New WA state budget won’t solve problem of foster kids in crisis

The state Legislature approved nearly $16 million in new funding last week, but the effort may come up short in fixing an overwhelmed system.

the Senate floor

Washington state lawmakers work on the Senate floor, Feb. 19, 2020, in Olympia, Wash. The state decided to increases funds to group homes for foster youth, but advocates say it falls short and doesn't meet the needs or resolve the issue of youth being shipped to out-of-state facilities or housed in hotels overnight. (Ted S. Warren/AP)

With Washington forcing a record number of traumatized foster youth into overnight hotel stays that further destabilize them — at a tremendous cost to taxpayers — lawmakers in Olympia have sent the governor a budget that seems unlikely to solve the problem.

Legislators last week approved nearly $16 million in new funding to stem the hotel-overnight crisis. The new money has the potential to restore 26 spots for foster youth lost earlier this year at one Seattle facility, Ryther, and create perhaps more than 70 new ones. Yet it might not be enough to fix the system: The department racked up more than 1,500 hotel overnights for almost 300 foster children in the most recent year measured, ending in August 2019.

Ryther, a children's mental health agency, offers an example of how lawmakers' efforts may come up short. The group home moved out the last of 26 troubled youth in the state’s foster care system in January, saying the state didn't pay it enough to cover costs. The wording in the state operating budget attached to $1.8 million in new funding is targeted directly at providers like Ryther. However, Ryther's chief executive told InvestigateWest that, with no clear terms spelled out for the money, it is uncertain whether she can actually use it to restart services for foster youth. The agency also may be unable to take advantage of a new rate for providers.

And there’s an even bigger problem. The types of foster care slots created by the $16 million designated by the Legislature address only part of the population of foster children forced into hotel stays, said Dee Wilson, a child-welfare advocate and critic of the state Department of Children, Youth and Families. A former state child-welfare official, Wilson called for the creation of 500 to 1,000 salaried, trained “professional” foster parents who can offer therapeutic services in their homes to some of the most-troubled foster youth. He also said that anywhere from 10% to 20% of the foster children forced into hotels need intensive psychiatric treatment, not merely the therapeutic services and regular foster care spots the Legislature funded this session.

At stake in this funding debate is how well the state will care for kids who have been abused or neglected, but can’t fit into Washington’s severely overtaxed foster care system. Previously these youth, many with turbulent behavior, have been sent out of state, where their support networks wither. A watchdog group also detailed abuses in some of these out-of-state group homes.

Others are repetitively housed in hotels (or, in rare cases, even in state offices). The overnight hotel stays can cost $2,000 or more because they entail wages for two caseworkers, as well as pay for a security guard in some situations. At Ryther, by contrast, CEO Karen Brady needed state officials to pay $578 per day per child instead of the state's going rate of $422, a difference of just over $150. (That was at roughly a 70% occupancy rate for all beds at Ryther, Brady noted. At 100% occupancy, the facility would have needed less from the state.)

In other cases, state officials have paid foster parents $600 a night to house youths, many of them deeply disturbed. The kids get only a bed and the use of a shower. That $600 is radically higher than typical foster parent reimbursement: Foster families typically get $562 per month for a child who is less than 6. Even those caring for older kids with high needs receive no more than $1,505 per month per child.

The challenge for lawmakers in the 2020 legislative session, which began in January and finished last week, was to make a dent in the record hotel-overnight numbers.

“These are our children,” said state Rep. Gerry Pollet, a Democrat from Seattle whose district includes Ryther. “We, all of us, are the parents, and we have to look on them as our children and treat them the way we want our children treated.”
 

Funding targets lowered, then met

Advocates for foster youth came into this year’s legislative session with the goal of dealing with the crisis of foster children making motel stays.

"A lot of those [foster] kids who are in the hotels have complex needs," said state Rep. Tana Senn, chair of the House Human Services and Early Learning Committee. She successfully backed a push to create special new rates at which the state reimburses specialized group homes such as Ryther that take in behaviorally turbulent youth. The Mercer Island Democrat also tried, with success, to increase state stipends for foster families and provide funding to increase Washington's insufficient pool of 5,100 licensed caregivers for its 9,100 foster children.

