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| In addition to saving lives, the efforts of New York City and New Jersey to curb needless foster care also saved thousands of children from other harm. |
We all know the knee-jerk response whenever a child previously known to the New York City Administration for Children’s Services dies: “See?” goes the false claim. “See? It’s because the ACS has caved in to the ‘woke mob’ and has been taking fewer children from their families.”
And now, after the discovery of the horrifying death of Jor'Dynn Duncan in the home of her father’s fiancĂ© in nearby Suffolk County, we will hear that Suffolk County isn’t tearing apart enough families – even though the number of children in foster care in Suffolk County has increased by more than 30% since 2021.
A massive study, involving 3.5 million records and more than 24,000 child abuse deaths, has demonstrated that the knee-jerk response is wrong. The study found that reducing entries into foster care caused no increase in child abuse deaths and increasing entries caused no decline in such deaths.
But new research shows that the news is better than that – for New York City, and worse in Suffolk County. The new research, from Kevin Campbell and Elizabeth Wendell of Pale Blue. and Family Seeing, demonstrates that New York City’s moves to curb foster care have saved children’s lives – probably an average of anywhere from 9 to 27 children per year. There were similar gains in New Jersey, which also has worked hard to safely reduce entries into foster care.
Conversely, the recent increase in foster care in Suffolk County may have contributed directly to the death of Jor'Dynn Duncan and may contribute indirectly to more.
Here’s what the research shows us:
A vast scholarly literature from around the world has accumulated over decades, using various means to compare outcomes for children left in their own homes to comparably-maltreated children placed in foster care in typical cases – cases that are vastly more common than the horror stories and which often involve confusing poverty with neglect.
The studies show that, when compared to comparably-maltreated children left in their own homes, the foster children typically fared worse on an enormous range of outcomes – including premature death.
There are a variety of reasons for this. In some cases, it’s the high rate of abuse in foster care itself. But also, there is the enormous stress of removal itself. Being torn from everyone loving and familiar, taken away, sometimes literally kicking and screaming, is the ultimate “adverse childhood experience.” So it’s no wonder that, for example, a Swedish study comparing foster children to comparably-maltreated children left in their own homes found that the foster children were four times more likely to die by age 20 – and the most common cause of death was suicide.
There now are enough data to calculate how many more children will die, and suffer serious disability, when a community endures a foster-care panic, a sharp, sudden increase in the number of children torn from everyone they know and love and consigned to the chaos of foster care. That happened in Suffolk County starting in 2022, and it may well happen again now. In a previous post, I discussed how this research has been applied to the foster-care panic now underway in Santa Clara County, California.
Conversely, it’s possible to estimate how many children’s lives have been saved in places that have safely and systematically reduced foster care, as New York City has done.
In New York City, the number of children in foster care has been cut from nearly 16,000 in 2010 to about 7,100 in 2022. The authors of the formula calculate that among the children who were not taken away, there are between 110 and 325 who would have died had they been taken. Many more would have suffered serious health problems.
Conversely, after the death of Thomas Valva in Suffolk County, there followed the usual knee-jerk reaction: a foster-care panic, a sharp, sudden increase in the number of children taken from their homes.
In addition to the enormous harm to the children needlessly taken, a foster care panic overwhelms workers, so they have less time to find children in real danger. That may have contributed to the failure to save Jor'Dynn.
But also, we know from all that research that some of the children taken needlessly in Suffolk County because of the panic will suffer disability. Some will die prematurely.
One factor the study could not take into account and might reduce the benefit from the reduction in foster care in New York City: The reduction in entries has come with a huge concomitant increase in onerous surveillance. New York City’s Administration for Children’s Services may not take as many children, but they’ll still pound on doors in the middle of the night demanding entry, require children to be awakened and sometimes stripsearched. Even when the caseworkers leave, everyone knows they could come back and walk out with the children next time. As a result of this trauma, years later, some children run to hide in closets or under beds. I know of no comprehensive studies of the health effects of that kind of toxic stress.
What needs to be done
No, this does not mean that no child ever should be taken from her or his home. But it means all family police agencies need to be far more careful about which children they take, making sure to weigh the danger in the home and the risk of allowing the child to stay there against what the science tells us will happen to many of them if they are taken. This is why various laws across the country raising the threshold for removal to standards like “imminent risk of serious harm,” or some variation - the very laws that give the take-the-child-and-run crowd fits – are essential to keep more children safe.
Here are the other lessons in New York:
● New York City needs to continue reducing the number of children in foster care – and it needs to reduce the scope of the child welfare surveillance state.
● And New York City needs to resist the knee-jerk response to horror stories – no more foster-care panics.
All that goes double for Suffolk County.







