Reported plan to require foster care couples to marry raises concerns

District judge, legislator seeking information from Department of Children and Families

by Dave Ranney, KHI News Service

A Kansas district court judge is raising concerns about reports that state officials are considering policy changes that would prohibit couples who aren’t married from being foster parents.

Douglas County District Judge Peggy Carr Kittel raised the issue in a letter sent Wednesday to Tammy Thomas, director of the Overland Park office of the Kansas Department for Children and Families.

“I have great concern that implementation of any new policy of a marriage requirement such as the one rumored will further reduce the number of (foster) homes available at a time when the number of children in out of home placement is increasing,” Carr Kittel said in the letter. Copies of the letter were sent to several other officials, including DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore.

In April, the state’s foster care system was caring for 6,507 children. That’s the most in state history, and approximately 700 more children than were in the system two years ago.

There are currently 6,492 children in foster care, according to Theresa Freed, a spokesperson for DCF.

In the letter, Carr Kittel said she is concerned a requirement that foster care couples be married would “result in expensive litigation” and divert money from an already underfunded foster care system.

“Such a policy change will also raise suspicion on any stated reasons for removals of foster children who are in previously approved homes, causing additional court hearings and adding uncertainty for children for whom we are mandated to achieve permanency,” Carr Kittel wrote.

Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Republican from Mission Hills, raised similar questions in an email she sent to Gilmore last week.

“I’ve had constituents contact me with concerns about the reports they’re hearing that DCF is going to discontinue allowing gay people to be foster or adoptive parents, and that other requirements — requirements of marriage — may be applied as well,” Bollier said in her email. “I want to know what’s factual and what is not.”

Freed said DCF is reviewing the “entire foster care licensing program” but emphasized that no decisions had been made about policy changes.

“We are in the early stages of conducting a long and thorough process of review and deliberation of the program,” Freed said.

Bollier and several people who work in the foster care system say they’ve been told the changes under consideration are in keeping with Gov. Sam Brownback’s ongoing efforts to use state policies to promote marriage.

The changes being discussed would reportedly not affect cohabitating couples who currently are licensed. But Bollier and others have been told unmarried couples would have to marry in order to renew their annual foster parent licenses.

Single men and single women would be allowed to be licensed foster parents with the understanding that other adults who are not relatives could not live in the household.

Lori Ross, executive director with the Midwest Foster Care and Adoption Association that serves Kansas and Missouri, said many foster parent couples are not married.

“Oh, gosh, there are a lot,” Ross said. “I mean, there’s nothing unusual about (foster) kids being appropriately placed with ‘Aunt Sally’ who’s living with a boyfriend.”

Kari Schmidt, a Wichita attorney who represents gay couples in adoption cases, said the reported policy change would be disruptive to the foster care system.

“Here we are, dealing with record numbers of kids in foster care, and DCF is thinking that requiring couples to get married and having fewer placement options will somehow make things better,” Schmidt said. “I think that’s greatly disingenuous.”

Schmidt said Brownback set the stage for the reported policy change with an executive order, which took effect July 1, that transferred the responsibility for licensing foster homes from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to DCF.

“When I heard they were moving licensing authority out of KDHE and over to DCF, I knew exactly what it meant,” Schmidt said. “It meant exactly what we’re hearing about now.”

Before the U.S. Supreme Court ruling last month that all couples have a right to marry, the change would have prevented same-sex couples from becoming foster parents because gay marriages were not legal in Kansas.

Now, the change in DCF policy, if approved, would apply to all married couples, including those who are same-sex.

Kansas privatized most of its foster care services in 1996 after failing several court-ordered reviews.

DCF now contracts with two nonprofit corporations — St. Francis Community Services of Salina and KVC Kansas of Olathe — for virtually all of its day-to-day services for children in foster care.

Jenny Kutz, a spokesperson for KVC Kansas, said the organization was “unaware of any discussions” having to do with requiring foster parent couples to marry.

Officials at St. Francis have not responded to requests for comment.

