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Kansas Sued Over Foster Care That’s Bounced Several Children Between 100 Homes

 MADELINE FOX

A lawsuit filed Friday contends Kansas violates foster children’s civil rights by moving them too often, adding to their trauma and restricting their access to necessary mental health treatment.

Gina Meier-Hummel started her job as secretary of the Kansas Department for Children and Families on Dec. 1, 2017
Photo by MADELINE FOX / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

The National Center for Youth LawChildren’s Rights and Kansas Appleseed filed the suit against Gov. Jeff Colyer and the heads of the Department for Children and Families, the Department for Aging and Disability Services and the Department of Health and Environment.

The class-action suit alleges the state violated foster kids’ rights by shifting them — some of them more than 100 times throughout their time in care — often from one single-night placement to the next. The suit says that renders kids in care effectively homeless.

“There’s a chunk of the population of abused, neglected and abandoned kids in Kansas for whom the state has no housing at all,” said Ira Lustbader, litigation director for Children’s Rights.  “Kids are rotated through just extreme numbers of placements.”

This process of “churning,” as described in the suit, has kids sleeping “anywhere a bed, couch, office, conference room, shelter or hospital can be found” overnight. Then they’re picked up the next morning and kept in a foster care contractor’s office for much of the next day, often into the next evening.

“Every change in placement a child experiences is a major disruption in that child’s life,” said Michelle Johnson-Motoyama, a professor of child welfare at Ohio State University who’s studied the Kansas welfare system.

She said churning creates a vicious cycle — each new placement adds compounded trauma and attachment issues, which makes it harder for them to stay in a foster home — increasing their moves almost exponentially.

The organizations seek no financial damages. Rather, the suit calls for the agencies to put together a plan to fix the churning and mental health problems, and to see that it’s implemented. A similar suit filed nearly 30 years ago led to the privatization of much of the state’s services for children in crisis.

Ten children, ten stories

The suit details the experiences of 10 children ranging from ages 7 to 17 who have been in foster care anywhere from a few months to nine years. Several have slept in foster care contractors’ offices, including one girl who was discharged from a psychiatric residential treatment facility into a series of one-night and short-term placements that included nights in an office.

One boy has been in more than 130 placements since entering the foster care system in 2012. Lustbader said that based on interviews the organizations conducted with advocates and attorneys across the state, that wasn’t unusual.

“That’s what can happen if you’re thrust into this night-to-night madness,” he said.

A 17-year-old girl described in the suit entered the foster care system in 2007. She was adopted three years later with her siblings into a family where she and her sister were sexually assaulted by their adoptive father and brother. They weren’t removed until 2013. In the five years since, the girl has been moved more than 42 times, including multiple night-to-night and short-term placements.

In one placement, the suit alleges, she was sexually exploited and trafficked. She stayed overnight in the office of a foster care contractor, including once for an entire week.

Churning kids through the system

From April to September of 2018, St. Francis Community Services, the foster care contractor for the western half of the state, had 764 children in one-night placements. Its eastern counterpart had 695 kids stay just one night in a placement.

The suit alleges DCF has enabled churning by letting contractors and child placement agencies waive capacity and sleeping space requirements — such as one home that had 10 children and that was only regulated to keep six kids. DCF approved 98 percent of approximately 1,100 requests to waive requirements for capacity and sleeping space in a 15-month period, according to a 2016 audit report.

The suit alleges that since 2017, DCF hasn’t even required agencies to ask for exceptions. As long as a child doesn’t go to that placement more than once in a week, homes can take on more kids than they are regulated to take without the state needing to sign off.

Under national standards, kids shouldn’t be moved more than 4.12 times for every 1,000 days they’re in foster care.

But according to reviews by the federal Department of Health and Human Services, Kansas hasn’t met that standard since it was set out in 2014. In its most recent fiscal year, Kansas moved kids an average of 8.6 times per 1,000 days, more than double the federal standard, and 30 percent more times than its 2016 average of 6.6 moves.

The suit alleges Colyer and the heads of the three agencies violated foster children’s 14th Amendment rights — which grants equal protection under the law — as well as the federal Medicaid Act.

