Understanding and Using Concurrent Planning to Achieve Permanency for Children and Youth
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Understanding and Using CONCURRENT PLANNING To Achieve Permanency for Children and Youth
ABA Conference June 6, 2002 Best Practices to Implement ASFA: Creative Strategies for Practitioners
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Definition of Concurrent Planning
To work towards family reunification while, at the same time, developing an alternative permanent plan. Concurrent rather than sequential planning. It involves a mix of family centered casework and legal strategies aimed at achieving timely reunification, while at the same time establishing a concurrent permanency plan if reunification cannot be accomplished. It is not a fast track to adoption, but to permanency
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Goals of Concurrent Planning
promote safety, permanency, wellbeing of children; achieve early permanency; reduce # of moves; continue significant relationships
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Goals of Concurrent Planning
To develop a network of foster parents (relatives and non-relatives) who can work toward reunification and also serve as permanency resource families for children and youth To engage families in early case planning, case review, and decision-making about the array of permanency options to meet children and youth’s urgent need for stability and continuity in their family relationships
To maintain continuity in children’ and Youth’s family, siblings, and community relationships
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Why Concurrent Planning Now?
Children are spending too much time in foster care Response to Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980 – PL: 96-272
Response to Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 ASFA
Major strategy used for child welfare agencies to meet National Outcomes and Performance Standards (Children and Family Service Reviews)
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Success Redefined
Permanency is the Goal.
Reunification is a primary but only one of several acceptable permanency goals.
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Core Components of Concurrent Planning
Success redefined Differential assessment and prognostic case review Full disclosure Frequent child-family visitation Crises and time limits as opportunity Early search for absent parents (including fathers) and relatives (including paternal resources)
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Core Components of Concurrent Planning (continued)
Plan A and Plan B – Placement with a permanency planning resource families Written Agreements, scrupulous documentation and timely case review Collaboration between social work and legal service providers
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Legal Strategies
Indian Child Welfare Act - 1978
Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act 1980 – PL:96-272 Adoption and Safe Families Act 1997 – (ASFA) Multi-Ethnic Placement Act – (MEPA) and Inter-Ethnic Placement Provisions (IEP) – 1994 [Amended in 1996 to remove barriers] The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act 1996
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Response to Legal Strategies
Family-Centered and Strengths-Based Practice Models
Community-Based Service Delivery Cultural Responsive Practice Models Open and Inclusive Practice Non-Adversarial Approaches ~ Solution-Focused Concurrent rather than Sequential Consideration of all Permanency Options
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Principles of Strengths/Needs Based Practice
Children belong in families, and need nurturing relationship with adults Children should be helped to stay with (or return to) their families People can change with the right services, education and supports Families (biological, foster and adoptive) should be viewed as partners Foster care and other placements used for family support
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Principles of Strengths/Needs Based Practice
Child’s attachment needs can be addressed through strengthening family resources
Comprehensive and individualized services focused on family empowerment – considering family strengths and underlying needs in developing individualized family service plans
Culturally responsive services
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Differential Assessment
Is a Process of: Individualizing our understanding of the individual, family, or group in the context of their present circumstances, past experiences, and potential for future functioning Deepening our family-centered understanding of the child in the context of their family, culture, and community Strengthening our understanding of the personal, interpersonal, and environmental context in which children and families live and interact.
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Differential Assessment
(continued)
• Engaging families in culturally competent, early comprehensive assessments, case planning and services needed to achieve timely permanency – reunification or an alternative plan b
• Engaging in a “Differential Prognostic Assessment” process to identify family situations in which a concurrent permanency plan/placement with a resource family is needed.
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Differential Assessment
(continued)
• Using the crisis of placement as a motivator to engage families in case planning and to make behavioral changes. • Increasing birth and foster parent partnerships in case planning
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Differential Assessment
(continued)
• Recruiting, training, and supporting permanency planning resource families in addition to other types of foster families.
• Engaging in discussions with foster families about the need for a concurrent permanency plan and their interest in serving as a back-up permanency resource for children who may not return to their birth parents.
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Differential Assessment
(continued)
• Identifying relatives and tribal resources who can be placement/permanency resources early on in the case planning process. • Respectfully using full disclosure with birth families and foster/adoptive families throughout the life of the case.
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Differential Assessment
(continued)
• Collaborating with courts, attorneys, and service providers to better serve children and families. • Determining when to pursue the alternative permanency plan such as adoption or guardianship when it is clear the parent(s) can not or will not care for their children.
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The Cycle of Change
Pre-contemplation
Maintenance Contemplation
Relapse Action Determination
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Benefits
To the child
To the Parent
Reduced placements Earlier permanency through reunification or other permanency option
Creates sense of urgency Parent benefits from early accessible services outcome is determined by parent. When outcome is not reunification, lays the groundwork for openness with permanent caregiver
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Current Challenges
Decision-Making when child is placed early and attached to non related caregiver and relative requests placement Foster Parents intervening when reunification planning occurs Continued training needs:staff turnover
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Reflections
Consider and normalize the language in concurrent planning,i.e. assessment, backup plan, resource foster families Collaborating with courts, attorneys, and service providers to better serve children and families Determining when to pursue the alternative permanency plan such as adoption or guardianship when it is clear the parent(s) can not or will not care for their children. Early Potentially Permanent Kinship Placements Use concurrent planning for all forms of permanency, not only adoption
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Gerald P. Mallon, DSW Associate Professor and Executive Director
National Resource Center for Foster Care and Permanency Planning at the Hunter College School of Social Work
A Service of the Children’s Bureau\ACF\DHHS
129 East 79th Street, Suite 801 New York, New York 10021
(212) 452-7053 - Center line (212) 452-7043 – Private line (212) 452-7051 - fax
mrengmal@aol.com - Email www.hunter.cuny.edu\socwork\nrcfcpp
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