California s Linkages: A service partnership between Child Welfare and CalWORKs

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California s Linkages: A service partnership between Child Welfare and CalWORKs Alma Vega Human Services Administrator I Danna Fabella Project Director Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services Child and Family Policy Institute of California Leslie Ann Hay Hay Consulting Consultant to Los Angeles County Linkages Program and Project Associate to CFPIC

LINKAGES is a service coordination partnership between Child Welfare Services and CalWORKs to address the common barriers that limit parents ability to work and keep their children safely at home. 2

CalWORKs can provide services to help prevent families from entering or re-entering the child welfare system. Approaching families as a team provides stronger intervention to help families with complex needs. Tighter service coordination helps maximize services for families while preventing duplication of services &/or payments. Joint outreach to sanctioned families involved with child welfare helps address barriers to safety and selfsufficiency. 3

CalWORKs families working to reunify can receive non-cash services to promote returning home safely and quickly. Family Maintenance mutual clients can access additional supports (e.g., cash assistance, employment services, MH, DV, SA, Medi-Cal or diversion services). CalWORKs can provide post-reunification services, including child care & other safety plan services to reduce likelihood of recurrence. Transition-age youth who are parents can routinely be assessed for and linked to CalWORKs supportive services to encourage self-sufficiency. 4

33 of 58 California counties have put Linkages into practice Share experience from California s largest county to see how Linkages works. Los Angeles County 5

Child Welfare Services can serve as an antipoverty program by helping families gain access to an economic safety net while building employment skills. Temporary Assistance to Needy Families can serve as a child abuse prevention program by providing families the resources they need to promote safety and well-being for their children. 6

Poverty is a risk factor for child abuse & neglect Families with annual incomes below $15,000, compared to families with annual incomes above $30,000, are over 22 times more likely to experience some form of maltreatment. [U.S. Dept of Health & Human Services, 2003] 7

Overlap of clients in Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) and Child Welfare Services (CWS): Statewide, 60% children in CWS have a history of AFDC or TANF aid Varies by county: from 44% - 87% CWS use predicted by: AFDC/TANF use, rates of unemployment, and family poverty rates [California Dept of Social Services, 2002] 8

Planning Phase Pilot Phase Phase 2 Phase 3 I m p l e m e n t a t i o n Engaged key stakeholders at all stages of effort Created shared vision for serving families in a more integrated manner prior to planning 3 phases of implementation Steady expansion to include majority of CA s 58 counties, representing over ¾ of state s population 9

Community Based Family Services Information, Referral & Screening Linkages Focus: Risk Assessment & Prevention Child Welfare Families Mutual Families CalWORKs Families Ongoing Coordinated Services* *Assessment, Case Planning, Case Management, Direct/ Contracted Services 10

Coordinate Case Planning on mutual families being served by child welfare and CalWORKs. Share resources. Create agency environments that integrate resources to better serve vulnerable families. Support mutual program goals. 11

Target populations & key strategies 2008 Survey of Linkages Counties in California (29 of 33 counties reporting) Number of Counties

Client level impacts o State-wide outcomes for CWS and CalWORKs o Organizational change o Process evaluation Integration and coordination across partner systems o Linkages Integration Assessment Tool o Interviews Across Systems o Focus Groups Case studies county level analysis o Staff interviews o Service delivery observations o Client focus groups 13

Most common outcomes 2008 Survey of Linkages Counties in California (29 of 33 counties reporting) Reduce recidivism (mostly CWS) Reduce child removals from home Increase rate of reunification Reduce time to reunification Employment retention Increase curing of W2W sanctions 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Number of Counties

A Solid Planning Foundation Administrative: Sustainability Practice Protocols: Policy Foundation: How Why & What Leadership

MISSION Working together to strengthen families, ensure child safety, promote well-being and sustain self-sufficiency. 16