Those steps, she hopes, will create more homes for less-troubled and less-disabled foster children. That, in turn, should help create additional slots for the more-troubled youth who frequently land in hotels, she said.

The Senate's funding for short-term and long-term beds for high-needs foster youth was an attempt to decrease the hotel overnights, said Sen. Jeannie Darneille, the Tacoma Democrat who heads the Senate's Human Services, Reentry and Rehabilitation Committee. But a proposed rate increase for child-placing agencies, the private groups that recruit, license and support foster parents, turned up in the final budget at a fraction of what was requested — even though a rate increase was part of the fight against hotel overnights, according to Darneille.

Even if the funding comes up short of fixing the hotel-overnight crisis, lawmakers did pretty much what Gov. Jay Inslee asked. However, Inslee’s request itself already had reduced what the Department of Children, Youth and Families said it needed to stem the emergency.

For example, the department said it needed at least 10 new openings in the Children’s Long-Term Inpatient Program to accommodate youth with  severe psychiatric disorders, on top of the current 84 slots. Inslee did not relay that ask to the Legislature.

Inslee eventually received much of the money he requested.

He asked for $7.6 million for 33 slots for serving foster youth “with significant mental, behavioral or developmental health needs. House budget writers came up with just $3.8 million. But the Senate bought Inslee's number of $7.6 million for those kids — and reached a compromise on that point in the final operating budget, which allocates $6.4 million.

Senators also proposed and got $1.8 million for a new “enhanced” rate for institutions that house behaviorally troubled youth on a long-term basis. That was included in the final budget.

Both chambers set aside an additional $7.3 million for more regular foster beds for kids who need a new home for two to four weeks. Senate budget documents say this may provide for about 40 new slots.

Also, the final budget allotted $7 million for upping the foster care stipend by an average of $110 per month per foster child by July 1. Inslee had recommended a similar measure in his December proposal.

While admitting that "I didn't get everything I wanted," Darneille said legislators made "a very significant investment" in the solutions for the hotel-overnight crisis.

Legislators said this year’s allocation represents hard-fought progress.

"What we've done is provide a big step forward for children in the foster-care system with behavioral health needs," said Pollet, the state lawmaker.

Darneille even said, notwithstanding the comments of critics, “the children really win in this budget.”

Senn called the $16 million for new special beds for foster children and a new special rate for providers “critical investments that we needed to make.” She said lawmakers will reevaluate this year's funding in next year's session to determine “if that is enough.”

The present situation with hotel overnights is “not an acceptable current situation,” Senn said.
 

High-needs foster kids driving hotel stays

Supporting high-needs foster children appears to be crucial to reducing the number of overnight stays in hotels. Foster kids who are not considered to have “significant barriers to placement” rarely showed up in the more than 200 reports from 2016 to 2018 filed by DCYF officials to justify overnight hotel stays that InvestigateWest reviewed. Many involved kids who had substantial mental or behavioral health problems — problems that make it difficult or even impossible for typical foster parents to care for them. That, in turn, sharply limits where the state can place these high-needs children, especially on short notice, given that Washington is struggling with an overall shortage of foster homes.

The state tracks the hotel-overnight statistics through the independent Office of the Family and Children’s Ombuds, which documented how 282 youths needed to stay at motels between September 2018 and August 2019, the highest number to date.

In a Feb. 6 letter citing an earlier InvestigateWest article published in Crosscut, Pollet, Senn and and state Rep. Javier Valdez, D-Seattle, wrote to the top-ranking House Appropriations Committee members, requesting that those members match Inslee's request for $7.6 million for the 33 high-needs beds. They also asked for $504,000 in order “to provide vital treatment for high-needs foster children in our state.” Ultimately, the final budget didn't meet their recommendations.

