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NCYL in the News

Child Welfare/Foster Care Media Archive

California

Voisin: Dyer, 16, has lived in seven homes
The Sacramento Bee, November 26, 2008
AUBURN – Dalton Dyer never stops moving. His fingers tug at the sleeves of his T-shirt. He drapes a leg over a table in the multipurpose room near the Placer High School gym and, in one continuous motion, stands and leans against a wall.

A victory for foster youth
San Francisco Chronicle Editorial, November 26, 2008
It should not have taken a team of lawyers to allow Dalton Dyer and his Placer High teammates to participate in the Division IV playoffs. They earned it on the field.

Judge says foster youth can play football
San Francisco Chronicle, November 25, 2008
An Alameda County judge ruled Monday that the organization that oversees high school sports in California violated state law when it found a Placer County foster child ineligible to play football because of a paperwork mix-up by his school's athletic director.

Alameda Court Decides In Favor Of Placer High
KTVU, November 24, 2008
An unusual situation surrounding a high school football player's eligibility that jeopardized division four playoff games and even suspended a game over the weekend has been resolved in favor of Placer High School.

Shining a light on child abuse, neglect
Bill would speed release of case files when youngsters die
Sacramento Bee, May 13, 2007
Daelynn Foreman, a partially paralyzed Orangevale 12-year-old, died last July weighing only 23 pounds and covered with deep bedsores that reached to her bones.

Child welfare progress debated
Sacramento Bee, Mar. 8, 2006
With the state facing federal pressure to fix its child-welfare system, experts testifying Tuesday remained divided on whether California is doing enough to improve protections for abused and neglected children. (Registration required.)

Nevada

Decision May Allow Class Action
Las Vegas Review Journal, October 10, 2008
Child Welfare Lawsuit Getting an Appeal
Las Vegas Now, October 9, 2008
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed to hear an appeal by the National Center for Youth Law (NCYL) of a recent U.S. District Court ruling denying its motion for class certification in Clark K. v. Willden.

Clark K. v. Willden.

Report on Children in Government Care a Surprise to Some
Las Vegas Review Journal, February 23, 2007
They showed up in a censored consultant's report as children left in potentially dangerous situations by Clark County Family Services.

Editorial: 'Everything's OK -- Just Trust Us'
State rightfully skeptical of secretive county Family Services
Las Vegas Review Journal, February 26, 2007
Some at Clark County Family Services may be wondering why they can never catch a break. But their current predicament is largely a result of their own predilection for secrecy, cover-ups and "happy face" reporting.

Utah

Legacy of Roska case is child welfare system reform
Salt Lake Tribune, July 6, 2007
The biggest stunner of the Roska family's trial last week wasn't their jury award: $2 in damages.

  • Long-Running  Foster Care Lawsuit Ends, KCPW News Salt Lake City, July 2, 2007 - A federal judge has declared the end to a 14-year lawsuit that cost Utah nearly seven million dollars and resulted in a major overhaul of the state's child welfare system.
  • Utah foster care Child welfare system reform means end of 14-year lawsuit
    Salt Lake Tribune, June 29, 2007 - You'll have to forgive U.S. District Judge Tena Campbell's departure from routine Thursday.
  • '93 suit credited for changes at DCFS:Settlement OK'd in fight between state and child-advocates, Deseret Morning News, June 29, 2007 - In her nine years at the state Division of Child and Family Services, Wendy Cole has seen positive changes in the state's child-welfare system, from the way caseworkers are trained to increased participation in individual cases.
  • End in Sight to 14-year Lawsuit Against Utah Foster Care KSL-TV, May 16, 2007 - For 14 years Utah's child welfare system has operated under a looming lawsuit by the National Center for Youth Law.
  • Child-welfare Suit Nears an End Deseret Morning News, May 15, 2007 - State officials and a California-based children's advocacy organization have agreed to formally end the 14-year-old lawsuit that is widely credited for reforming Utah's child-welfare system.
  • DCFS points to progress, but group asks "where?"
    Deseret News
    , Jan. 22, 2002 - Suit filed by NCYL staff attorney Darryl Hamm resulted in court-ordered overhaul of Utah's child protection system, but progress is slow in coming.

National

The Youngest Clients
ABA Journal, March 22, 2007
The 9-year-old boy looked the lawyer in the eye and asked, “Does my dad know that the social workers will go away if we go back to live with him?”

Welfare Agencies Seek Foster Children's Assets
The New York Times, Feb. 17, 2006
This front-page story describes child welfare agencies taking foster children's Social Security benefits and other assets to pay for their care. (Subscription required.)

The Foster Care Edition
KALW, January 18, 2007
Imagine being taken away from everything you know. That's the beginning for foster kids. Children are removed from terrible situations... and sometimes find themselves in equally bad places. We go inside the system to see what works, what doesn't, and what hope there is for neglected and abused children.

Welfare Agencies Seek Foster Children's Assets
The New York Times, Feb. 17, 2006
This front-page story describes child welfare agencies taking foster children's Social Security benefits and other assets to pay for their care.


"Crusading for Needy Children for 25 Years"
Dec 11, 2006 - Though John O'Toole is a lifelong peacenik and self-described "product of the '60s," his 25 years directing the National Center for Youth Law have been a constant fight. 

Blind Parents' Custody of Newborn Challenged
NPR, All Things Considered
, Dec. 13, 2004
A blind couple in Northern California nearly lose their newborn baby after San Mateo County officials question whether they're physically capable of caring for the child. (Audio) The segment includes comments from NCYL director John O'Toole; Ray Scheppach, executive director of the National Governors' Association; LaVarr Webb, a political consultant who was Leavitt's policy director in Utah; and Ted Wilson, former director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics and former Salt Lake City mayor.

For Teen Drivers, Mom's Monitoring
Washington Post, June 1, 2004
NCYL director John O'Toole is interviewed about parents' use of bumper stickers that encourage motorists to tattle on the childrens' driving.

Lesbian Mom Goes to Pennsylvania's Highest Court for Visitation Rights
Lambda Legal, Sept. 6, 2001
NCYL joins coalition filing brief urging Pennsylvania's highest court to affirm a ruling that a lesbian mother who raised a child with her former partner for three years from birth may seek visitation with her daughter despite the biological mother's objection.

Foster-Child Advocates Gain Allies in Injury Lawyers
The New York Times, Oct. 27, 2000
NCYL staff attorney Bll Grimm is quoted regarding multimillion-dollar class-action suit that seeks to reform the state of California's child welfare system. (free registration required)

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