T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1191.1 | | CPCOD::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Thu Dec 07 1995 12:12 | 22 |
| I didn't hear the whole story, but did catch a little bit of a discussion
on NPR - there were two guest speakers. Both seemed to feel that there
need to a clear list of things that should be checked when incidence of
child welfare problems is reported and known. Both said this does not always
happen. There was some discussion about caseloads & whether they were too
heavy or not, giving the workers too much to handle to adquately look keep
abreast of each child. I don't remember any clear conclusion being drawn.
The final part of the discussion was about how much drug problems enter into
this kind of thing (if I remember correctly, about 80% of the cases). I think
this girl's mother was a cocaine addict.
I have sometimes felt that there was too much emphasis on keeping children with
their parents. Although I think the biggest factor is that there is simply
not enough common sense used. In situations which sound as though the
children were in clear danger it has often seemed stranged to me that the
children were left with their parent or given back to their parent, while
in other cases, it seems like the child-parent relationship has been
interfered with on very little grounds & the silliest of reasons - ie
the woman who was still breast feeding her 2 year old and the child was
taken away because of "sexual abuse".
Leslie
|
1191.2 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Dec 07 1995 14:03 | 20 |
| I can understand the social workers being overworked and overburdened
with bureaucracy. But in those cases where abuse has been established,
action should be immediate, decisive and permanent!
When the child has cigarette burns, broken bones, too many bruises to
have been "accidental" and burnt hair, the child should be removed
immediately. At that point there should be no second chances. The
parent(s) should be viewed as a criminal(s) and a danger to the child.
The cause for his/her/their behavior (drugs, whatever) might be of
interest to someone involved in any rehabilitation effort but should
have no bearing whatsoever on the decision to keep the child safe.
Ferther, the parent(s) should continue to bear the finalcial burden of
raising the child. No exceptions. No visitation rights. Nothing
except a court mandated child support check every month arriving at the
home of the foster parents. These people are dangerous criminals and
they ought to be treated as such.
-dave
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1191.3 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Dec 07 1995 14:38 | 5 |
| Re: .2
With due process of law, of course -- right, Dave?
-- Bob
|
1191.4 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Dec 07 1995 15:31 | 6 |
| >>With due process of law, of course -- right, Dave?
With the same amount of "due process" given the child when he/she was
being tortured.
|
1191.5 | | CPCOD::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Thu Dec 07 1995 15:44 | 24 |
| I think one of the problems is that people are reluctant to break up
families. The standard rule seems to be, only place the child in a
foster situation when absolutely necessary. There are probably several
reasons, one is cost, two is lack of good foster situations, another is
that families have always been important in our society. I think they
still should be important, but of course, not at the cost of a child's
life, or even at the cost of a child being battered and abused.
The problem is: it can be fine judgement call on the part of social services.
That is where the case load issue comes into play. Does the worker have
adequate time to visit each home on their case list often enough? Do they
have enough time to spend an adequate amount of time at each home? Do
they know what they should be looking for? Does the child know them well
enough to trust them to be on their side, and therefore open up with them?
What are the signs that a child is in real danger? Some are blatant, but
others are not so blatent.
I don't think it is a simple matter, and I don't think the solution will
be simple either in terms of being absolutley black and white. I also have
a feeling there will always be tragic cases like this where a child slips
through all the safe guards and is badly, badly injured or killed. I would
hope (and I pray) that we would be able to greatly reduce those cases.
Leslie
|
1191.6 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Dec 07 1995 16:24 | 7 |
| Re:. 4 Dave
How is that different from saying that a person who is accused of murder
should have the same "due process" as the murder victim? Or is it
different?
-- Bob
|
1191.7 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Dec 07 1995 16:58 | 19 |
| >>How is that different ...
In many cases, there's no question about who did the beating. The
parent admits guilt yet gets custody of the child for repeat beatings.
The children are beaten/burned/broken again and again while the parent(s)
are getting "chances" or are being "counciled". "Due process" the
parent in court but only AFTER the child has been removed from harm's
way, an action that should require no due process whatsoever. And the
parent's "due process" should be in the environment of a criminal
trial.
Imagine being the doctor in the emergency room when that 6-year ond
girl was brought in for the last time. She has a familiar young face
that you've seen several times before. In the interest of protecting
"Mom's" rights, we kept sending her back into battle until she was
finally killed. Bull!
|
1191.8 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Dec 07 1995 17:22 | 18 |
| Dave,
I think there needs to be a balance between protecting the rights of the
families (parents and children) and protecting the safety of the children.