— KHI News Service reporter Jim McLean contributed to this story, which was updated at 4 p.m. Wednesday with comments from DCF.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Driver leaves after passenger falls off motorcycle onto I-70

A motorcyclist continued on his way after a passenger fell off a motorcycle on I-70 in Kansas City, Kan., according to a Kansas Turnpike Authority trooper’s report.

The motorcycle was westbound on I-70 east of I-435 when the accident happened at 3:45 p.m. Sunday, July 12, according to the trooper’s report.

The passenger landed on the pavement, according to the report.

The trooper identified the motorcycle driver as a 43-year-old man from Tennessee. The report stated that he was injured.

The passenger, a 21-year-old woman from Lenexa, Kan., was injured, according to the trooper’s report.

June casino revenues decrease at Hollywood Casino

June revenues for the Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., are about $2 million under the May revenues, according to figures released today by the Kansas Lottery.

The June revenues were $11,491,164 as compared to May revenues of $13,535,920, according to Keith Kocher, director of program assurance and integrity at the Kansas Lottery. He was speaking at the Kansas Lottery Commission meeting.

Revenues also were down for Boot Hill Casino in Dodge City, Kan., and Kansas Star Casino, Mulvane, Kan.

At Boot Hill Casino, June revenues were $2,936,755 for June as compared to $3,732,096 in May. At Kansas Star Casino, June revenues were $13,841,074 in June as compared to $16,889,552 in May.

In total, the three state casinos reported casino gaming revenue of $28,268,993 for June as compared to $34,157,568 in May, a total decline of almost $6 million.

Kocher said the decline was expected, and that June revenues are down every year as compared to May.

Record year for casino revenues in Kansas

He also reported figures for the end of the fiscal year, which came at the end of June.

Gaming revenues, from the three state casinos, resulted in a record of $365 million during fiscal year 2015, Kocher said, or about $1 million a day.

It was also the best year ever for Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway, which produced $142 million in gaming revenues, according to lottery records. Hollywood Casino’s previous high was fiscal year 2014 at $132 million, and the past year was a full $10 million increase over that.

During fiscal year 2015, all three casinos combined gave $80.3 million to the state of Kansas. That figure includes $31.4 million from Hollywood Casino.

Hollywood Casino paid $4,282,772 to the Unified Government during fiscal year 2015 from the casino gaming revenues, representing 3 percent of the total. Additionally, $2.8 million went to the problem gambling fund.

Since it opened on Feb. 3, 2012, Hollywood Casino has given almost $100 million to the state of Kansas in casino gaming revenues. It has given $13.6 million to the UG for its 3 percent of the casino gaming revenue.

Since their opening, the three casinos together have given back $294 million to the state of Kansas from casino gaming revenues.

Lawsuit filed over fourth casino in southeast Kansas

A fourth state casino is in the works in southeast Kansas.

Kocher reported that the Kansas Racing and Gaming Review Board had selected Kansas Crossing, Pittsburg, Kan., in Crawford County as the manager on a vote of 5-2. Two votes were for another applicant, Castle Rock in Cherokee County. A contract also has been approved for the new casino, with an expected opening date by July 2, 2016.

However, Kocher reported that a case has been filed in Shawnee County District Court challenging this decision. The Cherokee County commissioners board filed a petition July 13 against KRGC, requesting a temporary restraining order and temporary injunction. A hearing on it was scheduled for 2 p.m. July 16 in Shawnee County District Court.

Traditional lottery game revenues up in fiscal year

Sherriene Jones-Sontag, deputy executive director of the Kansas Lottery, reported that traditional lottery sales were up this fiscal year, from July 2014 to June 2015. Sales were $264.4 million, which is 2.66 percent ahead of last year’s record sales, according to lottery officials.

The lottery transferred an additional $75.02 million to the state during the fiscal year, another record, according to lottery officials.

This improvement in lottery sales came despite a challenging year in which there were few $200 million jackpots and in which a new national game the lottery had planned to join did not go forward. It was also a year in which prize payouts, totaling more than $137 million, were $5 million more than the previous year, she said.

She said the entire team played a crucial role in the success of the lottery this year.

One of the goals for this year will be increasing the number of selling spots within retail lottery locations, she said.

Contact Mary Rupert at [email protected].