May 4, 2023
9-4pm
Delta Hotel by Marriott
1330 Industrial Blvd NE
Minneapolis, MN 55413
Cost: Free. Coffee, lunch and snacks provided
Conference Panels:
- Behavioral Health (Chemical and Mental Health) Panel including case managers, treatment center staff, and more.
- Disability Services Panel including social workers, waivered services, advocates and others.
- Housing and Public Health Panel including county case managers, home visitors, and more.
- Parent Perspectives Panel with lived experience
- Youth Perspectives Panel with lived experience
5.5 CEUs offered (approved by the MN BOSW) to those who attend the entire conference and complete an post-conference evaluation.
Time | Program |
8:30-9:00 | Breakfast + Registration |
9:00-9:15 | Welcome |
9:15-10:15 | Keynote Speaker - Marina Lalayants |
10:15 - 10:30 | Group Exercise |
10:45-11:45 | Behavioral (Chemical + Mental) Health Panel |
11:45-12:15 | Parent Panel |
12:15 - 1:00 | Lunch |
1:00 - 2:00 | Disability Services Panel |
2:00-2:30 | Youth Panel |
2:45 - 3:45 | Housing & Public Health Panel |
3:45-4:00 | Closing |
Marina Lalayants, PhD, is an Associate Professor and Chair of Child Welfare: Children, Youth and Families field of practice at the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College, The City University of New York. Throughout her professional career, her interests have been in examining and responding to the needs of low-income families, children, and youth in child welfare. In response to such complex and multi-faceted problems as child maltreatment, Dr. Lalayants have extensively studied multidisciplinary collaborative efforts between child protective services and mental health, substance abuse, domestic violence, medical service providers, and law enforcement, while combining the organizational and clinical dimensions to identify best practices associated with successful collaborative practice implementation. Dr. Lalayants’ recent line of inquiry has focused on family-centered and collaborative approaches building partnerships with parents and caregivers with the support of parent advocates to encourage family engagement and participation in case decision-making and child welfare services, elevate parents’ voice, support families, and ultimately promote child safety and successful child and family outcomes. Funded by the ACYF Children’s Bureau, in partnership with NYC Administration for Children’s Services and Kempe Center, Dr. Lalayants led the design, implementation, and evaluation of the pilot Enhanced Family Conferencing Initiative, a randomized-controlled trial of a parent advocacy initiative in child protection, designed to engage families in the development of safety plans with the support of parent advocates. Dr. Lalayants’ research findings have been published in social work and interdisciplinary high-impact journals and presented at national and international venues.
Behavioral Health Panel
Facilitator: Sue Abderholden
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Jessica Bernier has been working at Carver County doing child welfare work for over 8 years. She has 9 years of experience in child welfare/behavioral health. In her current role she completes child protection assessments and investigations. She has past experience as an ongoing case manager for child protection and children’s mental health. She has also completed internships in child welfare involving truancy and foster care licensing. She completed undergraduate degrees in Social Work and Criminal Justice at MSU Moorhead in 2013 and obtained her MSW from MSU, Mankato in 2021. |
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Carmichael Finn MA, LAMFT, LADC, ADCR-MN, “Finn”, is the current Executive Director at Recovering Hope Treatment Center in Mora, Minnesota. Finn has twenty years of experience providing services to families and individuals in the field of behavioral health. Finn is licensed as an alcohol and drug counselor in the State of Minnesota and obtained a Master degree in Marriage and Family Therapy. Additionally, Finn is a Community Faculty member at Metropolitan State University and teaches in the Alcohol and Drug Counseling program. Finn is also a member of the Minnesota Association of Resources for Recovery and Chemical Health (MARRCH) Ethics Committee. Interests include gender, ethics, research, LGBTQ issues, and addiction and the family. |
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Amelia LeGarde, Gitchigamigabowikwe, is from Grand Portage and an enrolled band member with Fort Williams First Nation. Amelia is a graduate from the College of St. Scholastica for her BA, and a graduate from the MSW program at the University of MN Duluth. While in the master’s program at UMD, Amelia was both a Child Welfare Scholar and a NCWWI scholar. Amelia has been working in the front lines as a child protection case manager for the last 10 years, 6 of those being in tribal welfare. In her time at the county, Amelia worked in the ICW unit, and thus has spent the majority of her professional career working with Indigenous families and communities while following and implementing the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act (MIFPA). In addition to her child welfare experience, Amelia has been training with UMD’s Tribal Training and Certification Partnership (TTCP) since November 2021. As a community trainer with the TTCP, Amelia is part of a team that trains BSW and MSW students, new ongoing child welfare workers, ongoing child welfare workers with years of experience, Guardians ad litem, tribal partners, and DHS on ICWA and MIFPA. Amelia is currently the Lead Social Worker of three ongoing units at St. Louis County and is responsible for mentorship and support of practice fidelity. |
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Judge Mark J. Kappelhoff is a District Court Judge on the Fourth Judicial District Court in Hennepin County, Minnesota, where he serves as the Presiding Judge of Juvenile Court. He also is a member of the Hennepin County District Court’s Equal Justice Committee and represents Hennepin County District Court on the State-Wide Committee on Equality and Justice.
