»Overview
Total number of reports to child protective agencies in 2000: 2.8 million
Percentage of those reports that met the standards for
an investigation and/or assessment: 62 percent, or 1.7 million cases
Number of substantiated cases of abuse/neglect in 2000: Approximately 500,000
Number of children placed in foster care in 2000: 291,000
»Life in the System
Total number of children in foster care in 2000: 556,000
Average length of stay in foster care for those in the system in 2000: 33 months; the median is 20 months
Percentage of children in foster care on Sept. 30, 1998, who had been placed in five or more homes: 16 percent
»Demographic Profile of Children in Care
POVERTY:
According to estimates from the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means, more than 50 percent of the children in foster care in 1999 were given federal foster care assistance, which is tied to eligibility for welfare benefits. "The number of children in federally assisted foster care has grown significantly in the years since funding first became available under AFDC in the early 1960s," the committee said in its 2000 Green Book.
RACE OF CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE (2000):
|
Percentage of total population in foster care
|
Total
|
American Indian/Alaskan Native
|
2.0%
|
10,994
|
Black
|
39.7%
|
220,660
|
Asian/Pacific Islander
|
1.1%
|
5,978
|
Hispanic
|
14.7%
|
81,890
|
Other
|
5.0%
|
27,846
|
White
|
37.5%
|
208,632
|
»Outcomes for Children in Foster Care (2000):
Children in foster care whose parents' parental rights were terminated: 75,000
Number of children adopted from foster care: 51,000
Reasons children exited foster care
|
Reunification w/parent or caretaker
|
57%
|
Living with other relative
|
10%
|
Adoption
|
17%
|
Emancipation
|
7%
|
Guardianship
|
4%
|
Transfer to another agency
|
3%
|
Runaway
|
2%
|
»An Uncertain Legacy:
According to a survey of foster care alumni conducted by Casey Family
Programs, 13 percent reported being homeless at least once since being
discharged. Further, fully 15 percent of the alumni reported being
arrested since leaving foster care. "When the system fails, the children
are very likely to move out of the system into the juvenile justice
system, into the welfare system, into the adult criminal justice
system," says Richard Gelles, dean of the University of Pennsylvania's
School of Social Work and one of the authors of the 1997 Adoption and
Safe Families Act.
»Sources
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration on
Children, Youth and Families, Child Maltreatment 2000 (2002); AFCARS, interim FY2000 estimates as of August 2002; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration on
Children, Youth and Families, Child Welfare Outcomes 1999: Annual Report
(2002); U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Ways and Means,
Green Book 2000; Casey Family Programs, "Assessing Foster Care Alumni
Outcomes: A Short-Term Follow Up Study."