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Foster Care History

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Foster care is supposed to be temporary, but for many teenage youth in foster care it is often a permanent solution. Foster care was never meant to raise children into adulthood. Even though foster care is supposed be temporary, most teenage foster youth reach their 18th birthday and become emancipated and end up living their lives without a family. Currently, 40% of foster youth in the system are between the ages of 11 and 21 (Child Welfare 3). Foster care is supposed to be a temporary arrangement in which adults provide care for children whose parents are unable to do so, due to issues within the family such as neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, or homeless. The earliest documentation of foster care can date back to the Bible, which …show more content…

However, it wasn’t till 1562 that English Poor law that lead to the development of family foster care in the United States, it was the beginning of placing children into homes ("History of Foster Care."). In 1853, Charles Loring Brace paved the way to what we know foster care as it exist today. Brace, a minister and director of New York Children’s Aid Society, was concerned with the amount of children sleeping in the streets. His plan was to provide the children homes by advertising in search of families who would open their home to them ("History of Foster Care."). As a result, this lead to social agencies and state governments to become involved, and began paying board to families who would take care of children ("History of Foster Care."). While foster care is a help to children who need a temporary home, there are also many supplemental programs to help children in foster care. Sometimes there is so much emphasis and funding of these supplemental foster care programs that we forget that foster care should be temporary. The government and taxpayers put a lot of funding into programs that keep children in care instead of helping them reunify, get adopted, or make a …show more content…

AB 12 lets foster teenagers stay in foster care until they are 21 years old. Often, when foster youth turn 18, their foster parents kick them of the home out due to no longer receiving payment, and the youth have no place to go. With the implementation of AB 12, they can choose to stay in a foster home and the foster parent continues to get a stipend to help pay for the foster teens expenses. The foster teenager also has the option to move out of the foster home and get a monthly stipend that goes directly to them. This stipend is used to help pay for expenses such as rent, utilities, food, etc. This all sounds great, but I don’t feel that it is working for foster teenagers. The concept is good, but definitely needs to be reformed and restructured. To receive AB 12 funding, a foster teenager still has to meet with a county social worker monthly and meet certain criteria which include going to school, working, or looking for work. They can lose AB 12 funding if they do not meet these qualifications. Often, it is hard for the youth to meet these qualifications because they have not learned the necessary skills to effective apply and hold a job or learn how to navigate the college university system to enroll in school. What is happening is that the youth are not qualifying for AB 12 and if they do they are so used to the money that when they turn 21 and lose the AB 12 funding, they end up not

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