Archive for April, 2009

Voices heads to downtown Miami with YP networker on May 7th

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

On May 7th, Voices makes its way back to downtown Miami for a young professionals mixer at Andu Restaurant & Lounge. Join us at 6pm for two complimentary drinks and hors d’oeuvres, and the opportunity to learn more about child advocacy and the over 3,000 foster kids in Miami. If you’ve been looking for a way to become more involved in your community, we encourage you to come out and learn more about Voices’ new initiatives!

$5 with RSVP or $10 at the door.

Call 305.324.5678 or email emorales@voices4.org to RSVP or for more information.

We look forward to seeing everyone!

Channel 10 News recently did a piece on Voices, watch it here

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

S. Fla. Foundation Raises Funds, Hopes For Kids In Foster Care

To read the story and watch the video, click here.

Miami Herald article discusses rise in family violence, child abuse

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

  

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Economy may contribute to rise in family violence

Some hospitals report seeing more than twice as many shaken babies as a year ago. Deaths from domestic violence have increased sharply in some areas.Calls to domestic-violence hotlines have risen too, and more than half the callers said their families’ financial situation has changed recently.

Across the country, these and other signs point to another troubling effect of the recession: The American home is becoming more violent, and the ailing economy could be at least partially to blame.

“Our children and families are suffering,” said Alane Fagin, who runs a Long Island nonprofit group called Child Abuse Prevention Services. “With more layoffs expected, the threat of foreclosure looming over so many and our savings disappearing, even the best parents can feel stressed out and overwhelmed.”

Nationwide government data will not be compiled for months, so the evidence suggesting an uptick in child abuse and domestic violence has been largely anecdotal.

But the Child Welfare League of America, a coalition of public and private agencies, has been surveying state child welfare agencies to determine whether the numbers reflect a spike in violence.

“I think a lot of people are very concerned that we are in the early phases of this,” said Linda Spears, vice president for policy and public affairs.

Eighty-eight percent of law enforcement officials surveyed nationwide believe the economic crisis has led, or will lead, to more child abuse and neglect, according to top police officials from Los Angeles, Boston, Milwaukee and Philadelphia who recently held a news conference in Washington.

“Those of us on the front lines of law enforcement know that there is a correlation between economic distress and increased child abuse and neglect,” said Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton. “We have to get in front of this problem now.”

Just as the need appears to be growing, the recession is drying up funding to many agencies that fight domestic violence.

“This period of time may well be our perfect storm: a struggling economy, an increase in stress and a decrease in funding of programs,” said Fagin, the Long Island child abuse prevention advocate.

Not everyone is convinced domestic violence and child abuse are increasing.

“So far from what I’ve read there is no evidence that is the case,” said Ben Tanzer of Chicago-based Prevent Child Abuse. “Certainly we’re concerned that certain communities may be in crisis, but we just don’t know.”

Earlier this month, the U.S. Administration for Children’s Services released its annual report on child abuse, which found the number of children being maltreated actually fell in recent years, from 904,000 victims nationwide in 2006 to 794,000 the following year.

But those figures do not include the worst of the recession, which began in late 2007. Still, additional signs abound that violence is rising:

- The National Domestic Violence Hotline reported calls were up 21 percent in the third quarter of 2008 compared with a year earlier. A six-week survey found 54 percent of callers answering “yes” when asked if there had been a change in the family’s financial situation in the past year.

- Workers at Children’s Hospital Boston and Massachusetts General Hospital reported seeing nine infants with shaken baby syndrome in three months, compared with four in the same period last year. The chairman of pediatrics at Schneider Children’s Hospital on Long Island said his facility has had five cases in the past six months; only one or two cases arose during the previous year.

- Milwaukee reported a 40 percent increase in homicides related to domestic violence in the first three months of 2009. Police Chief Edward Flynn cannot say for sure whether the increase was caused by the recession, but he believes the two are related.

- The San Diego County Domestic Violence Hotline reported a 20 percent increase in calls in January 2009 over the prior year. “As the economy worsens, it’s likely that trend will get even worse,” District Attorney Bonnie M. Dumanis said.

- The Women’s Center of San Joaquin County, Calif., says the number of clients seeking aid in obtaining restraining orders against abusers has increased 50 percent for the first three months of 2009, and counselors blame the economy. The county leads the nation in foreclosures.