SQUARE MILES 4,084 CHILD POPULATION (2004) UNDER 5 Y.O. 3,000,000 27% 5 TO 9 27% 10 TO 14 30% 15 TO 17 16% 17

DPSS/DCFS JULY 2009 DATA NUMBER OF OFFICES Department of Public Social Services (DPSS) Districts/Regions 31 CalWORKs/ General Relief (GR) 11 Welfare-to-Work/GAIN Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) REGIONAL 17 MONTHLY CASELOAD 158,627* REFERRALS CASES 11,843 37,793** * CalWORKS Cases * * Includes Emergency Response (Open Services Cases), Family Maintenance, Family Reunification, Permanent Placement & Adoption Services Cases. 18

LA s Approach to Linkages Convened Service Integration Committee Convened Linkages Planning Committee & developed pilot test (3 DCFS and corresponding DPSS Offices) Convened Linkages Leadership Team Countywide implementation of Linkages through progressive rollout. o Cohort 1 completed November 2007 o Cohort 2 completed May 2008 o Cohort 3 completed March 2009 o Cohort 4 completed June 2009 o Cohort 5 scheduled for completion Fall 2009 Established Linkages Coordinators in each DCFS/DPSS Office. 19

Linkages Leadership Service Integration Committee (DCFS/DPSS Deputy Directors & Chief Executive Office Rep) Linkages Leadership Team (DCFS/DPSS Central Support Staff) DCFS Linkages Liaison per Child Welfare Office (17 Regional DCFS Offices) DPSS Linkages Liaison per Cash Assistance Office (31 District CalWORKs/GR Offices) DPSS Linkages Liaison per Welfare-to-Work Office (11 Regional Offices) 20

Linkages focus: DCFS Families DPSS Non-CalWORKs Families (Medi Cal/Food Stamps) CalWORKs & DCFS Families CalWORKs Families Information, Referral & Screening Risk Assessment & Prevention Ongoing Coordinated/ Integrated Services* *Assessment, Case Planning, Case Management, Direct/ Contracted Services LA County joined Linkages in 2005 as a Phase 2 County Piloted Linkages in 2006 Implemented Linkages countywide effective November 2007 through a progressive rollout to be complete fall 2009 LA Linkages = Four Protocols

FOUR LINKAGES PROTOCOLS Service Coordination for Families receiving Family Preservation Services & CalWORKs Service Coordination for families receiving Family Reunification Services & CalWORKs Linkages GAIN (Welfare-to-Work) Services Worker Co-Located at DCFS Attends Team Decision Making (TDM) Meetings For Target Population Only Provides Ongoing Case Consultation 22

ACCOMPLISHMENTS Nearly complete with roll-out across Los Angeles County: o Created infrastructure to transform how services are provided for mutual clients. o Trained > 2,800 DCFS personnel and > 800 DPSS personnel in the practices, supervision and automation necessary to coordinate services for Linkages clients. Stronger DCFS/DPSS Central Support = Stronger Linkages Leadership Team Launch of Linkages Website (accessible to both depts) Created automated solutions to facilitate & track service coordination between departments. 23

CHALLENGES Improve ongoing service coordination (communication) between DCFS workers and DPSS workers outside of TDMs (e.g., Family Preservation/Reunification). Practice consistency across vast bureaucracy. Separate data systems for child welfare and CalWORKs pose barriers to service coordination regarding: o Identification of mutual clients o Sharing information easily for common clients o Producing integrated management reports 24

IN PROGRESS Conducting comprehensive evaluation of child and family outcomes for longest running Linkages locations. Adding strategies to coordinate services for homeless and sanctioned mutual cases. Developing automated tracking of service coordination protocol for mutual Family Preservation/CalWORKs cases. Increasing formal collaboration between central support and Regional and District level management to encourage practice consistency. 25

LINKAGES: HELPING FAMILIES IN LA COUNTY Real results for families Working together to strengthen families, ensure child safety, promote wellbeing and sustain self-sufficiency. 26

ANY QUESTIONS? WHY LINKAGES? IT JUST MAKES SENSE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

On line resources www.cfpic.org Linkages staff Danna.Fabella@cfpic.org LeslieAnn@HayConsulting.org 28