It alleges Colyer, sued in his official capacity as governor, had the responsibility to make sure agencies followed state and federal law and the ability to reshape the function of agencies to ensure they were looking out for the children in the state’s care.

DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel, the suit says, has “direct non-delegable custodial responsibility” for the state’s children, meaning her office is ultimately responsible for civil rights violations that happen to foster children under the supervision of the state’s foster care contractors.

Lustbader said it was important to make it clear that while DCF has delegated foster care placement to private agencies, the state welfare agency and Kansas Department of Health and Environment and Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services still have ultimate constitutional responsibility for the state’s children.

“The buck stops with the government agencies responsible for these kids in their care,” Lustbader said. “You can certainly use private providers, but not without accountability.”

Mental health services

The secretaries of KDHE and KDADS are responsible for administering Medicaid and mental health services according to federal and state laws. They also oversee Medicaid waiver programs and operating hospitals and institutions in the state.

All foster children are eligible for Medicaid, which requires mental health screenings for children under the Early Periodic Screening Diagnosis and Treatment provisions of the federal Medicaid Act. Lustbader said under Medicaid, kids in state custody have “absolute access and entitlement” to basic screening, assessments and treatment.

The lawsuit charges that the agencies responsible didn’t meet that requirement.

Data Kansas reported to the federal government in 2016 indicated more than 3,000 foster children, nearly half the number of kids in foster care at the time, were identified as emotionally disturbed.

Changes coming

The lawsuit comes in the midst of a lot of changes coming through Kansas and its child welfare system.

Gov.-elect Laura Kelly will take office in January, and will likely bring with her a new cabinet – including new heads of DCF, KDHE and KDADS.

The foster care system is also bracing for a transition between foster care contractors. KVC and St. Francis, the two organizations that have held Kansas’ foster care and family preservation contracts since 2013, will cede family preservation to two new statewide providers, Florida-based Eckerd Connects and Missouri-based Cornerstones of Care.

TFI, a former contractor and current subcontractor for Kansas foster care, will join KVC and St. Francis as a state contractor for foster care.

Becci Akin, a professor of social work at the University of Kansas, said transitions can be chaotic. She said it’ll likely take 18-24 months after the contracts switch over in July before it’s possible to really judge whether the new providers and other new aspects of the child welfare grants are working.

task force examining the state foster care system is submitting its final recommendations to the Legislature in January. The recommendations, which include expanding Medicaid, examining the effects of privatization and improving work conditions for social workers, could prompt legislation taking aim at some of the challenges in Kansas’ child welfare system.

Deja vu

The lawsuit echoes a case filed over foster care in 1989. That suit accused the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, the precursor to DCF, of failing to protect children. It evolved into a class-action case joined by the ACLU. Its Children’s Rights project has since become an independent nonprofit and is one of the parties suing now.

Rochelle Chronister, who headed SRS, said she’s not surprised Kansas is being hit with another lawsuit. She said the state’s cutting back on preventive measures to keep kids out of foster care is leading to more kids coming in, and hitting an agency that isn’t prepared to handle them.

The new suit, unlike the previous case, is in federal court. Rene Netherton, the attorney behind the earlier case, said it’s more narrow in scope than the one filed nearly 30 years ago. That earlier case focused on not only short-term placements but also worker caseloads, resources and numerous other problems with the foster care system.

Netherton also thinks the circumstances could be better this time around.

“I don’t think the climate could be any better than it will be with the new governor,” Netherton.

Netherton’s suit, and SRS’s failure of several resulting quarterly reviews, prompted the Legislature to privatize Kansas’ foster care system at the behest of then-Gov. Bill Graves.

The first contracts, for six nonprofit providers, began in 1996. Privatization has drawn the ire of some lawmakers, child advocates and birth and foster parents. They say it’s allowed the state to push blame for problems in the system to contractors and shortchange a system starved for resources.

Lori Burns-Bucklew, a Missouri attorney on the suit, says she wants the state agencies to stop treating children’s bad situations like an inevitable consequence of strains on the system.