Before being appointed to the bench, Judge Kappelhoff was an Associate Clinical Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School, where he Directed the Criminal Justice Clinic. He also served as the Director of the Minnesota Law Public Interest Residency Program and taught a seminar course on Human Trafficking, which he continues to teach as an Adjunct Professor.
Judge Kappelhoff spent nearly two decades as a federal prosecutor in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, where he served in a number of senior leadership positions, including Deputy Assistant Attorney General and Chief of the Criminal Section. In these positions, he prosecuted cases involving police misconduct, human trafficking, and hate crimes. Among his responsibilities, he oversaw the Department’s criminal and civil investigations in Ferguson Missouri, Baltimore, Maryland, and other police departments around the country. He also played an instrumental role in the Department’s efforts to secure passage of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, co-chaired the Attorney General’s Advisory Group on racial disparities in federal sentencing, and created the Civil Rights Division’s groundbreaking Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
Judge Kappelhoff received a number of honors for his work as a federal prosecutor, including the Attorney General’s Award for Exceptional Service — the Department’s highest award for employees — for his work on the Ferguson Police Department investigation. He also received the Presidential Rank Award — the highest award for federal government career senior executive service professionals.
Prior to joining the Department of Justice, Judge Kappelhoff was an Assistant Public Defender in Montgomery County, Maryland. He also has served as an adjunct law professor at the University of Maryland School of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, and American University, Washington College of Law.
A graduate of St. John’s University in Collegeville, Minn., Judge Kappelhoff received his J.D. from American University, Washington College of Law. |
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Julie Schultz has been the executive director of Main Street Family Services for the past 7 years. Julie began this agency responding to a need in the community for supervised visits and parenting education services. Under Julie’s leadership, Main Street has expanded its services to include mental health and prevention services, along with continuing to provide supervised visitation and parent education. Main Street is in Elk River, Minnesota. Julie is a licensed social worker and received her social work degree from Bethel College. Over the past 20 years, Julie has been helping children and families in a variety of capacities. Julie spent over 10 years as an adoption social worker for a small private agency doing international adoptions. She has experience as a school social worker, she taught parenting classes in ECFE and facilitated support groups for adoptive families through NACAC. For 5 years Julie was an independent contractor doing supervised visits and parenting skills for families involved in child protection cases. Along with being a mother of eight, with two of her children joining her family through adoption, Julie is also a proud grandmother of 10. Julie’s personal mission and passion is to support nurturing and loving relationships between parents and their children by helping them overcome the challenges they face. |
Parent Perspectives – QPI-MN
Panelists: Shana King, Sheena Roy, Mikala Dickerson
Disability Services Panel
Facilitator: Traci LaLiberte
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Hannah Checketts is a Lead Investigative Social Worker for St. Louis County. She received her undergraduate degree in social work from the University of Wisconsin-Superior and her master’s degree in social work from the University of Minnesota-Duluth. She began her career as a county child welfare worker in Douglas County, Wisconsin in 2013 before making a transition to St. Louis County the following year. In the last decade she has held a variety of positions within children and family services including juvenile justice (probation), ongoing child protection case management, investigations and assessment, and family/corporate child foster care licensing.
Prior to a recent promotion and return to Investigations in fall of 2022, she spent the last four years working exclusively in licensing and development of child foster care resources. She was the corporate child foster care licensor for St. Louis County and developed/licensed The St. Louis County Emergency Family Foster Care Program, an innovative response to providing emergency care to children outside of a traditional shelter setting. In this work, she has collaborated extensively with 245D (Home and Community Based Service Providers), case managers providing Rule 185 Case Management, and MN Choice Assessors and Waiver Case Managers. She is part of a rapid consult team here in St. Louis County which pulls together workers in both Children and Adult Services to expedite disability services for children in crisis.
