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Shared Family Care: An Innovative Model for Supporting & Restoring Families through Community Partnerships Amy Price, Associate Director National Abandoned Infants Assistance Resource Center School of Social Welfare University of California, Berkeley October 15, 2003 For more information, contact Amy Price at amyprice@uclink.berkeley.edu or 510- 643-8383, or go to http://aia.berkeley.edu/information_resources/shared_family_care.html
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Use of Shared Family Care Prevent Separation Restore/Reunify Decide to Relinquish
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Key Elements of SFC Community Partnerships Engagement of Families as Partners Use of Teams in Decision Making Intensive Case Management & Support Services Housing and Aftercare
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Community Partnerships Public/Private (CW Agency & CBO) Mentors (community members) Other local agencies including: Job training and employment Job training and employment Substance abuse treatment Substance abuse treatment Housing Housing Education Education
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Engagement of Families Participant Selection & Matching Process Rights and Responsibilities Agreement Individualized Family Plan
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Use of Teams in Decision Making Individualized Family Support Team Family members Family members Mentor Mentor Child welfare worker Child welfare worker Case manager Case manager Others invited by family Others invited by family Others invited by staff Others invited by staff Monthly Team Meetings
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Intensive Case Management & Support Services Caseloads of 5-6 Meet with family avg. of 10 hours/week On call 24/7 Monthly support meetings for participants Monthly support meetings/trainings for mentors
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Housing and Aftercare Housing specialist begins 30 days into placement Linkage with local housing agencies and landlords 6 months of aftercare Linkage with community and faith based organizations
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Who are the Mentors? Average age 46 Single and married (about half) 73% African American, 15% Caucasian, 7% Latina, 4% Asian/PI, 1% other Most work full or part time or are retired 25% have experience as foster parents and 2/3 have worked in human services Stable
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Shared Family Care Placements through May 2002 (n=87)
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Who is Placed in SFC? Mostly single women (a few single men) Average age of 28 58% African American, 26% Caucasian, 13% Latina, 3% other 2 children an average age of 4 Uneducated, homeless, poor, and isolated from family and community 1/3 with criminal background 2/3 with substance abuse history
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Outcomes Family stability/self-sufficiency Income and Employment Income and Employment Housing Housing Child safety & well-being Child welfare involvement Child welfare involvement
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Percentage of Graduates Employed (N=25)
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Average Monthly Income of Program Graduates
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Percentage of Graduates Living Independently
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Child Welfare Re-Entry Rate 8% re-entered foster care within 12 months of completing the SFC program.* In comparison, 14% of children in California, and 17% of children in Contra Costa County, re-entered care within 12 months of reunification after regular non- kin foster care.**
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Service Costs Mentor recruitment, training and support Pre-placement Placement Aftercare Miscellaneous Administrative
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Mean Monthly Cost Per Family SFC includes cost of direct placement services
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Mean Total Cost Per Family SFC includes cost of direct placement services
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Mean Total Cost Per Family (with all administrative costs) SFC includes all administrative costs
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Other Costs Start-up costs: a minimum of $100,000 over 12-18 months Respite Matched savings Transportation Meeting costs Administrative overhead
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Potential Savings Keeps families together Less entry or re-entry to system More stable, productive families Multi-System savings, e.g., $750 per month in homeless shelter (see next slide)
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Mean Monthly Cost Per Family with Cost of Homeless Shelter
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Getting Started Conduct community assessment of needs and resources Educate key partners Assess agency’s resources, readiness, experience, capacity, and commitment Explore funding sources (look beyond child welfare)
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Program Development Allow 12-18 months Establish collaborative relationships (formal & informal); clarify roles & responsibilities Identify goals and anticipated outcomes Design program (address target population, length of placement, licensing, liability, aftercare, housing) to reflect outcomes Develop policies and procedures
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Program Development (cont.) Establish mentor and client screening procedures and criteria Conduct focus groups to target mentor recruitment Recruit & train solid pool of mentors Educate potential referral sources (CWWs, judges, attorneys, AOD counselors, etc.)
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Make the commitment, start small, and have realistic expectations.
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