|
|
May is Foster Care MonthOver 513,000 American children are in foster care because their own families are in crisis and unable to provide for their essential wellbeing. Like all young people, youth in foster care deserve and benefit from enduring, positive relationships with caring adults. Now is the time to get involved. Join America’s leading child welfare agencies, advocates, experts and foster care alumni as they come together to address the needs of these children. This May, National Foster Care Month will serve as a platform for connecting more of these vulnerable children to concerned, nurturing adults who, no matter how much time they have to give, can do something that will change a lifetime for a young person in foster care. Across the nation, caring individuals are helping foster children build brighter futures by serving as their foster parents, relative caregivers, mentors, advocates, social workers and volunteers. But much more help is needed. If nothing changes by the year 2020: Nearly 14 million confirmed cases of child abuse and neglect will be reported “Many children in foster care require secure, stable places to call home until they can either safely reunite with their parents or establish other lifelong family relationships. For older youth, it is especially important that we equip them with what they need to thrive on their way to adulthood,” said Virginia Pryor of Casey Family Programs and chair of National Foster Care Month. Each year, more than 20,000 young Americans “age-out” of foster care, most without the appropriate resources, skills or options they will need to live on their own. Without lasting connections to supportive adults, foster children are far more likely than their peers in the general population to endure homelessness, poverty, compromised health, unemployment, incarceration and other adversities after they leave the foster care system. The National Foster Care Month campaign is presented by 14 of the nation’s largest child welfare organizations and is led by Casey Family Programs. “We hope to inspire and engage many more individuals to take action in support of these children and their families. There are so many ways a person can positively affect the life of a child in foster care,” added Ms. Pryor. For more information about National Foster Care Month, planned community events and activities, and the many ways in which you can make a lasting difference for America’s children in foster care, please visit, www.fostercaremonth.org. Related Tags: foster care month, foster care, adopting Related Posts: 2 CommentsLeave a comment |
Posts of Interest
Adopt-A-Whatever Adoption Poems Adoption Quotes Breastfeeding Celebrate Finalization Choosing An Agency Creating A Lifebook Domestic Adoption International Adoption Journalist Guide Older Child Adoption Talking To Your Child The Homestudy Process Transracial Adoption Tagsadoptees adoption adoption agencies adoption agency adoption and breastfeeding adoption attorneys adoption books adoption celebrations adoption education adoption events Adoption Forums adoption homestudy Adoption Interviews adoption legislature adoption lifebook adoption lifebooks adoption news adoption options adoption poems adoption poetry adoption profiles Adoption Programs adoption quotes adoption scams advocate for adoption celebrity adoption choosing adoption contests domestic adoption domestic infant adoption embryo adoption financing an adoption foster care Gay Adoption International Adoption Older Child Adoption open or closed adoption Our Adoption Story Parenting Parenting an Adoptee reactive attachment disorder site news Special Needs Adoption Transracial AdoptionNatural Child: Any child who is not artificial. Real Parent: Any parent who is not imaginary. Your Own Child: Any child who is not someone else's child. Adopted Child: A natural child, with a real parent, who is all my own. -Rita Laws PhD
![]() |
Blogging Chicks Blogroll






























Joanne,
I’ve got a few questions for you, regarding your journey to adopting your children, and wondered if I could e-mail you.
Hi Kathy,
If your questions are basically general in nature, asking them as a comment here would better benefit anybody else who has the same questions.
If their more personal in nature, send me an e-mail. I’d be happy to help in any way that I can.