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The following article was published following the
discovery that four-year-old Xctasy Garcia had been battered
by her mother's boyfriend in Schenectady New York.
timesunion.com
Child abuse deserves our best solution
By RICHARD WEXLER
First published: Monday, July 31, 2006
More than 18 years ago, when I was a reporter for the
Times Union, I covered a photo opportunity featuring
then-Gov. Mario Cuomo. He went to the state Child
Abuse Hotline, listened to a call and touted the
quick-fix-of-the-day for cracking down on child
abuse.
At that time, the name that shocked the conscience of
the state was Lisa Steinberg, the little girl murdered
by the man who had illegally adopted her.
"With Lisa's help," said the governor, "maybe the
next child can be saved."
It didn't work out that way. Instead, every few
years, another case horrifies us. The same "solutions"
are proposed. They fail. We repeat the cycle. The
name in the news now is Xctasy Garcia. And once again,
politicians are touting solutions that are simple,
obvious -- and wrong. As a result, the odds of another
child suffering as Xctasy did already have
increased.
Consider the "solutions" mentioned so far, many of
which are likely to turn up in the inevitable "Xctasy's
Law":
Phony Solution 1: Force every government employee to
pass on any second- or third-hand account alleging any
harm to a child, no matter how vague, to the state hot
line.
That will backfire. In Xctasy's case, a neighbor
offered a vivid description of horrendous abuse of a
terrified, screaming child. By the time the story went
from the neighbor to the hotel manager to the welfare
examiner who "failed" to call the hot line, the account
had become a vague allegation of noisy neighbors who
might be hurting a child.
The hot line might not have accepted it. And if it
did accept every such case, frontline caseworkers would
be so deluged investigating all the noisy neighbors who
don't abuse their children that they would have no time
to examine any case properly -- and they'd miss more
children in real danger.
Phony Solution 2: Quickly fund the new National
Database of Rumor and Innuendo. That's not what it's
called, of course, but that's what the new law combining
everything in 50 state central registers really is.
This is not like a database of criminal records. All
that it takes to wind up in a child abuse register is
one caseworker's guess that you might be a child abuser.
There is no chance to defend yourself beforehand. And
in half the states, including New York, the worker is
supposed to put you in the register even if there is
more evidence of innocence than guilt.
Some states have long, cumbersome appeals processes.
Other states allow no appeal at all. If any angry or
misinformed caller dials the hot line and the wrong
caseworker winds up at your door, you're in.
Period.
Some would argue that adults should pay that price to
help children. But again, it will backfire by
overloading workers with false allegations.
And some of the accused in central registers are
children themselves. The Illinois register once
included a 10-year-old girl as a possible sexual
predator -- because she had pulled up the pants of some
younger boys she had caught "playing doctor" in her
family's home day care. She was driven almost to
suicide before a class-action lawsuit created a real
appeals procedure in Illinois. Had she lived in another
state, she still would be branded for life. And the new
national database will brand such children
nationwide.
Phony Solution 3: Do a child abuse check whenever
someone applies for other government help. This at
least has the advantage of bringing the racial and class
biases that permeate child welfare into the open. The
only difference between poor people and the rest of us
is that their poverty itself often is confused with
neglect. Singling them out for checks in an unreliable
database only increases the chances their families will
be needlessly destroyed -- and workers will be
overwhelmed with false reports, missing real abusers,
like the well-to-do lawyer who killed Lisa
Steinberg.
But worse than any one phony solution is the
cumulative effect: a foster-care panic, as every
caseworker, terrified of having the next Xctasy Garcia
on her caseload, rushes to take away far more children
and throw them into foster care. One recent study by
Casey Family Programs and Harvard Medical School found
that foster-care "alumni" have twice the level of
post-traumatic stress disorder of Gulf War veterans.
One-third said they had been abused in foster care
itself and only 20 percent could be said to be doing
well.
And that's not even the worst of it. Over and over,
foster-care panics have been followed by increases in
deaths of children known-to-the-system, because
overwhelmed caseworkers overlooked even more children in
real danger.
Sometimes even the odds of harm in foster care are
worth it. When sadistic brutes injure a child,
authorities should take away the child and never look
back.
But we pay no tribute to the child by shoveling
thousands of other children whose cases are in no way
similar to that of the injured child into a system that
churns out walking wounded four times out of five.
There are better solutions:
New York law says certain professionals must report
maltreatment when they have "reasonable cause to
suspect" it. That's good guidance for everyone.
Create a meaningful appeals process and a reasonable
standard of proof before entering someone in a central
register. Then a national database would make
sense.
Provide concrete help to the families whose poverty
has been confused with "neglect," and other assistance
to families with real problems but who love their
children. Getting those cases out of the system is the
only way workers will have time to find the next Xctasy
Garcia before it's too late.
Richard Wexler is executive director of the National
Coalition for Child Protection Reform in Alexandria,
Va.
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