A watchdog for Kansas’ child welfare agency? Not this year

by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service

Twice, Rep. Jarrod Ousley introduced bills that would create a watchdog over the Kansas agency in charge of looking after children from troubled families.

It’s a massive department hounded by stories of overlooked abuse cases and foster children caught in punishing patterns of shifting from one temporary home to the next.

Ousley says he’s dropping the idea of a state child advocate. For now.

Instead, the Merriam Democrat wants to give the new Democratic administration a shot at reforming the Department for Children and Families before bringing in an outside office to look over its shoulder.

The office would have the power to review investigations and decisions made by the DCF, but it would be housed in the Department of Administration. That separation is key for child welfare advocates, who want to ensure DCF can’t retaliate against an advocate who turns up mistakes or wrongdoing.

The bill didn’t even make it to a floor vote last year. After reintroducing the idea this year, Ousley last week yanked it. Instead, he’ll revisit the proposal next year. The lawmaker said he wants to give Gov. Laura Kelly’s administration a year to get a handle on child welfare issues.

Ousley’s child advocate bill was sunk last year, in part, by DCF’s objection. He’s hoping to earn the support of the new governor and new head of DCF by giving them some time before setting up an outside advocate’s office.

“I’d rather delay the year,” he said, “get it right, and get it moving forward without any obstruction than to risk getting nothing at all.”

Kelly made child welfare a central tenet of her campaign. She’s said fixing and increasing funding for DCF is a high priority for her first year in office.

Ousley said DCF doesn’t plan to oppose the bill, but that the governor wanted time to get settled and attack pressing child welfare problems first.

Kelly spokeswoman Ashley All didn’t say whether the governor favors setting up an advocate’s office, but did say the administration is prioritizing other issues, like adding social workers and funding foster care prevention.

“We must first stabilize this agency and the child welfare system before we can make other significant changes,” she said in an email.

But others are concerned about the harm that can be done in another year without that kind of oversight.

Judy Walsh strongly supports the bill, which she says could have helped protect her grandson, Adrian Jones. The boy died as a result of abuse in 2015 despite multiple reports to the state abuse hotline and several DCF investigations.

She said she’s been frustrated with the slow pace of change in the three years since Adrian’s death. She worries pushing this bill back a year is a sign that Kansas is losing momentum on policy changes in child welfare.

“I just worry that there’s going to be more children falling through the cracks,” Walsh said.

The cost to kids of waiting a year is Ousley’s biggest concern in pushing the bill to 2020.

“A year in a child’s life is a very long time,” he said.

Missouri has had an Office of the Child Advocate since 2002.

Missourians worried their abuse reports weren’t adequately investigated by the Department of Social Services, foster parents who think their knowledge is being ignored by their caseworker, or aunts questioning why their nephew was placed in a foster home when they had offered their open bed can call or email the office to have their concerns reviewed.

The Missouri Office of the Child Advocate exceeds goals in getting in touch with complainants and completing its investigations in a timely manner. In 2017, it contacted complainants within three business days 94 percent of the time. It wrapped up investigations within 45 business days 87 percent of the time.

In Kansas, where DCF has missed federal standards for timely handling of its cases, having an office without the baggage of a poor track record could be a boon for public trust.

“It’s an extra check and balance on the system that anybody, anybody can access,” said Lori Ross, president of the child welfare advocacy organization FosterAdopt Connect.

Ross said having an office that allows people to feel heard would also help Kansas with one of its particular challenges in foster care — retaining foster parents.

“That very basic level of, ‘Hey, I hear you have a concern, and it’s valid enough that I’m going to look into it and get back to you,’” said Ross, “that in itself is retention.”

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
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Legislative update from Rep. Pam Curtis, D-32nd Dist.

Rep. Pam Curtis

by Rep. Pam Curtis

Last week was the final week for committees to meet as we head toward the “turnaround deadline” where we push bills from the House to the Senate and vice versa. We will spend most of this week on the “floor” voting on bills that have advanced through the committee process.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Chamber of Commerce was the host of the Wyandotte-Leavenworth County Tuesday Luncheon. We discussed a number of issues of importance to the KCK business community.

