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Ron Newcome
The Anchorage Daily News (www.adn.com)
Children's agency is grim, says an insider
NEWCOME: Retired state worker calls on
flawed office to be dismantled.
By LISA DEMER
Anchorage Daily News
(Published: September 20, 2005)
Ron Newcome lasted 26 years in a tough and thankless
state job: protecting kids from abuse and neglect.
Ron Newcome
He started with the Division of Family and Youth Services
(now the Office of Children's Services) in 1975 in Kodiak,
moved to Anchorage, and quit a couple of times, once to
commercial fish and another time to run a glass business.
In 1989, he started anew with the agency in Seward, where he
stayed until he retired in March. He spent his entire
career as a front line child protection worker and also
licensed foster homes, child care centers and adult care
facilities.
His experiences provide a rare glimpse into an agency
that often is hidden from the public. Some of his views are
extreme. He unleashed harsh criticism about the management
of OCS and DFYS. He says the whole operation should be
dismantled and started fresh. He talked openly about
drinking.
Newcome, 55, is married with two grown stepdaughters. He
and his wife are renovating a house in Seward, where they
also run a cleaning business.
Newcome sat down recently with Daily News reporter Lisa
Demer. The interview was edited for length and clarity.
Q. Why Seward?
A. While I was working in Anchorage, I got sober. And
when I came back to that job sober, I realized I couldn't do
it. ... So that's when I left the agency in Anchorage and
was gone for two years. And then when I went back to the
job with two years of sobriety in Seward I realized there
was some fresh excitement to the job.
For me, Seward was a very manageable assignment. It was
a small town. ... So I found the job satisfying because it
was rarely any situation that one or two phone calls
couldn't give me all the information I needed. It was not
like Anchorage where something happened and you had no idea
what that was or who these people were. ... many of the
cases in Seward were multi-generation cases.
Q. Let's go back a minute to what you were saying about
your background. ... When you were drinking, were you
drinking on the job?
A. Oh yes. Everyone was.
Q. Everyone was?
A. Drinking and/or drugging
Q. When was that?
A. ... I was visiting Juneau (in 1975). I just saw
(the sign for) Department of Health and Social Services.
And I wondered what the job situation was up here, and I
walked into an office where I was immediately led into the
director's office. My interview consisted of a question of
was I afraid of flying in small planes. I was hired for
Kodiak. ...
Q. What was your background to do this work?
A. I had two years in a community mental health center
doing a broad range of mental health services. And two
years at a residential treatment center for disturbed kids.
I had absolutely no background in child welfare, child
protection.
Q. Why was it when you went back sober you felt like you
couldn't do the work?
A. ... The inescapable frustrations of the bureaucracy
and the flaws of the agency together with the stresses built
into the job potentiate in Anchorage in lethal ways.
Q. So you are not saying the families were harder to
deal with ... You are saying it was the agency that
was.
A. In 26 years of doing this job all over Southcentral
Alaska I have never felt unmanageable stress from the
clients I deal with. That's the business. The unmanageable
stress comes from the agency.
Q. The perception at least is that there is great stress
on OCS workers. ... If they make the wrong decision, it
has such serious consequences.
A. Well that's because the individual workers have all
of the responsibility and none of the authority.
My wife and I run a commercial janitorial service in
Seward and when we go away on a vacation or when we're
otherwise unavailable we give service employees who have
been with us for two to three months more petty cash
authorization and more on-the-spot decision-making authority
than any master's level social worker in the OCS system.
Q. What was the most frustrating thing to you?
A. ...The job of a child protection social worker became
documenting activities that were reimbursable for federal
funds. ... If I were commissar of everything, I would shut
the entire agency down. I would take the money and use it
immediately for increased law enforcement presence. ... I
would let law enforcement deal with (child abuse) as either
being a crime or not. And I would encourage people to have
lots of community dialog about what each community needed to
do about the remainder of the problem. Because we cannot
fix the existing system. It's too bureaucratically
entrenched.
Q. We've all heard the criticisms, from opposite ends of
the spectrum, that OCS rips children away from parents when
they could be safe at home or that it leaves children in
homes where it is dangerous. ... Do you think either of
those touch against the truth?
A. I think both do. I think that making that
determination of whether to allow a child to remain in a
home is a complicated final choice based on the processing
of a lot of information. And more often than not, children
have to be removed because the individual worker doesn't
have the resources at his or her disposal to preserve the
child in the family. There are of course situations in
which any panel of reasonable women and men would instantly
determine the child needs to be removed. Those aren't the
problem cases. ... This job is not something that requires
much more than common sense and good decision-making skills.
...
Q. Describe some of the main reasons you would see kids
coming into custody.
A. There are of course a percentage of cases of
extremely damaged people who have had children and are
clueless as to any other way of dealing with those children
than the way they themselves were dealt with and that's
usually a neglectful and abusive path.