The millions of dollars aimed at decreasing the overnight hotel stays by foster children are just a small part of the Department of Children, Youth and Families budget. The department received funding for children and families services for 2019 through 2021 of $1.385 billion when the Legislature voted on the biennial operating budget last year. In the final operating budget this year, it is getting an adjusted $1.299 billion for 2019-21, which includes tens of millions of dollars in new spending but an overall spending decrease.

The record number of hotel-overnight stays by foster children is one of multiple crises hitting Washington's foster-care system. For example, the system is facing a shortage of licensed foster homes, and the depaarment said it is short-staffed. In a state budget document, the department said it needs roughly 44 more frontline child-welfare caseworkers on top of a current count of about 544. It asked for another 20 such caseworkers for fiscal year 2021, which starts July 1, but it appears that neither Inslee nor lawmakers took up the request.

Wilson — a 26-year veteran of Washington's foster-care agency, in which he was a regional administrator — sees four pressing problems with the state's foster system. In addition to housing youth in hotels, the state in recent years has been shipping foster children to facilities in other states, though it has begun to curtail that practice. Washington also is traumatizing foster children with 24-hour placements and failing them by not maintaining enough Children’s Longterm Inpatient Program beds for intensive residential mental health treatment, he said.

Wilson said the state's foster system is so dysfunctional that even eliminating hotel placements would fail to fix it. "It's not like if we knock out hotel placements, then we can pat ourselves on the back," he said.
 

A request in millions, an answer in thousands

The Legislature fell short on other funding to help foster kids. One important area is private child-placing agencies that recruit and support foster families. The umbrella association for these agencies asked lawmakers to give them an increase of $7.7 million, or roughly 50%, in their rates. Instead, they got a raise of $591,000.

The Department of Children, Youth and Families and these private agencies are the only organizations through which Washington residents can get a foster parent license. The child-placing agencies offer more supportive services than DYCF does, said Jill May, executive director of the Washington Association for Children and Families, the umbrella group.

"DCYF does not support [foster] families in the way that we're able to," May said.

She said more than a third of active Washington foster licensees obtained their license through a child-placing agency — and many of them intentionally chose an agency over DCYF for the licensing process because of the supports the agencies provide, including family stabilization to prevent the removal of a foster child from a foster family.

The agencies got a rate increase in 2016, from $379 per child per month to $447, but that was largely a return of funding lost during the Great Recession. The rate, which is for case management, had been $414 in 2006.

The Senate budget had allotted $1.3 million for increasing the rate paid to child-placing agencies, which would have been an 18% increase, but the House-approved allocation of $591,000, or 7.5%, prevailed in budget negotiations.

Asked whether the $591,000 in funding is sufficient for child-placing agencies, Senn said, "We balance that all the time, sadly — of what we can do and what we want to do."

“It's what is possible right now,” she said.

May said the agencies will regroup for the next legislative session. “I talked to one agency that said, ‘It's better than nothing,’ ” May said of the $591,000 increase. “I talked to another agency that said, ‘It's not enough. I don't think I'm going to make it.’ ”

In fact, according to Bethany Christian Services, an international organization out of Michigan that supports children, families and refugees, that is what happened last year with its Washington foster care operations. Bethany shut down its foster care services in Washington because frozen rates for child-placing agencies were “making it impossible for private agencies to provide children with the services they need,” Jeff Carlson, Bethany's vice president of regional operations, said in comments emailed to InvestigateWest.

Said Carlson, “We encourage the state to provide a meaningful rate increase for private agencies so that the [foster] community can effectively support children who need families.”

Allegra Abramo contributed to this report.

InvestigateWest is a Seattle-based nonprofit newsroom producing journalism for the common good. Learn more and sign up to receive alerts about future stories at http://www.invw.org/newsletters/.

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About the Authors & Contributors

Rachel Nielsen

Rachel Nielsen is a freelance reporter based in Seattle. Previously, she covered venture capital and technology from New York/Jersey City, affordable housing from New York and business and politics from Russia.