HB 2279, that Rep. Ponka-We Victors and I introduced passed out of committee on Friday. The bill will enhance notifications for victims of domestic violence to aid them in making safe decisions. It will require that law enforcement inform a victim that the person arrested can be released from custody in a short amount of time, and that there may be a 72-hour no-contact order imposed, and that they can sign up for “VINE” (Kansas Victim Information Notification Everyday) to know when the person arrested has been released. We appreciate everyone’s assistance in reaching consensus to pass HB 2279 out of committee. It now heads to the full House of Representatives for consideration.

It is a special honor to serve as your state representative. I value and appreciate your input on issues facing state government. Please feel free to contact me with your comments and questions. My office address at the Statehouse is: Room 452-S, 300 SW 10th, Topeka, KS 66612. You can reach me at 785-296-7430 or call the legislative hotline at 1-800-432-3924 to leave a message for me. You can also email me at: [email protected]

Kansas Black Legislative Day
On Thursday, Feb. 21, the Kansas African American Legislative Caucus and the KS Quad-Caucus, in cooperation with the Kansas Black Leadership Council, held Black Legislative Day at the Capitol. There were many in attendance, with special guests from the Kansas Black Farmers Association, the NAACP Youth, the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, and the Kansas African American Affairs Commission. They held advocacy training workshops, forums on issues, and met with legislators, as well as the governor.

Anti-LGBTQ bills receive bipartisan backlash
Kansas made national headlines when a group of Republican legislators introduced and sponsored several radical bills targeting the LGBTQ community. The bills declare same-sex marriages as “parody marriages” and would disallow the state from recognizing them, despite the U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Another bill creates a special category of “elevated marriage” that requires counseling before a divorce is permitted.

The Republican legislators modeled these bills after drafts given to them by a controversial anti-gay activist.

A few Republican lawmakers that signed onto the bills denounced their support, claiming they hadn’t fully read the bills.

This week on the floor

This week, the House worked several bills on the floor. All of these bills passed through the chamber. They are as follows:

HB 2070: Designates a portion of United States highway 75 as the John Armstrong memorial highway.
HB 2123: Amends the Kansas national guard educational assistance act.
HB 2143: Updates the version of risk-based capital instructions in effect.
HB 2199: Amends documentation requirements related to the preparation of dead bodies.
HB 2087: Allows certain light screening material on motor vehicle windows.
HB 2097: Provides a method for calculating the cost of keeping civil prisoners in a county jail.
HB 2104: Amendments related to driving under the influence, including preliminary screening tests, implied consent advisories and test refusal.
HB 2105: Updates laws concerning limited liability companies.
HB 2125: Requires licensees operating a motor vehicle to promptly deliver driver’s license upon demand by authorized persons.
HB 2127: Eliminates the marking requirements for certain truck and truck tractors.
SB 9: Authorizes the transfer of $115,000,000 from the state general fund to the Kansas public employees retirement fund during the fiscal year 2019.
HB 2085: Adds a time requirement for reinstatement of a forfeited benefit unit of a rural water district.
HB 2007: Creates the United States army, navy, air force, marine corps, and coast guard veteran license plates.
HB 2101: Updates state credit union statutes.
HB 2119: Empowers the KPERS board to develop policies and procedures relating to procurement, enter into certain contracts and allow travel for trustees and employees of the system.

Resources
My Legislative Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/PamCurtisKCK.
My Twitter account, https://twitter.com/pcurtiskck
My website, https://www.curtisforkck.com/
Kansas Legislature website, http://kslegislature.org/

KCK man sentenced for delivering more than 3 pounds of meth

A Kansas City, Kansas, man was sentenced today to 80 months in federal prison for acting as a courier to deliver more than three pounds of methamphetamine, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said.

Demetrius Summerson, 28, Kansas City, Kansas, pleaded guilty to one count of distributing methamphetamine.

In his plea, he admitted that FBI agents had him under surveillance when he delivered more than 3.6 pounds of methamphetamine to a buyer in Lenexa, Kansas. The buyer paid Summerson $10,000.

Summerson was working as a distributor for a drug trafficking organization operating in Johnson and Wyandotte counties that was obtaining methamphetamine from a provider in Michoacan, Mexico.

McAllister commended the FBI, the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department and Assistant U.S. Attorney Sheri Catania for their work on the case.