Q. What's actually happening in that home?
A. I think there's still a large number of people out
there who feel that spare the rod, spoil the child needs to
come back as a popular approach to child rearing. I think
there's a large number of people out there who exert a kind
of authority and control in their home that is completely
unrealistic given the realities of early 21st century
society. I think that we live in a culture of societally
approved substance abuse. ... So a lot of kids are being
raised by parents who are pretty zoned out.
Q. You mentioned that there is a high acceptance of
spanking. Certainly that's not against the law. At what
point is spanking something the state even needs to be
looking at. ... Is anything that leaves a mark a reason
for the state to intervene?
A. In and of itself, it provides certainly a basis for
an investigation. Whether or not it is a parent who just
had enough and used for probably the first or second time
physical discipline and used more than was necessary is of
course different than the kid who can rattle off the number
of swats for each violation that he commits. Didn't pick up
room, five. Didn't do homework, 10.
... But you know, physical abuse is a very small
percentage of the cases. They are the high profile cases.
They are the dramatic cases. They are what everybody loves
to talk about. But they are not what floods the offices of
children's services. Much more typical is the chronic
neglect situation. ... Substance abuse is almost always a
factor. ... Life is exceptionally hard for single parents.
We give a lot of lip service to the value in society we
place on families. But we really do very little to support
families. One of the most glaring examples is child care,
particularly for the single working parent. There's a real
tendency for social workers to get to be middle class
busybodies and to get involved with sort of ideal
circumstances. ... I think the most difficult line to draw
is the neglect line, not the physical abuse line. I think
most people know physical abuse when they see it.
Q. With neglect, where do you see the line ... ?
A. ... My line was could the state offer them anything
better. ...
Q. Would that mean did you know of a good foster family,
do you have one lined up with room?
A. Sure. Or are there resources. You'd have single
parents with multiple kids who are trying to go to school or
trying to get some career advancement and they'd get these
eager beaver social workers who'd give them these case plans
that have them going to parenting classes when they don't
have transportation, that have them paying for mental health
or diagnostic service when they don't have health insurance.
I mean you are putting additional pressures on a family.
...
Q. Why don't you summarize this case that has been kind
of weighing on you?
A. This one's a classic. It was a single male Caucasian
parent. The ... physical abuser was a substance-addicted
(alcohol) Native female ... who was the natural mother.
... Ultimately the drugs just got to dad and dad couldn't
handle it. ... He committed like his second or third
felony and he had to abandon the child. (He described a
situation in which a child's mother was physically abusive
and his father a drug addict who was on the lam and then
incarcerated. The child ended up in foster care out of
state with a former Alaska couple.)
They just stepped up to the plate. They took this young
man in the home. ... This kid that I used to describe as a
4-year-old who could roll a joint with one hand on a
screaming motorcycle suddenly is going to tennis camp, band
camp, a time share condo across from Carnegie Hall for
classical concerts. ...
Q. This turned out to be a success story?
A. Well, yeah on that level. ... When the issue comes
up to reconnect this Native child with his huge Native
family -- I mean he has hundreds of relatives -- the courts
ordered that visit. Every 6-month case plan recommended
that visit, and somehow Southcentral regional management
managed to always find other economic priorities. ...
Q. How many years did it take to finally get this child
to Alaska (to visit his biological family)?
A. Four
Q. How many of the cases involved sexual abuse?
A. ... When we are talking about sexual abuse we are
really talking about a range of human behavior. ... We
need to distinguish between the chronic habitual pedophile
and the seductive 17 ½-year-old and a stepparent. ...
There's a very, very unpopular approach to sexual abuse that
works, with children remaining in the families. Anybody who
would even mention that in most treatment circles would be
crucified.
Q. Do you think that makes sense?
A. I think in some families it does ... You have
complicated multi-dynamic family systems that are
malfunctioning that result in inappropriate sexual behavior
between members of that family that's going to require
highly skilled, long-term, difficult, comprehensive
fixing.
... What happens (now) is that we create all of this
chaos. I used to call it hitting the pulse button on the
food processor. We wreak absolute havoc in people's lives
and then we offer them nothing. ...
Q. Why speak out now?
A. You get to the end of this much time and you try to
make some sense of it. ...
Daily News reporter Lisa Demer can be reached at ldemer@adn.com and 257-4390.
Source:
website of the Anchorage Daily News
Note: Social workers, and
former social workers, are a valuable source of
information about child protection, when they speak
candidly, as in this interview. The Anchorage Daily
News article on the internet linked to another article
in the same paper interviewing Tammy Sandoval, recently
appointed to lead Alaska's child protection system. It
included the exchange:
Q. We hear so often two things: that the state rips
away children who could be safely left at home and also
that it leaves children in homes where there really is a
danger. Which one of those do you feel like is the
greater problem?
A. To answer that question would assume that I think
that there is a problem.
There is nothing useful to be learned in this kind of
interview.
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