Working to Improve Outcomes for Parents and Children with Disabilities in Child Welfare

Created in 2011, the DCWC brings together practitioners and researchers from the fields of child welfare, disability, and education in an effort to improve outcomes for parents and children with disabilities in the child welfare system in Minnesota.

Goals

  • To raise awareness and understanding of the needs of children and parents with disabilities who are served in the child welfare, disability, and educational systems
  • To act as a resource to disability service providers, school districts, child welfare agencies, and other service providers so that they are able to work more effectively with young people and their families
  • To foster dialogue among service providers involved in supporting children and parents with disabilities in the child welfare system so that they may promote positive outcomes in all aspects of their lives (including educational stability and attainment; permanency and stability in living arrangements; and integrated, supportive, and appropriate disability services)

Downloadable Tools and Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

The child welfare system is a group of public and private services that are focused on ensuring that all children live in safe, permanent and stable environments that support their well-being. Child welfare services may interact with entire families, or they may be focused on direct intervention with children.

The public child welfare system operates at the federal, state, and local levels. Additionally, many private and community-based organizations are involved in providing for children’s well-being. Thus, the child welfare system varies dramatically from state to state.

When the DCWC refers to child welfare, we are referring to any of the elements of this system. Thus, a family who is child welfare-involved may be receiving services but still be intact (family preservation), or the child or children may be removed from the home, either temporarily or permanently.

View the DCWC fact sheet: Definitions & Questions about Services: Child Welfare (PDF)

For more information about child welfare programs and services, visit the Child Welfare Information Gateway at: https://www.childwelfare.gov/

Disability can be used very broadly, to refer to a wide array of diagnoses and conditions.

There are many different understandings and definitions of disability and disabilities. According to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, a disability is:

  1. a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities of such individual;
  2. a record of such impairment; or
  3. being regarded as having such an impairment. (P.L. 101-336)

It is notable that the definition of disability does not specifically mention length of time for impairment, nor does it specify age.

The federal special education law (IDEA) defines a child as a disability as a child with an impairment that falls into one of thirteen categories:

  • autism;
  • deaf-blindness;
  • deafness;
  • emotional disturbance;
  • hearing impairment;
  • intellectual disability;
  • multiple disabilities;
  • orthopedic impairment;
  • other health impairment;
  • specific learning disability;
  • speech or language impairment;
  • traumatic brain injury; or
  • visual impairment (including blindness).

In order to qualify for special education services, the child’s education must be “adversely affected” by their disability.

When the DCWC uses the term “disability” we are generally working from the ADA definition.

View the DCWC fact sheet: Definitions & Questions about Services: Special Education & Other Services (PDF)

For more information on the ADA definition of disability: http://www.ada.gov/q&aeng02.htm

For more information on special education definitions of disability: http://nichcy.org/disability/categories

Children are generally referred to the child welfare system because a friend, family member or other concerned adult suspects that the child is experiencing maltreatment.

Definitions of child abuse and neglect are part of the federal Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act. Specifically, abuse and neglect refer to “any recent act or failure to act on the part of a parent or caretaker which results in death, serious physical or emotional harm, sexual abuse or exploitation; or an act or failure to act that presents an imminent risk of serious harm” (https://www.childwelfare.gov/can/).

If you suspect a child is suffering from abuse or neglect, you can find information about how to report it here: http://www.childwelfare.gov/responding/how.cfm

If you are in Minnesota, call your county’s child protection and services office.

If it is an emergency, call 911.

For more information about definitions of abuse and neglect: http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/factsheets/whatiscan.cfm

Many people think adoption and permanency mean the same thing.; however, it is more accurate to think of of permanency as a broad umbrella under which adoption fits. We all know what adoption means you go to court to say, “This person is a part of my family legally.” Adoption is legal permanency. But there are other types of permanency that include physical and emotional permanency. For children in the child welfare permanency may occur via:

  1. Return home
  2. Transfer of physical and legal guardianship
  3. Termination of parental rights and search for adoptive family
  4. Alternative Planned Permanency Living Arrangement (APPLA)

Permanency is not a single placement, it is not a plan, it is not a program. It is not what some call ‘long-term foster care’ or ‘permanent foster care’ – there is no such thing, as foster care is designed to be temporary. It is also not an Independent Living Skills class.

Permanency is a knowing, deep within, that you belong somewhere with someone even if you make a mistake, including a really bad mistake. Permanency requires relationships that are life-long and provide what any family might: being in a Last Will and Testament, hearing your name on the answering machine, having your picture on the family photo wall in someone’s house, knowing someone will walk you down the aisle (should you choose to get married and want that), realizing that the term ‘family vacation’ includes you, having people who will visit you regularly even if you are in jail.

If you are a worker in the child welfare field, here is a question you can ask yourself at a youth’s staffing meeting to determine whether or not that youth has permanency: Look around the room. Is there anyone in the room who is not paid to be there (this includes foster parents, guardians ad litem/CASAs, paid mentors)? If the answer is ‘no,’ then that youth does not have permanency.

Disability impacts child welfare clients in two primary ways- either because the child themselves have a disability and/or because their parents have disabilities. In either case, it is critical that child welfare providers are aware that many of the families that they are working with include people with disabilities.

Increased awareness of disability and disability issues are important for a number of reasons. First, research and anecdotal evidence have both shown that there are high numbers of people with disabilities involved in the child welfare system as clients; thus, it is likely that if you work with the child welfare system, you are already working with people with disabilities. Second, there are a number of community services and supports available to people with disabilities, which may be helpful in assisting clients in reaching their goals. Finally, best practice demands that we provide services that are “meet clients where they are”, meaning that we employ strategies for engagement, assessment, intervention, prevention, and evaluation that are inclusive and respectful of all of our clients’ needs and strengths.

Again, there are several ways that your work within the disability system and special education systems can interact with child welfare. You may be a special education teacher or school social worker who is working with a young person who is involved in the child welfare system. Or you may be a disability advocate who is working with parents who have become involved. Or there may be some other situation that has caused you to become aware of child welfare.

Regardless of the reason, data indicates that there is a high rate of overlap in clientele between the child welfare and disability serving systems. However, it is also clear that there is a great deal of “siloing” among systems, and that we often are not aware of the services, supports, and expertise that are available in other systems of care. As well, we may be making assumptions- for example, that a child has a permanent place to live, or that an adult with a disability is not able to parent, or that if independent living plans exist in one system that it is recognized in another. It is our hope that by raising awareness and fostering dialogue between systems, that we will begin to improve responses to children and families with disabilities who are child-welfare involved.

Contact DCWC

We hope that you will find all of this information helpful in your own work and that you will contact us if we can be of assistance, or to let us know about resources or expertise in your own area. Our email: [email protected]