Monday, August 31, 2009

"Will abused kids lose Orlando safe haven?" by Kate Santich



From the Orlando Sentinel.

They come at all hours of the day and night, their small bodies often bruised, their lives in chaos. Some arrive in nothing but a diaper and a T-shirt.
At the Crisis Nursery in Orlando, they find a warm bed, plenty to eat and someone to hold them and keep them safe. Last year, 150 children came to the shelter, most removed from abusive or neglectful parents.
Rest of the story at: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/orl-crisis-nursery-082809,0,6443362.story

"A New Mission to China" by Scott Calvert


A story from the Baltimore Sun.
The boy was near age 6 when he was abandoned in 1998. Police found him under a bridge in Luoyang, a city in eastern China. Unable to learn how he got there or where he came from, officers deposited him at a busy orphanage in town.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Seminole County in Desperate Need of Guardian Ad Litem Volunteers!

From the Seminole Chronicle -

Guardian program low on help after state cuts
By Abraham AborayaAugust 19, 2009

SEMINOLE COUNTY - The volunteer organization that represents abused, neglected or abandoned children in court is looking for more volunteers in the county.
The Guardian ad Litem program emerged from the state's budget cycle with a $2.81 million cut, which, while significant, was far less than the Florida House of Representative's proposed $7.6 million.
But the cuts caused a shift in volunteers, leaving a hole that needs to be filled with 80 volunteers in total, and 40 for a training session that starts in October.
"We really need volunteers for the program desperately," said Patricia Williams, the recruiter for the guardian program. "We could easily use another 50 or 75 volunteers (in Seminole County alone). Our state government was very good and gave us as minimal a cut as possible."
A Guardian ad Litem is a person appointed by the court to represent the interests of a single person. In Florida, the guardians can sometimes be the voice of a group of children pulled from a home during an abuse, abandonment or neglect case.
The guardian takes the time to get to know what the child's interests are, and often interviews the family of the children, as well as doctors, educators and anyone else that touches the child's life.
Volunteers get about 30 hours of training before they begin work. In Florida, to volunteer you need to be 19 years old, not have a felony record and be able to produce references.
"We need someone who cares about children, who has a little bit of time, only about 10 hours a month, and the big one is the common sense requirement," Williams said. "So you have the state's requirements and then you have [my] requirements."
Statewide, as of June, there are 31,000 kids under court supervision, and 26,800 are represented by a Guardian ad Litem. In Seminole County as of July 1, there were 440 children needing guardians, and 145 volunteers in the program.
The program got a $3.8 million cut, although the cut was dampened this year by a $1 million, non-recurring boost. That means that there will be an additional $1 million coming from the budget the following year.
The cuts ultimately led to 50 positions lost statewide. Less staff means the program is depending more now on volunteers to fill in the gap.
"That was the result, unfortunately," said Deborah Moore, the public information officer for the guardian program. "It wasn't as severe as we thought it would be. We were concerned that it was going to be a much larger cut."
Williams knows first hand about the volunteering. She started working for the guardian program six years ago in Brevard County as a volunteer.
"It just was an eye-opening realization that that was going on in my own area, and I was totally unaware," Williams said. "I never had any idea the extent of what the situation is for our children.
"And it's a wonderful opportunity. It's life changing for the children. You get to improve that child's life. How many volunteer opportunities can you have that effect on generations to come?"
Valentina Jolta, 29, of Casselberry, became certified as a Guardian ad Litem in 2004 while she was getting her undergraduate degree from the University of Florida. A representative from the program spoke during one of her psychology classes.
"Just hearing the need to find safe, permanent homes and knowing that I could make a difference really attracted me to the volunteer opportunity," Jolta said.
Jolta said volunteering as a guardian has been very rewarding for her.
"I would recommend it to anyone who desires to help children, that wants to make a difference," Jolta said. "I would advocate for anyone in college to have this experience, or anyone who has an interest in law, or anyone who has the love and support able to give to a child. It's a unique opportunity, and it's a very professional program.
"I just think it's a very rewarding experience. It gives a lot of personal satisfaction."
Jolta, a certified school psychologist who is employed as an educational liaison, said that working with abused children can take an emotional toll, especially if you get attached.
"I think just knowing you're making a difference is helpful, and I'm very positive," she said. "I don't think it's ever affected me negatively."

http://www.seminolechronicle.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2009/08/19/4a8c6afa9c107

Overseas adoptions disrupted by new TB policy

From MSNBC
New mandate may delay plans for those adopting kids from China, Ethiopia
The Associated Press

NEW YORK - Advocates of international adoption are furious over a new federal policy related to tuberculosis testing that could disrupt plans for families adopting children from China and Ethiopia.