“I have been ranting, I’ve been pounding the table, I’ve been worrying about these kids being schlepped around from night to night and I’ve been seeing it treated like it’s inevitable fallout from this messed up system,” she said. “I don’t want to let the institutional changes ignore the individual faces.”

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox.

Missouri woman dies in head-on semi crash

PETTIS COUNTY —One person died in an accident just after 2p.m. Friday in Pettis County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2015 Chevy Malibu driven by Janna M. McQueen, 51, Sedalia, was eastbound on U.S. 50 just west of Route W. The Chevy traveled into the westbound lanes and struck a semi head-on.

McQueen was transported by Lifeflight to University Hospital where she died. The semi driver Bruce A. Robbins, Menahga, MN., was not injured.

Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the MSHP.

UPDATE: 67 inmates seek Kansas prison release over secret recordings

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A court-appointed attorney investigating whether federal prosecutors in Kansas improperly listened to recorded conversations between prisoners and their attorneys testified Friday that he was stunned and disappointed when he realized months into the investigation that the U.S. Attorney’s Office was not cooperating with him.

David Cohen, an Ohio attorney who was appointed by U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson to investigate the matter, said he believed federal prosecutors were working to identify attorneys in the office who might have listened to the recordings made at the privately run Leavenworth Detention Center. He said he wanted any attorneys involved to voluntarily speak to him and optimistically believed the investigation, which started in October 2016, could wrap up by early 2017.

Instead, it took months to get any documents from federal prosecutors and those documents provided little usable information. He also was surprised to learn that the office was seeking to recuse itself from the investigation and that at least one attorney had been told not to talk to him.

Early in the investigation, Cohen said he told Tom Beall, who was acting U.S. Attorney at the time, that there were problems in the federal prosecutor’s office in Kansas City, Kansas.
“I said since I was from out of town, I could be the bad guy and they could blame everything on me so we could fix things, and (Beall) could be the hero,” Cohen said. “That’s not what happened. I wasn’t given the tools to burn out the cancer. It’s a sad state of affairs that two years later the problems are still not fixed.”

Friday’s hearing came after Federal Public Defender Melody Brannon filed a motion to have the government declared in contempt for its conduct during Cohen’s investigation. She also wants the government to pay the legal costs as a sanction. Judge Robinson did not indicate Friday when she would issue a ruling on the motion.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office stopped cooperating with an investigation in October 2017 at the direction of Steven D. Clymer, a federal prosecutor in New York who was appointed to be the liaison with Cohen after the federal prosecutors’ office decided it had a legal conflict during the investigation.

In testimony earlier Friday, Beall insisted that his office had cooperated with Cohen and had not intentionally slowed the investigation or hidden information. He said the delay in providing requested information was due in part to his belief that he needed permission from the Department of Justice before responding to Cohen’s requests. And he said he didn’t want to commit the office to legal procedures while waiting for a new U.S. attorney to be named.

“Our effort to get things right governed (the delays),” Beall testified. “I would like to have moved faster but there was no deliberate attempt to slow walk the investigation.”
In her motion, Brannon asked for the release of 67 inmates from a Kansas federal prison and plans to seek freedom for more than 150 others because of the secretly recorded conversations between prisoners and their attorneys. Most of the federal inmates are being held on drug or firearms-related cases.

The recorded phone calls first came to light in a prison contraband case during which criminal defense lawyers discovered the privately run Leavenworth Detention Center was routinely recording meetings and phone conversations between attorneys and clients, which are confidential under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution.

At least one Texas woman has been released early because a former prosecutor listened to recorded phone calls with her attorney. Michelle Reulet , 37, had been serving a five-year sentence for mail fraud and was not due for release until September 2020. She was freed last month.
The Justice Department has argued that there is no evidence the recordings at the prison were done for reasons other than “legitimate security considerations,” but did not elaborate on that point further.
—–

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The federal public defender’s office said Thursday it has asked for the release of 67 inmates from a Kansas federal prison and plans to seek freedom for more than 150 others because authorities secretly recorded conversations between prisoners and their attorneys that are supposed to be private.