I've heard horror stories about DSS storm troopers swooping in and taking
children based on the unsubstantiated word of neighbors or child care
workers where in fact *no* abuse had taken place.
I agree that children may need to be put into temporary protective
custody, but only where there is evidence that abuse has taken place (not
just hearsay). And children should not be permanently taken from the
parents until the parents have had their day in court - the burden of
proof should be on the state to show why a family should be broken up.
In clear cases of abuse, though, I agree that the law needs to do more
than it currently does to protect children.
-- Bob
|
1191.9 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | runs with scissors | Thu Dec 07 1995 18:43 | 12 |
| Bob and Dave,
What you and I and the rest of us don't hear about is all the good
that DSS has done in getting kids out of bad situations, and in many
cases, successfully reuniting families. We only get the horror stories
when DSS over or under reacts to a given situation. Most social
workers for DSS are underpaid, overloaded with cases, and it is amazing
given this that more kids aren't critically injured or killed each
year, or otherwise slide through the cracks.
Meg, who has known a few intake workers at DSS and their admnistrative
staff.
|
1191.10 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Dec 08 1995 09:21 | 14 |
| Meg:
You bring up a valid point. Like anything else, be it the fringe
groups of faith or social issues, the bad apples get the notariety.
Unfortunately there was somewhat of a scandel up here in Massachusetts
a few years ago and I don't know if they ever recovered. DSS pulled a
young boy out of school without the consent of the parents, without
notifying the parents, and on unsubstantiated heresay. Because of the
awkward situation they got in, instead of doing the right thing they
tried to cover their tracks and the boy was separated for well over a
year. Even the liberal talk show hosts up here were appalled.
-Jack
|
1191.11 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | cuddly as a cactus | Fri Dec 08 1995 12:58 | 11 |
| jack,
I don't know why you would think "liberals" would be appalled at this.
It happens to our kids too, and the damage to a family from having been
needlessly seperated is dreadful.
what is more dreadful is when DSS fails to do its job, and a child or
children wind up dead or so severely injured they can't care for
themselves when they grow up.
Doses of caution on each side are what is called for.
|
1191.12 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Dec 08 1995 13:44 | 16 |
| If one's perspective of the world was limited to what one sees/reads in
the media, one would think that catholic priests are professional child
molesters. The DSS and others have saved thousands but will never be
recognized for it because that sort of thing it seems is not noteworthy.
IMO, a family that beats it's children is undeserving of the child(ren)
it abuses. And the people who do the abusing belong behind bars. If
we were talking about rape, we'd demand the rapist be caught, tried,
sentanced and put behind bars. No 2nd chances to recommit the horrible
act! But when the victim is a child, we somehow find more compassion
for the abuser, saying that it was the fault of drugs or poor living
conditions or something. Why are the children given lower regard? Seems
to me they should be given higher regard as they are teh innocent and
require the protection of adults.
-dave
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1191.13 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Dec 08 1995 13:45 | 13 |
| Sorry. In Massachusetts, it is a long tradition that anything from the
government is good...no matter how ghastly it is and anything from the
Private sector is bad. Example. Digital is the third largest Employer
in Massachusetts, right behind Ratheon and the State government. The
Boston Globe is a local communist rag, the ink should be red. Anyway,
the Boston Globe in years past for some reason has had it out for
Digital, never saw any accolades of any kind.
Things have changed substantially since the Dukakas' administration
faded away. The current governor is doing alot to bolster the private
sector in the commonwealth.
-Jack
|
1191.14 | Former title = 'Bad News' | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Fri Dec 08 1995 14:20 | 6 |
| With the author's permission, I have changed the title of this string
for the sake of ease in locating the topic in the future.
Richard Jones-Christie
Co-moderator/CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE
|
1191.15 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Dec 08 1995 14:24 | 11 |
| Another wrinkle in the picture. I have discussed the matter of
corporal punishment with others and have noticed those against it
categorize spankings and the like with beating your kid. I find this
an abuse of the term considering what a real child goes through when
they are "beaten". It minimizes the trajedy of abuse.
This is something that is taboo to government and it would probably be
in the governments best interest not to get involved. The lawsuits and
litigation would be disasterous.
-Jack
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1191.16 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Dec 08 1995 16:41 | 7 |
| Equating spanking with child beating is like equating dentistry with
sadism. The intent and the overall result is what you have to look at.
The overall good of the child should be paramount in whatever you do.
-dave
|