Politics & Government

Grand Jury Report: Riverside County CPS May Have Failed Some Abused, Neglected Children

The Board of Supervisors today directed the Executive Office to respond to a Riverside County grand jury report critical of the Department of Child Protective Services for its handling of some abuse and neglect cases, as well as apparent deficiencies in personnel training and standards.    

Without comment, the board voted 5-0 for staffers to address jurors' concerns within 60 days.    

The 19-member grand jury submitted a nine-page analysis that identified shortcomings in Child Protective Services' operations.    

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CPS, a component of the Department of Public Social Services, is tasked with removing children from homes where they're exposed to danger, placing abused and neglected children in foster homes and aiding in the adoption process.

The grand jury report evaluated CPS based on interviews with employees and scrutiny of internal documents and policies. According to the grand jury, the last time CPS' organizational structure and operations underwent thorough vetting was in 1995.

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"Since that time, the county's population has grown to over 2.2 million, and the prevalence of abuse and neglect has significantly increased," the report stated.

The grand jury relied on data from 2011 to get an overview of CPS activity. Figures showed 44,737 calls were fielded that year regarding children potentially at risk.

"Of those, 82 percent were investigated and 21 percent of those were found to be substantiated," according to the report. "Nine percent resulted in an open case, with 6 percent -- 2,438 -- of the children being removed from the home and taken into protective custody."

Just under 4,000 children are entrusted to the care of CPS.

The grand jury found flaws in the criteria used by CPS investigators to determine how much potential danger a child may face in a home.

According to the jurors, the basic document on which case workers rely to make their findings -- the California Family Risk Assessment Form -- "does not place enough value on 'neglect factors."'

The grand jury reviewed closed cases and determined that conditions apparently ignored or overlooked by investigators included a history of substance abuse or domestic violence by one or more occupants of a household, continuing inadequate supervision of children, and children performing poorly in school without ever showing signs of improvement.

During the trial earlier this year of 12-year-old Joseph Hall, who fatally shot his neo-Nazi father Jeff Hall while the man slept at his Riverside home, witnesses testified that CPS workers had been to the boy's home on no less than 20 occasions in the five years prior to the May 1, 2011 murder. There were allegations that Jeff Hall physically abused his son and used illegal drugs in front of all his children. Joseph is expected to be sentenced in late August.

The grand jury said that several CPS employees admitted under oath that, in making a determination to keep a case open or close it, they did not routinely consider a parent or guardian's "erratic behavior," nor whether law enforcement had been called to a home multiple times, nor whether a child was living in sanitary or crowded conditions.

"Testimony revealed that not all social workers ... investigate the medical, psychological or school records of children with ongoing neglect and abuse complaints," according to the report.

The jurors noted that CPS workers sometimes do not have ready access to law enforcement records, further hampering efforts to complete an investigation.

Social workers are also faced with daunting caseloads that prevent them from devoting the time they would like to each investigation, according to the grand jury. Workers testified to having 40 open cases at one time and having between seven and 14 reports to write each month.

According to the grand jury, some CPS workers revealed they were not well-versed in the agency's complaint process or how to properly assist individuals attempting to make a complaint. Jurors cited this as an example of deficient training.

The grand jury recommended that the county take the following corrective steps:

-- Develop a new mandatory checklist for CPS workers to follow that requires them to consider all potential risk factors "that affect the long- term health, growth and development of children";

-- require CPS workers to review all "referral alerts" connected with a case, such as calls from concerned neighbors about a child's safety;

-- make certain that any case assessment digs into the criminal history of all members of a household;

-- review all law enforcement and mental health contacts a parent or guardian of a child has had, as well as academic and health information related to the child;

-- cut social workers' caseloads;

-- ensure that all personnel have a full understanding of the Children's Services Handbook and can confidently advise parties of how the complaint process works; and

-- mandate that all CPS workers complete their nine-week "core induction training" before going into the field and, preferably, be paired with experienced social workers for mentorship purposes.--City News Service


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