Update from state officials below:
Dear Colleagues,Governor Corzine and I are pleased to share the latest round of data on the child welfare system, which continues to point toprogress in a number of key areas. You can find the new data on our Web site by visiting this link:http://nj.gov/dcf/home/childdata/index.html (if the link does notdirectly open, please cut and paste into your Internet browser).This is our largest single production of data to date, andincludes demographic information on children, substantiation andoutcome data, information on DYFS caseloads for every office in the State, adoption data, and referrals from the hotline to DYFS and the Institutional Abuse Investigation Unit (IAIU).
As many of you know, we experienced our first net gain of 209 resource families in 2006, and we have already surpassed that netgain in the first three months of this year - 331 new families between January and March of this year.Caseloads continue to decline across DYFS. As of March, 60percent of our DYFS offices complied with caseload standards forintake; 68 percent complied with caseload standards for ouradoption practice; and 71 percent complied with caseloadstandards for permanency (ongoing) work. Sixty-five percent of our offices complied with supervisor to staff ratios (5 to 1),not counting the casework supervisors in each office. When thecasework supervisors are included, every office complied. Ourinternal tracking indicates that we will see significantimprovement in every category by July.Another indication of progress in reducing caseloads is thedecline in the number of DYFS staff serving more than 30families. As of this March, 0.7 percent of our staff served morethan 30 families, compared to 6 percent of DYFS staff a year ago.Ten percent of DYFS staff served 21 to 30 families in March ofthis year, compared to 20 percent last year. Forty-nine percentof DYFS staff served 11 to 20 families this March (last year itwas 41 percent) and 40 percent of DYFS staff served one to 10families this March, compared to 33 percent last March. The data indicates modest improvement in placing sibling groups togetherin foster care, and placing children within 10 miles of theirhomes when they are removed from their families. I'm eager to see bigger advances in these areas as we implement the case practice model.
The data also indicates a continued downward trend in the number of children who are abused or neglected in foster care, and asharp reduction in the number of legally free children awaitingadoption from January 2006 to March 2007. There is a lot of work ahead of us, but we're heading in theright direction.
Kevin M. Ryan
NJ Commissioner Department of Children and Families
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