In New Report, Foster Youth Tell Congress, “Don’t Write Us Off”

In New Report, Foster Youth Tell Congress, “Don’t Write Us Off”

Better Policies, Not More Funding, Will Help Most Vulnerable

Psychotropic Drugs, Education and Immigration Top Areas for Reform

 Washington, DC – August 2, 2011 – Today a group of former foster youth interning on Capitol Hill released a comprehensive report on the system in which they were raised. The Future of Foster Care: A Revolution for Change details the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute’s (CCAI) Foster Youth Internship (FYI) recommendations on improving hot-button issues ranging from immigration, education, mentoring, psychotropic drugs, child abuse, and government accountability. All of the topics reported are those that the youth felt motivated by personal experience to present. The report serves as a blueprint for Members of Congress interested in advancing foster care reform.  The 2011 FYI Report is the fourth in a series from which several previous recommendations are in the process of becoming law.

The 2011 FYI briefing and report should teach us two simple, but profound lessons,” said Kathleen Strottman, Executive Director of the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute (CCAI), “that we are too often failing to provide youth in foster care with the everyday things that ANY child needs to thrive, and more importantly, the children who do receive these supports, have the potential to be our future leaders.”

The report’s authors delivered compelling highlights of the report to Members of Congress at a briefing last week.  Their main message: “We have potential. Don’t let the foster care system write us off.” The youth, 15 leaders from across the country who, due to abuse or neglect, spent the majority of their lives in foster care, were interns for Members of Congress this summer including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Representative Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.). Their mission is to speak for the almost 410,000 children still in the foster care system – children who are being left behind.

“It’s a shame it takes a death of a child for policymakers to take notice of psychotropic medication abuse within child welfare agencies. How many more foster children have to die before policymakers and child welfare professionals realize that this is a national crisis and not a state-to-state issue? We need to hold states accountable for the safety of these children by creating a national benchmark,” said former foster youth Madison Sandoval-Lunn from Las Vegas.

Marjorie Delgadillo, a former foster youth from California, called on Members to take action on behalf of immigrant children in foster care, who make up 10 percent of children in care.  Delgadillo was specifically concerned with children whose parents were undocumented. According to Delgadillo, “The real tragedy is that while the federal government provided some special protections for these vulnerable children almost 20 years ago, states are simply not using them to protect kids.”

Several of the youth stressed the importance of education, an area that is consistently overlooked.  As a result, only 50 percent of youth in foster care graduate from high school, and less than 3 percent go on to graduate from college.  Insight as to why this is the case and ways that it can be improved are included in the full report.

“Each year some of the most passionate and upstanding young men and women are a part of CCAI’s Foster Youth Internship program. They come to Washington not only as interns, but as the collective voice of every child in the U.S. foster care system,” said Senator Mary Landrieu (D-La.), co-chair of the Congressional Coalition on Adoption, “It is a privilege to continue to work alongside these tremendous youth as they fight for the much needed change in child welfare policy.”

Representative Karen Bass (D-Calif.), also a Coalition co-chair, stated “CCAI deserves tremendous credit for giving opportunity to former foster youth through their inspiring internship program. The participants are champions who are overcoming the odds to make a difference in their lives and in the welfare of their communities. We will be hearing for years to come about the achievements of these wonderful young leaders.”

Representative Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), also a Coalition co-chair added “Each summer, CCAI’s Foster Youth Interns fill a valuable role in offices across Capitol Hill. As a foster mother of 23, I know these young people have overcome tremendous challenges in their short lives. I commend the foster youth for doing exceptional work during their internships and I wish them every bit of success in their future. I am confident CCAI will continue their excellent work running the Foster Youth Internship Program which provides these youth with important experience and a taste of Capitol Hill.”

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Save the date: 2011 FYI Briefing and Report Release

CCAI invites you to attend the 2011 Foster Youth Internship briefing and reception where the interns will release their policy report of recommendations to improve foster care.  These 15 exceptional leaders have spent their summer interning on Capitol Hill and are using their legislative knowledge combined with their personal experience of life growing up in foster care to educate policymakers on areas for reform.  The briefing will cover pertinent policy areas such as the reauthorizations of the Promoting Safe and Stable Families Program, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, and federal child welfare financing.  In addition, each intern has focused on a specific policy area of interest and will present recommendations on these issues.  Past briefings and reports have been used by policymakers and advocates across the country as guideposts for the development of future adoption and foster care related policies.  Details:  Wednesday, July 27th in the Capitol Visitor Center Room SVC 208-209; Briefing: 3:00-4:30pm; Reception: 4:30-5:30pm.   To ensure we save a space for you, RSVP to Emily@ ccainstitute.org by Friday, July 22nd.

The interns learning about federal child welfare policy in preparation for writing their report.


Foster Youth Interns On Capitol Hill Work To Help Others

WASHINGTON, D.C.  (WUSA) – Marjorie Delgadillo has just graduated from college and is working as an intern for California Congresswoman Karen Bass. Marjorie says it’s a miracle she wound up here… based on her traumatic childhood.

“I was put into the system when I was 13 years old because I had suffered abuse by my stepfather from an early age.  I was bounced around from foster home to foster home, and shelters,” said Delgadillo.

Almost all foster children are taken from their homes because they’ve been abused or neglected… says Kathleen Strottman, the Executive Director of the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute.

In most states, at 18 or 17, they will basically be ejected from the foster care system. They’ll maybe get a plastic bag of some things they’ve collected over the years. And a handshake and a pat on the back and a “good luck,” with no where to so,” said Kathleen Strottman.

