Image Credit: Japheth Mast / Pexels / CC
By Anita Wadhwani [Tennessee Lookout -CC BY-NC-ND 4.0] –
A new law taking effect this month requires the Department of Children’s Services to add additional services for kids leaving state custody who are between the ages of 18 and 21.
The law requires DCS to pay low-income relatives of those children stipends set at 50% of the rate paid to foster parents while kids transition from teenagers to adults.
According to state estimates, more than 400 young adults will be enrolled in the extension-of- foster-care program in its first year. The state has budgeted $3.9 million to pay relatives caring for former foster kids in the program – an average daily rate of about $21 per family.
DCS currently contracts with private providers to manage services for kids aging out of foster care. Those private providers will continue to be responsible for monthly visits, and verifying whether relatives are eligible to take care of former foster kids.
The goal of programs extending services to kids in state custody who would, in the past, lose them at age 18. Kids aging out of foster care with no support are especially vulnerable to financial instability, homelessness, human trafficking and committing crimes.
One Response
The contract agencies of DCS will probably do all they can to stop this program since some of them make healthy profits on foster children.