The policy already has forced one distraught couple from Virginia, Jay Scruggs and Candace Litchford, to leave China without the daughter they had spent two weeks bonding with.
“That was a cruel thing to put a 4-year-old child through,” Litchford said in a telephone interview Monday. “How is she supposed to trust us now?”

The anger stems from a directive issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2007 intended to minimize the number of immigrants entering the U.S. with multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis.

Earlier this year, the CDC announced that immigrants over the age of 2 from Ethiopia and China — a country that for the past decade has been the leading source of foreign adoptions for American parents — would be subject to the new protocols. The policy applies to all immigrants, including children adopted abroad by U.S. citizens.

Adoption advocates say the required testing procedures — and treatment in the case of positive tests — could cause delays ranging from several weeks to 12 months for obtaining a visa to bring adopted children back to the U.S.

Several major adoption organizations are circulating a petition asking the CDC to exempt adopted children from the requirements. The groups contend that the risk of TB transmission is minimal for infected children under 12 and contend that adopted children, unlike some adult immigrants, are virtually assured of obtaining top-level health care as soon as they reach the U.S.

Chuck Johnson, chief operating officer of the National Council for Adoption, expressed fear that some children adopted by Americans would, because of the new delays, die in their homelands for lack of state-of-the-art medical care they might have received in the U.S.
“Some of these bureaucrats are going to have to answer for that,” Johnson said.
Johnson and his allies are trying to mobilize congressional support for exempting adopted children from the policy. They are gathering testimonials from medical experts to back the contention that children, in contrast to adults, are extremely unlikely to transmit TB.

The CDC defends the policy as medically necessary.
“We agree it’s a rare circumstance that children can transmit TB, but the reality is it can happen,” said CDC spokesman Glen Nowak.
He also said the CDC did not have the legal authority to exempt children being adopted by U.S. families from rules applying to other immigrants.
As for Scruggs and Litchford, Nowak said, “We appreciate that this is frustrating. ... We are doing what we can to make this go as fast as possible.”

The policy does not apply to children under 2. However, Thomas DiFilipo, president of the Joint Council on International Children’s Services, noted that China was emphasizing special needs adoptions for older children, so that many hundreds of families could be affected by the rules.
Bringing Harper homeAny policy change will come too late for Scruggs and Litchford, both architects from Alexandria, Va.
They traveled to China last month and met their adopted daughter, Harper, on July 27, but had to return home without her last week after a wrenching farewell that they captured on a video posted on their blog.
Litchford said she and her husband were aware of the new regulations and also knew that Harper — being adopted under the “special needs” program — had asthma-like health problems.
However, Litchford said they were told Harper tested negative for TB, so they went ahead with their trip, hoping to bring her home. After arriving in China, they were told that Harper actually had tested positive for TB and that, under the new CDC regulations, she would have to undergo a series of tests to ensure she was TB-free, with results not expected for at least six weeks.
The couple sought a waiver so they could leave with Harper in tow, but were unsuccessful and returned to the U.S. without her, in part for financial reasons and also because they had left their 6-year-old adopted son, Ivan, back in the U.S.
Litchford said Harper already had spent time in two hospitals and with a Chinese foster family that eventually decided it didn’t want her.
“She’s scared to death,” Litchford said. “Every time she walks into a new situation, she thinks she’s being left again. And then we had to leave her, the worst thing that could happen has happened.”

In the video, Scruggs tries to assure Harper that he and Litchford will return to take her home. But the girl nonetheless bursts into sobs and clings to her father as he tries to leave.
Harper will stay over the next several weeks with a family near Guangzhou, and her parents hope she will be cleared for travel to the U.S. at some point in September.
“This is not an immigrant — it’s not someone who has no address in the U.S. and no support network,” Litchford said. “It’s a child with a family who’s going to care for her. But now we can’t. We can’t take care of our daughter.”

Long term, the problems faced by Scruggs and Litchford may be alleviated by a bill recently introduced in Congress. It would extend U.S. citizenship immediately to children adopted abroad by American parents, replacing the current policy in which citizenship is extended only after the child reaches the U.S.

Had the bill been in effect this summer, Harper would not have been treated as an immigrant and would have been allowed to travel to Virginia with her parents.
Adoption advocates say the bill is unlikely to win approval this year, so they are hoping the CDC might ease the procedures for adopted children in the interim.
“I don’t believe the CDC intentionally put this policy into place to harm adopted children — I just don’t think they were considered in the mix,” said McLane Layton, founder of Equality for Adopted Children. “The policy needs to be re-evaluated in this regard, the sooner the better.”
Layton, one of most vocal critics of the CDC policy, has been following the difficulties of Scruggs and Litchford as they sought to bring home Harper.
“You wonder about the psychological and emotional impact it will have,” Layton said. “When her parents come back, how much will it take for her to believe they’re not going to leave her again?”

