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Children entering the foster care system face serious
challenges.
- If children in foster care are part of a sibling group,
they will be separated from their brothers and sisters in approximately
67% of the cases. They will find themselves alone in strange new surrounding.
- Social workers, who are responsible for the care of
children in foster care, usually have such a large number of cases that
they do not have the time to provide adequate oversight and support
that foster parents need.
- Foster parents can terminate a child’s placement
at any time and often do. They do so for varied reasons: Circumstances
in the foster parent’s life may change. The foster child in their
care may not fit in with their own children. They may feel unable to
handle the challenge of dealing with insecure, anxious and sometimes
resentful children, or they simply do not like the child.
- Most children in foster care experience multiple placements
and suffer the fear and insecurity of not knowing when they are going
to be moved next.
A former foster child recently wrote:
“I was placed in
my first foster home at age four and for next
eight years I moved in and out of foster homes and several
shelters. Twice I was sent back to live with my mother and
abused by my stepfathers. There were no summer camps,
birthday parties or favorite toys. My childhood was a case
of “serial abandonment.”
The separation from brothers and sisters, the terrible feeling of being
alone, the anxiety of not knowing where one will end up next and for how
long, exact a toll. These children graduate from the present foster care
system with serious problems at a cost to society.
The statistics are sobering.
Research (State of California) indicates that within four
years of leaving the foster
care system:
50% were unemployed
25% had been homeless
40% were on public assistance
50% did not graduate from high school |
The Children’s Village creates a community
where Village Parents are trained, supervised and supported, and where
the Village community works together to provide the child with a feeling
of permanence and belonging. The Village is dedicated to give children
secure and happy childhoods so that they will grow up to be emotionally
healthy adults equipped to lead happy and productive lives.
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