At 14, Marjorie was lucky to find a permanent home with a loving couple. But that’s not the norm.

Only 50 percent graduate from high school… and only 3 percent …from college. A quarter of them wind up homeless.

“Fundamentally, we need to view children in the foster care system as any other child. We don’t when our child turns 18, tell them that its time to go and send them out into the world,” said Rep. Bass.

Congresswoman Bass wants foster children allowed to receive benefits until they’re 25. That’s something Marjorie will be pushing in her role as an intern and advocate.

I believe if they are able and afforded to have mentoring programs, like CCAI, or other ones that we can think of or dream of, then there would be more people of the foster care system who would be speaking out and making changes for people who have been in the system,” said Delgadillo.

Written by Peggy Fox and available online here.

New fund to help foster youth climb Capitol Hill

Former foster youth interning in Congress this summer will get a little help from the Sara Start Fund for Foster Youth, a new venture announced today by the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute (CCAI). With partners including Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, Under Armour and matchbox food group, the Sara Start Fund is designed to help former foster youth get a start on their professional lives by providing a stipend for a business wardrobe and informal career counseling.  The Phillips Collection art museum will provide special enrichment activities.

The Sara Start Fund will work in tandem with CCAI’s Foster Youth Internship (FYI) program, which places former foster youth in congressional offices to advocate for the 463,000 youth currently in care across the country. Interns in the program must attend college and demonstrate leadership skills on campus.

“One of the main goals of the FYI program is to remind policymakers and those around them that youth who grow up in foster care are like any other youth in that they have hopes, dreams, and most importantly, enormous potential. The Sara Start Fund is one way we can invest in that potential and what I know for sure is that society will be the ultimate beneficiaries of this investment,” said Kathleen Strottman, CCAI’s executive director.

Click here to read the full press release.

When the school of hard knocks sets its sights on the pinnacle of power

CCAI Advisory Board Member Lindsay Ellenbogen writes about a former Foster Youth Intern for the The Hill‘s pundits blog today:

When Jetaine Hart came to Washington in 2009, she was well-accustomed to cramming the trappings of her life into a few small suitcases and moving them from place to place. By age 20, she moved to six different homes in northern California, each time uprooting the familiar for the unknown. Jetaine wasn’t what we affectionately call an “Army brat,” whose family moved periodically as service required; she was a child in foster care. Moving was not her choice; it’s what happened to her by chance.

But the move to Washington was different: first, because she wanted it; and second, because it was filled with promise, opportunity. Through a little-known program on Capitol Hill that gives former foster youth access to the privileged world of summer internships, Jetaine applied for a chance to start her professional life. Each year, the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute selects 15 kids who spent time in foster care and places them in congressional offices. To qualify, these talented interns must attend college, a high bar that less than 3 percent of kids in foster care reach. Jetaine, with bachelor’s in hand, started her climb on Capitol Hill in the office of Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.).

Read the full article here.

Jetaine

2011 FYI interns look forward to a summer on Capitol Hill

Next month, 15 former foster youth will leaves their homes from across the country and head to Washington, DC ready to leave their mark on Capitol Hill in an effort to improve the lives of their 423,000 brothers and sisters still in the foster care system.  These 15 individuals are either current college or graduate students, or recent graduates, who are devoting their summer to successfully complete a Congressional internship, participate in advocacy events, discuss their personal experience with policymakers and advocates, and network with some of the country’s most respected leaders on these issues in further impact foster care reform.

CCAI is looking forward to spending a life-changing summer with Kadidjia Adula (NY), Marjorie Delgadillo (CA), Lakeshia Dorsey (CA), Ruth Jimenez (NJ), Mitsu Klines (ID), Linda Lee (FL), Marisela Ortiz (WA), Desiree Parker (WI), Amy Peters (NE), Jessie Peterson (CA), Derrick Riggins (FL), Melanie Roberts (MO), Madison Sandoval-Lunn (NV), Richard Terrell (MN), and Taatianna VanReed (VA).

When asked what they are most looking forward to about the opportunity to be a 2011 Foster Youth Intern  , many of the interns recognized their responsibility to share their story and ultimately promote the well-being of children in care.  Desiree responds, “I am most excited about what a great opportunity this will be for me to learn about government and other aspects of foster care.  I am looking forward to taking what I learn back with me and helping more foster youth, like myself, further their futures.”

Amy agrees, stating, “I’m very excited about spending the entire summer in Washington D.C., to learn about the legislative process while advocating for something I’m so passionate about. I’m grateful to have this opportunity use my story and voice to make a difference on a national level. ”

Melanie says, “I’m looking forward to learning as much as I possibly can to help provide a voice for the many children who may have otherwise never be heard!”.

Jessie responds, “I am so excited to learn! I believe this is going to be an extremely beneficial experience where I gain knowledge through the work I do, people I meet, places I see and go, and so much more. As a result, I will be successful in aiding those youth still in the foster care system today and in the future”.

Richard sums it up by saying he is planning on, “Going to D.C, working with Congress, and working hard for change.”

CCAI is excited to share that the following offices will be hosting Foster Youth Interns this year: Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV), Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO), Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA), Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA), Rep. Adrian Smith (R-NE), Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC), Senate Finance Committee Majority, Senate Finance Committee Minority, and House Committee on Ways and Means Majority.

It is not easy after a life of being uprooted and displaced to once again leave behind everything and everyone for a summer of the unknown.  As a testament to their unbelievable character, these individuals did just that, continually stepping out of their comfort zone to reach for the common goal they had each individually set: to improve the foster care system for their brother and sisters currently in care.