Hannah is passionate and committed to serving children and families in her community. She believes that early connection to specialized services and resources can be a proactive way to provide safety and ensure family preservation. |
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Gayle Koop has been licensed for child foster care in St. Louis County since around 1987. Gayle and her husband, Jon’s, unique medical expertise as a NICU nurse and paramedic respectively made them well equipped to support high needs children with physical, cognitive, and mental disabilities. Two of the children they took home in the 1990’s are now young adults that still live in their home. They have also adopted a child with disabilities out of the foster care system and more recently were instrumental in the adoption of two of their grandchildren that were previously in corporate care.
Gayle’s involvement with HCBS and Disability Services started in the early 2000’s. Gayle was approached by St. Louis County to expand her services/care and was one of the first child corporate foster care providers in the county. Years later, she is now one of the largest providers in this area and operates four corporate CFC programs and her own family program. Gayle supports children 0-18 years of age on ID/DD Waivers and CADI Waivers. Between the five homes she has seventeen waivered beds. She has supported youth all over including children from outside of St. Louis County. |
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Charlotte McDonald
Char has her master’s degree in clinical social work, is licensed as a LICSW with the MN Board of Social Work and has certificates in Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health and Permanency and Adoption. Char has worked in various roles over her career, previously working as a Guardian ad Litem, a child protection worker, an adoption worker, and in-home therapist with foster children, and coordinating statewide early intervention programming for young children and families focused on preventing child maltreatment at DHS.
Char currently works full-time at the MN Department of Health focusing on continuous quality improvement efforts for family home visiting and part-time as the Clinical Manager and therapist at Main Street Family Services. Over her career, Char has been a representative for Minnesota’s Governor’s Interagency Coordinating Council, been an active member of Minnesota’s Interagency Development Screening Task Force, previously sat on the advisory board for the Minnesota Association of Children’s Mental Health, and currently remains on the planning team for MN’s Help Me Connect. Char is passionate about interagency and systems collaboration, specifically as it relates to young children and families and ensuring services are streamlined to support children with mental health and disabilities. |
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Megan Westerheide is a LICSW currently working with Dakota County as an embedded social worker in the West St. Paul Police Department and on the crisis stabilization team. Megan previously worked in a variety of settings including: corporate foster cares, schools, and hospitals. Megan’s primary focus is working with youth and adolescents with significant mental health concerns with increased behavioral needs. Megan has also worked with adults in forensic mental health settings. |
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Nikki Villavicencio is a longtime disability rights advocate. She serves her community by being one of the City of Maplewood’s City Council members and the Chair of the MN Council on Disability. One of her greatest accomplishments is to be mother to her daughter, which led her and other advocates to help pass legislation to assist parents with disabilities. |
Youth Perspectives Panel with Foster Advocates
Facilitator- Hoang Murphy
Panelists: Karen Banks, Erin Gantz, Travis Matthews, Tiffany Omete
Housing and Public Health Panel
Facilitator: Michelle Gerrard
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Jamilee Brown received her BSW from Saint Catherine University and MSW with clinical focus from Saint Mary’s. She currently works for Hennepin County’s Adult Representation Services as a Case Management Assistant working in civil public defense in a micro setting supplying indigent clients with assistance toward parent representation for CPS cases, housing stabilization, assisting with the health equity legal project and providing resources. These all have intersectionality when we think of basic needs that pour into the CPS sector. In addition, she has a background working in school social work, supervised parenting, and clinical therapy to families experiencing separation. |
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Amy Mimm, MS, RN, PHN is a Public Health Supervisor for a Family Home Visiting program in the Dakota County Public Health Department in MN. Amy is also a trainer for the Maternal Early Childhood Sustained Home-visiting (MECSH) program and the Mothers and Babies program. She earned her BA from Gustavus Adolphus College and MS from the University of Minnesota. |