Most of the federal inmates are being held on drug or firearms-related cases.

The practice first came to light in a prison contraband case during which criminal defense lawyers discovered the privately-run Leavenworth Detention Center was routinely recording meetings and phone conversations between attorneys and clients, which are confidential under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution. A court-appointed expertwas brought in to independently investigate whether prosecutors had improperly listened to the recordings.

The court expanded the responsibilities of the federal public defender’s office to represent any inmate in Kansas who may have been affected by the prison recording.

At least one Texas woman has been released early because a former prosecutor listened to recorded phone calls with her attorney. Michelle Reulet, 37, had been serving a five-year sentence for mail fraud and was not due for release until September 2020. She was freed last month.

The Ethics Bureau at Yale wrote in a friend-of-the-court brief this week that the intrusion into the attorney-client relationship violates the Sixth Amendment by endangering the ability of a lawyer to represent a client, erodes the right to counsel, and undercuts public trust in the legal system.

“The government’s intrusion into the attorney-client relationship and subsequent failure to disclose its possession of privileged materials transgresses the foundational principle of attorney-client confidentiality. … Fairness and the integrity of the adversarial process demand that this Court condemn the large-scale erosion of the principles at the heart of our profession and our justice system,” the group argued.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson will hear arguments Friday in Kansas City, Kansas, on Federal Public Defender Melody Brannon’s motion to have the government declared in contempt for its conduct during the special master’s investigation. She also wants the government to pay the legal costs as a sanction.

Prosecutors rejected her arguments.

“To the extent that the (federal public defender’s) present motion can be read to suggest government wrongdoing, the government denies such allegations,” wrote Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Clymer.

The Justice Department has argued that there is no evidence the recordings at the prison were done for reasons other than “legitimate security considerations,” but did not elaborate on that point further.

Also at issue Friday is whether former and current prosecutors testified truthfully at an earlier hearing , whether the government knew it had recordings of attorney-client conversations, and whether prosecutors properly disclosed evidence.

Brannon first raised the issue of potential contempt last year when she accused the U.S. attorney’s office in Kansas of destroying evidence. She alleged the government wiped clean the hard drive on the one computer in the U.S. attorney’s office dedicated to playing videos from the prison after the court had ordered the government to turn over all hard drives.

The government denied the accusation, saying that the software upgrade happened before the court order.

Ed Secretary proposes overhaul to campus sexual misconduct rules

By COLLIN BINKLEY

U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVoss – photo U.S. Dept. of Education

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is proposing a major overhaul to the way colleges handle complaints of sexual misconduct.

The Education Department released a plan Friday that would require schools to investigate sexual assault and harassment only if the alleged misconduct was reported to certain campus officials and only if it occurred on campus or other areas overseen by the school.

The plan would narrow the definition of sexual harassment and allow students accused of misconduct to cross-examine accusers in campus hearings.

DeVos’ proposal would replace Obama-era guidelines she scrapped last year, saying they were unfair to students accused of sexual misconduct.

The new guidelines aim to give greater protections to accused students while also giving schools flexibility to offer support to victims who don’t file a formal complaint.

Mo. school sub claims ban after thanking kids for Pledge of Allegiance

MANCHESTER, Mo. (AP) – A Missouri substitute teacher is seeking answers after claiming he was banned because he thanked students for saying the Pledge of Allegiance.

Jim Furkin has worked as a sub for about a decade in St. Louis County’s Parkway School District.

Furkin told the school board Thursday that he was subbing in a freshman English class at Parkway South High School in October. During the pledge, most, but not all, students stood.

Furkin says he thanked those who stood. One student went to a counselor. An administrator told Furkin the student complained he had been “hurt” by Furkin’s comment.

District spokeswoman Cathy Kelly wouldn’t comment on Furkin’s specific case but says students choose whether to participate in the pledge, “and our role as educators is not to make a judgment about that choice.”

