Sarah Ford | April 28, 2015
In Focus: No Place to Call Home
鈥淵ou never get to feel safe. You never get to make friends. You are always anxious, because you never know when something is going to go wrong.鈥
That is how Mackenzie 鈥 who remembers being moved 26 times during nearly a decade in state care 鈥 said it felt being shuffled through a series of foster families, group homes, hospitals and residential treatment centers while child welfare workers struggled to find her a home that could meet her needs.
Once, when 鈥淐PS didn鈥檛 have anywhere else to put me,鈥 her caseworker sent her to an unlicensed home, where she slept in the same bed as the parents. She was 15, she told Children鈥檚 Rights, and 鈥渃lothing was optional.鈥 Another time, she said, workers could not find room in a treatment center with high-level mental health care, so she spent 鈥渁lmost a whole month鈥 in a hospital that was only supposed to keep her for three to five days. Later, she lived in a bedbug-infested group home with 鈥渉oles in the walls.鈥
According to a recent听, 鈥渄emand for foster beds exceeds supply by more than 30% nationally.鈥 That means experiences like Mackenzie鈥檚 鈥 though alarming 鈥 are unfortunately all too common for the 640,000 kids who spend time in U.S. foster care every year. Throughout the nation, kids are bounced between homes, sent far from their support systems, separated from their siblings and put in restrictive institutions simply because states do not have enough foster care placements.
鈥淚magine suddenly being stripped of every person you ever knew or loved, then moving over and over again and never finding somewhere that felt like home,鈥 said Sandy Santana, interim executive director of Children鈥檚 Rights. 鈥淔oster care systems are putting thousands of our children through this right now. As a country, we should be outraged.鈥
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