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Financial Help - Adoptions, Foster Care and Kinship Guardianship (Paperback)
Loot Price: R495
Discovery Miles 4 950
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Financial Help - Adoptions, Foster Care and Kinship Guardianship (Paperback)
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Loot Price R495
Discovery Miles 4 950
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Foster care is a temporary living arrangement for children who
cannot remain safely in their own homes. For nearly every child who
enters foster care, a first goal of the child welfare agency is to
ensure necessary services are identified, and provided, so that the
child can quickly and safely return to his or her parents. Most
children who leave foster care do so to be reunited with parents or
other family members. For some children, however, this is not
possible. In those cases, the child welfare agency must work to
find a new permanent home for these children and this may be
accomplished through adoption or legal guardianship. As the U.S.
Constitution has been interpreted, responsibility for the
protection of children and the well-being of children and their
families, is considered primarily a state duty. However, Congress
has long sought to assist states in improving their child welfare
services. In exchange for federal funding to support provision of
foster care and other child welfare services, states must meet
certain federal requirements.1 Under Title IV-E of the Social
Security Act, states, territories, and tribes who meet those
requirements are entitled to claim partial federal reimbursement
for the cost of providing foster care, adoption assistance, and
kinship guardianship assistance to children who meet federal
eligibility criteria. The Title IV-E program, as it is commonly
called, provides support for monthly payments on behalf of eligible
children, as well as funds for related case management activities,
training, data collection, and other costs of program
administration. In FY2011, states (including the 50 states and the
District of Columbia) spent $12.4 billion under the Title IV-E
program, and received federal reimbursement of $6.7 billion, or 54%
of that spending.
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