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32363931/ns/health-kids_and_parenting/from/ET

Monday, August 10, 2009

Adoptive Family Webinars

The Joint Council on International Children's Services proudly offers webinars for adoptive families and prospective adoptive families on the first Tuesday and Thursday of every month. Webinars are held from 7 pm - 8 pm EST and cost $10/family. Click here to register.

more information: http://www.jcics.org/Webinar.htm

Adoptive Family Webinars Schedule
Thursday, July 2nd - FAS Inside Eastern European Orphanages, presented by Todd Ochs

Tuesday, July 7th - Developing Cultural Competence in Adopted Children, presented by Patricia Irwin Johnston

Tuesday, August 4th - Finally Finding My Birth Family with the Help of My Adoptive Family, presented by Maureen & Aselefech Evans

Thursday, August 6th - Journey to Me, presented by Heather Forbes

Tuesday, September 1st - Medical Special Needs Children, presented by Todd Ochs

Thursday, September 3rd - Understanding and Managing Loss in Adoption, presented by Dr. David Brodzinsky

Thursday, October 1st - Fostering Attachment, presented by Lynn Wetterberg

Tuesday, October 6th - When International Adoptions Mean Parenting Across Racial Lines, presented by Beth Hall

Tuesday, November 3rd - Parenting Adopted Adolescents, presented by Dr. Greg Keck

Thursday, November 5th - Brothers and Sisters in Adoption, presented by Arleta James

Tuesday, December 1st - Importance of Life Books and Talking with Adopted Children About Adoption, presented by Carrie Kitze

Thursday, December 3rd - TBA

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Advocates and Sponsors Needed for Swazi Orphans




Ad-Vo-Cate
To speak, plead or argue in favor of
1. One that argues for a case; a supporter or defender
2. One that pleads in another's behalf; an intercessor


Will you use YOUR voice, YOUR influence to make a difference in children's lives? You can "sign up for" a certain number of these kids. . .say 10, 20, 25, 50 of them. We'll give you their names an profiles and you can be in charge of finding them sponsors! This way, you can literally make an eternal difference in the lives of these kids!

Kids' House Back to School Bash

As many of us plan for the end of the school year and begin to make our summer vacation plans, some children and families are already beginning to worry about how they will prepare for the next school year. To help meet these basic needs, Kids House organizes a special outreach event called" Back To School Splash". At the beginning of each new school year, our kids and their families are invited to a large pool party accompanied by food and games. At the end, all the kids are provided with a backpack complete with necessary school supplies to begin a brand new year of learning. This year's event, which will take place on August 12th, is expected to draw attendance from nearly 200 children in-need. In order to help as many kids as possible, we need your help! Click here for a full list of supplies we need.

Catholic Charities holding Adoption Seminar

Are you interested in Adoption?
Catholic Charities of Central Florida's Adoption Specialists are presenting a
FREE with Registration Informational Seminar on
How to Become "Adoption-Ready"
October 21, 2009 or January 13, 2010
6:00 - 8:00 PM
Catholic Charities of Central Florida
1819 N. Semoran Blvd., Orlando, FL 32807
To Register: Call 888-658-2828 or Click Here to Register online

Contact
Cami Tarasewich

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Henan Orphan Care Sponsors Needed


Ninety-three children in Henan orphanages are waiting right now for sponsors in order to live with a trained foster family or be cared for at one of the three Lily Orphan Care Centers.

Would you consider sponsoring one of these waiting children for $40 a month?

As a sponsor, you will receive quarterly reports and pictures for the child you sponsor. More importantly, you will enable an abandoned child to escape an institutional environment and receive one-on-one care that will permanently and positively impact his or her life.

For $1.30 a day, you can make an immeasurable difference!

One person or family can sponsor a child, or several families, a group of co-workers, a church group, or a group of classmates can also pitch in and sponsor a child as a group.

PLEASE reach out to a child by becoming a sponsor today! For detailed information, please contact Xia at charity@chinesechildren.org or 303-850-9998 ext 17. Thanks!!!

Monday, August 3, 2009

Freed to Visit Orphans (Ethiopia)

Together 4 Adoption has just released a new video to raise awareness of the current global orphan crisis and to promote their upcoming October conference. It connects the glory of the gospel with the orphan crisis.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCK8dMoErRA