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Tamara L. Stark (pronouns: she/her/hers) serves as Senior Director of Housing and Youth Development at Tubman.Tubman is a non-profit, community based agency that provides a range of prevention, intervention, outreach and leadership services across the Twin-Cities metro, reaching nearly 20,000 people each year with the goal of preventing challenges associated with violence and trauma.Tamara leads efforts to build comprehensive approaches to enhance the well-being of people in community-based settings, schools, and housing programs. Tamara believes that meaningful collaborations and the leadership of people directly impacted by challenges are key to thriving communities. Tamara has launched a range of innovative prevention, housing, economic justice, outreach, and leadership programs and partnerships, including access to strength-based services for youth and young adults to improve personal, social, and financial conditions. Tamara has over 20 years of leadership experience in the social services sector, including prior work as a therapist, educator, and youth program quality consultant. Tamara credits being a peer counselor in high school and childhood theater experiences as key influences. Tamara has been awarded by public health leaders for her contributions to violence prevention and youth work. Tamara received her BA from Saint Olaf College and her MA from Argosy University. She loves time with family, friends, and people she meets along the way.Tamara enjoys creative endeavors in all aspects of life. |
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Mary Pumphrey works as the Core Sites Housing Stability Program Manager and Training Manager at CommonBond Communities, a provider of affordable housing with services with properties in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa. In this role, she is responsible for the design, development, implementation, and evaluation of the Core Sites Housing Stability Program, with a focus on eviction prevention. This program has expanded resident services support to over 2000+ units of affordable housing using a web-based call center model. Mary is a collaborative leader who has supervised resident services staff, developed training modules on topics including best practices in working with vulnerable populations, and facilitated case consultation groups for staff. Mary received her BA in Government from the University of Virginia and her MSW from St. Mary’s University. Mary lives and builds community in the Seward neighborhood of Minneapolis where she serves on the Seward Neighborhood Group and Seward Longfellow Restorative Justice boards of directors. |
Keynote Speaker-Marina Lalayants In this presentation, Dr. Lalayants described how she led the design, implementation, and evaluation of the pilot Enhanced Family Conferencing Initiative, a randomized-controlled trial of a parent advocacy initiative in child protection, designed to engage families in the development of safety plans with the support of parent advocates. Dr. Lalayants’ research findings have been published in social work and interdisciplinary high-impact journals and presented at national and international venues.
Behavioral Health Panel, In this panel, our speakers discuss the intersection between behavioral health care and child welfare and why collaboration is important. The moderator was Sue Abderholden, MPH Executive Director of NAMI-MN. Panelists were Jessica Bernier, CP Investigations worker from Carver County, Carmichael Finn, Executive Director of Recovering Hope Treatment, Julie Schultz, Executive Director of Main Street Family Services, Justice Mark Kappelhoff, a Hennepin County judge, and Amelia LeGarde, a CP Investigations worker for Saint Louis County.
Parent Panel with QPI-MN, In this panel, we learn about the experiences of system-involved parents about the benefits and challenges to interdisciplinary collaboration in child welfare. The panelists were Mikala Dickerson, Theresa Day, and Shana King.
Disability Services Panel, In this panel, we hear from several individuals about the need to intersect child welfare and disability services. The facilitator was Dr. Traci LaLiberte, Executive Director at CASCW. The panelists were Hannah Checketts, CP Investigations worker at Saint Louis County, Charlotte McDonald from the MN Department of Health, Gayle Koop, a licensed foster parent in Saint Louis County and former NICU nurse, and Megan Westerheide, a social worker.
Youth Panel with Foster Advocates, In this panel, we hear from system-impacted youth from Foster Advocates. The facilitator was Hoang Murphy, Executive Director of Foster Advocates. Panelists were Karen Banks, Foster Advocates Community Board member, post-partum doula, and educator, Erin Grantz, Foster Advocates Fellow, and Tiffany Omete, Foster Advocates Fellow.
Housing & Public Health Panel, In this panel, we learn about the opportunities and challenges of interdisciplinary collaboration between child welfare and housing resources/organizations and how this intersects with public health. The moderator was Michelle Decker Gerrard, Senior Research Manager at the Wilder Foundation. Panelists were Jamilee Brown, Case Management Assistant at Hennepin County’s Adult Representation Services, Amy Mimm, MS, RN, PHN, Public Health Supervisor in Dakota County, Tamara Stark, Senior Director of Housing and Youth Development at Tubman, and Mary Pumphrey, Core Sites Housing Stability Program Manager and Training Manager at Common Bond Communities.
On Site Participants:
The conference will be held at the Delta Hotel, Minneapolis, MN.
1330 Industrial Boulevard NE | Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 55413 | Tel: +1 612-331-1900
Parking is available at no cost at the hotel surface lot
Find information for your online reservation at the link above.
Off-Site Group Participants:
Prior to the event, you will receive additional information for this event.