U.S., Brazil Soybean Price Gap Narrowing

The price gap between U.S. and Brazilian soybeans is narrowing, a signal some suggest that trade progress could be made between the U.S. and China. CNBC reports narrowing U.S.-Brazil soybean price differentials imply greater market optimism regarding a meeting between President Trump and China’s President at the upcoming G20 Summit. Even with the 25 percent tariff on U.S. soybeans, the average differentials have shifted from a 24 percent U.S. discount to Brazil in mid-October, to a 17 percent discount last week and a 13-15 percent discount this week. Market experts say the differential could partly account for any movement of U.S. beans to South America for local crushing or even re-export. The G20 Summit, where President Trump and his counterpart from China are expected to discuss trade on the sidelines, begins November 30th.

Gov.-elect senses ‘momentum’ in Kansas toward medical marijuana

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Could Kansas soon join the growing list of states allowing medical marijuana?

The District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, Missouri and 30 other states now allow for public medical marijuana-photo O’DEA / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

The election of Democrat Laura Kelly puts a medical marijuana supporter in the governor’s seat. Kelly recently told reporters that she senses “some momentum” among legislators to legalize medical marijuana, with strict regulations.

Several surrounding states now allow recreational or medical marijuana. Missouri voters on Nov. 6 approved a ballot measure allowing for medical marijuana, joining nearly three dozen states.

In Kansas, medical marijuana bills have been considered without success for years. Esau Freeman, spokesman for the pro-legalization group Kansas for Change, says the election of a supporter “will definitely change the conversation.”

Lower Income Continues to Pressure Farm Finances

Farm income and credit conditions continued to deteriorate in the third quarter of 2018, according to a Federal Reserve Bank survey. The Tenth District Survey of Agricultural Credit Conditions shows more than half of bankers reported lower farm income compared to a year ago, and the decline in farm income was sharpest in states with higher concentrations in corn and soybeans. The district includes seven Midwest and Plains states in the Western Corn Belt. The survey found prices for most major commodities remained lower than a year ago amid elevated supply expectations and ongoing trade disruptions. The prolonged period of depressed farm income has placed more pressure on borrower balance sheets. According to bankers across the region, many crop producers in 2018 had a modest deterioration in working capital. For the fifth straight year, a majority of bankers reported having borrowers with some depletion of short-term operating funds. Stress on farm finances also contributed to an increase in the expected sale of mid- to long-term assets in 2018.

Southwestern Missouri man convicted of killing former lover

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) – A Joplin man has been convicted of first-degree murder in the death of a woman who jilted him.

James Henneha-photo Jasper County

Jurors on Thursday found 39-year-old James Henneha guilty in the 2016 strangulation death of 38-year-old Tonya Crawford of Joplin.

Prosecutors argued that Henneha choked Crawford to death after she told him she no longer wanted him in her life.

Assistant prosecutor Kimberly Fisher described Henneha as a jealous man who wrote demeaning names for Crawford in graffiti on the walls of his home. Police allegedly found a note that read, “Tonya Crawford has left me for the last time.”

A forensic pathologist testified for the defense that her review of autopsy reports and other evidence indicated that Crawford died of hypertensive heart disease, not strangulation.

Roberts, Conaway, Engaged in Finger-pointing

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell calls passing a farm bill a top priority for the lame duck session, but the conference committee must first come to an agreement. Senate Ag Chairman Pat Roberts was hopeful for an agreement Thursday, but said House Ag Committee Chair Mike Conaway refused to come to an agreement, blaming the delay on the Texas Republican. However, Conaway called Roberts comments “finger-pointing” that would not help to bring about a deal, according to Politico. Roberts noted that Conaway was holding out on signing the conference report because he has concerns with at least six titles of the bill, including commodity, nutrition and conservation. Roberts said of the conference committee leadership he is “very troubled by the fact that we have agreement among three, but we can’t get the fourth one.” Conaway says he has “some things” he hasn’t agreed to, but adds that so does Roberts, and Ranking Senate Ag Member Debbie Stabenow and Ranking House Ag Member Collin Peterson. Conway concludes “pick your poison as to who you think is standing in the way.”

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