Episode 49: A Guide to Implementing Family First
Length: 38:33
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Transcript: cwig_podcast_transcript_episode_49.pdf [PDF, 167 KB]
"It’s really easy to get bogged down in the details and get bogged down in the legislative text. So, what we tried to achieve here was a lay person’s translation of what all this means for child welfare agencies and anyone else who’s working to implement the law.”
- Rebecca Robuck, policy director, ChildFocus
The Family First Prevention Services Act (Family First) has raised many questions among State, local, and Tribal child welfare agencies regarding implementation. Family First, signed into law in February of 2018, is built around three principles:
- Help families whose children are at risk of removal stay together safely
- Ensure that children in foster care can live with a family
- Improve access to high quality residential treatment
To help agencies implement Family First, The Children’s Defense Fund released Implementing the Family First Prevention Services Act, a guide developed by a coalition of organizations “intended to offer the clearest possible information about the provisions of the law and the congressional intent behind it, based on a careful review of statutory language, agency guidance, and additional analysis by multiple organizations and partners who were intimately involved in the support and passage of the legislation.”
The guide was funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Redlich Horwitz Foundation, and ZOMA Foundation.
This episode features a conversation with representatives from three of the seven organizations who collaborated on the guide. Topics discussed include the following:
- How State and Tribal child welfare agencies should use the guide
- The guide’s connection and alignment to the Title IV-E Prevention Services Clearinghouse and the California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse
- Some common misperceptions about the implementation of Family First
- How guidance was identified and decided upon by the supporting organizations
- How the guide will remain relevant as new information is revealed and learned
The following individuals are featured in this episode:
- Stephanie Sprow, director of child welfare policy, Children’s Defense Fund
- Rebecca Robuck, policy director, ChildFocus
- Zach Laris, director, Federal advocacy and child welfare policy, American Academy of Pediatrics