full of it and was forced to get a outside monitor due to the lack of accountability and over site. He is truly disconnected. 3200 Complaints made about ACS from the community. Institutional racism continues in the child welfare system. The disproportionate number of black families affected and their children put in America’s child welfare system is staggering. Black children make up more than two- fifths of the fostercare population, although they represent less than one-fifth of the nation’s children. The worst part of the child welfare system’s treatment of african american families. It unnecessarily separates their children from their parents. Child protective agencies are far more likely to place black children in foster care instead of offering their families less traumatic assistance. According to federal statistics, fifty-six percent of black children in the child welfare system have been placed in foster care, twice the percentage for white children.A national study of child protective services by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reported that minority children, and in particular African American children, are more likely to be in foster care placement than receive in-home services, even when they have the same problems and characteristics as white child Most children reported to the child welfare system are poor, and black children are more likely to live in poverty than children of other groups. Family courts has a big problem inside and also needs over site and accountability. African American Families are being abused by State CPS and Family Courts through out the United States of America, this is a major issue that needs to be addressed, Families that have had their civil rights violated through family court proceedings and the fact that all due process and constitutional rights are violated and manipulated by family court judges, District Attorneys, and Commissioners of /social services departments as well as CPS workers, and court appointed attorneys that are not working for the clients but have helped incriminate parents. CPS workers who are falsifying or have falsified documents in court and who have lied in a court setting. These workers should be held accountable. Poverty, discrimination and racism has made all the more perilous for African American parents who may be extra vulnerable because of their children have been removed from their care, economic instability, lack of support barriers. As they see their human rights violated and dignity violated, disparaged and battered at the hands of employers, supervisors and even spouses, African American parents experience powerlessness, depression, fear, hatred, and suppressed rage, among a myriad of other emotions. They are repeatedly subject to verbal threats and harassment and abuse from caseworkers,lawyers and judges, yet are forced to maintain their silence through coercion and threats of retaliation or retaliatory practices by child welfare workers. Additionally, they may fear that reporting the incident will threaten them from getting their children back into their care. As a result, African american parents often are often forced to choose between enduring on-going abuse from case workers in order to try to get their children returned. They still never get their children back. In essence, African american parents due process rights are infringed upon in such a way that they are unjustly punished twice for their state of poverty: first when their children are removed from the home on the grounds of neglect when the true problem is poverty; and second when they cannot afford, nor are they guaranteed, counsel to defend themselves against charges of neglect. Without counsel, african american parents face a greater risk of permanently losing their children, and thus their fundamental right to raise them, on the basis of their financial situation. This issue arguably involves the most discrimination and affects that most African American children & families who encounter multiple and intersecting forms of it. This is the incentive and motivation that has propelled a system designed to protect children, into what it is today - a system which is causing children to be subjected to danger and unspeakable abuse. Thanks for sharing this article.
Social Justice Advocate, State Program Director, PHD Candidate, Special Needs Parent Mentor and Inclusion Life Coach
8 年Thanks for sharing this article. I will be sharing with my team.
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8 年been saying it since I experienced it since 5 IN the system! just the fact that my baby brother, who was light skin with freckles got adopted off..as most light kids did then and still do sadly now...accept people like Madonna and Sandra bullock..who don't care what color..Kudo's to them....thankfully my foster mother taught me to always be proud of my color, I never wished for a white Barbie, I wanted both!! :) color plays a big role, especially in 70's and religion also...