- Maine saw domestic violence-related homicides double in the past year. Gov. John Baldacci urged health care professionals to look even more carefully for signs of violence and sexual assault.

- Just outside the nation’s capital, the number of abuse and neglect cases rose 23 percent in Fairfax County, Va.; 29 percent in Montgomery County, Md.; and 18 percent in the District of Columbia in 2008. Neglect investigations appear to have increased most, as struggling families live without heat or electricity or fail to get children medical care.

Amy Wicks, a spokeswoman with the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome, said her organization has received reports from pediatricians around the country concerned about a spike in cases.

“It’s not just shaken baby, it’s other forms of physical abuse,” Wicks said. “A lot of fathers, or male caregivers, have been laid off and now they’re home with the screaming baby. Sometimes the stress of a crying baby is just too much on top of everything else.”

Individual cases also raise questions about the role economic troubles may have played.

Police on Long Island were called last month to the home of an out-of-work stagehand arguing with his wife over money. After repeatedly punching her in the face in front of his house, the man barricaded himself inside with her and their seven children as hostage negotiators pleaded for their release.

The siege in East Rockaway ended after the man’s wife fled and he was tackled by police outside the house. The children were not harmed.

Days later in Stockton, Minn., a man held a 4-year-old hostage for about five hours before surrendering. A woman told police her husband was intoxicated and had become “verbally violent” with her, noting he was depressed about being laid off at a die-casting company.

Mindy Perlmutter, spokeswoman for the Nassau County Coalition for Domestic Violence, cautioned that the economy is not the only factor in abuse cases - a common refrain among social workers.

“It doesn’t cause someone to be abusive,” she said. “There are many poor people who never abuse their loved ones. But if you’re inclined to be abusive, if you are an abuser, losing a job and being home 24/7 may give you more opportunity.”

If Florida House budget proposal passes, abused children are at risk of losing their voice in court

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

  

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Give voice to child advocates

Until Jimmy, a child in Miami-Dade County’s foster-care system, met his guardian ad litem, he had refused to leave his room. Jimmy was born with a skeletal deformity that made him the target of taunts at school. Jimmy isolated himself from his foster parents, teachers and the rest of the world.Not only did Jimmy’s guardian ad litem persuade him to leave his room and come to court, but she also found him a surgeon who operated on Jimmy. Now Jimmy stands tall and lives with his adopted parent.

In Tallahassee, the voice for 27,000 children served by guardians ad litem (GALs) statewide is in jeopardy of being weakened or silenced. Judges created this program to give the child-protection system what it lacked in the decision-making process: an independent voice in the courtroom speaking on behalf of the best interest of children. This model has been firmly embedded in Florida’s child-protection system for more than 25 years. State law requires that every child in all maltreatment cases have a guardian ad litem (unless one is not available). These caring, trained volunteers, with professional support, help judges make the best possible decision for these children.

If Florida House budget proposal 2009 passes, the most vulnerable children are at risk of losing their voice in court. This proposal recommends a 23-percent cut — $7.6 million — in the GAL budget. If passed, it will force the program to substantially reduce the indispensable support system upon which volunteer advocates rely. About 5,700 victims of abuse, abandonment and neglect (18 percent of the total number of children in care) will lose their GAL. This means their voices in court will go silent, and judges will lose an indispensable resource in making sound, therapeutic decisions.

Not one organization involved in child welfare supports the cut, including the Department of Children & Families, Florida’s Children First and The Children’s Campaign. The Florida Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges — 48 juvenile-court judges from Pensacola to Miami — is not in favor of cutting one penny from the GAL budget, let alone by $7.6 million.

Although the Legislature mandates a GAL for every child, that has not been achieved because of lack of funding. By drastically defunding an underfunded mandate, the Legislature is breaking faith with the children it promised to care for and protect.

CINDY S. LEDERMAN, Miami-Dade chief juvenile judge, Miami

JERI BETH COHEN, Circuit Court judge, Miami

April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Today marks the beginning of National Child Abuse Prevention Month. We encourage all of you to make a donation to support Voices to commemorate this occasion and assist us in our efforts to provide foster children with Guardians Ad Litem (court advocates) and other basic needs. Let’s all make a point to spread the word about Voices and the work we do on behalf of abused children. WE CAN ALL PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN OUR OWN COMMUNITIES. BE A VOICE!