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Children, Families, and Government: Preparing for the
Twenty-First Century |
..Exploring Child Welfare: A Practice Perspective (2nd Edition) (2000), Cynthia Crosson-Tower |
An Introduction to Child Maltreatment in the
United States: History, Public Policy and Research (3rd Edition) |
|
Frontlines Failure to Protect: The
Caseworker Files looks at the child welfare system, a subject that sporadically makes
headlines with a tragic event, usually the death of a child at the hands of abusive
parents. Failure
to Protect is a less sensational journey into the system in Maine, a look into the
burdens and responsibilities of caseworkers in the Department of Human Services (DHS) in
Bangor and the trials of the families and children they encounter.
The breaking up of families, substance abuse, mental illness, sexual
abuse and plain old poverty are just a few of the issues DHS caseworkers are faced with
when making decisions that could seal a child and a familys fate. How do they judge whether a child has been abused
or neglected? When should children be removed
from their families and when should the parents be given another chance? And how is a suitable adoption placement assured
for a child with a difficult history? Rather
than discussing these issues through the eyes of policy makers and academics, Failure to Protect takes the viewer to the
nitty-grittythe work and lives of DHS case workers and the dilemmas that are a part
of their job descriptions. At the end of day,
it is often up to the overworked caseworker to make the difficult decisions and take the
blame when things go wrong.
The documentary traces DHSs involvement in three cases of child
abuse and neglect. One is ten-year-old
Mathew, who was removed from his home when DHS received reports that his father was
physically abusing him. Ironically, Mathew is
shown crying inconsolably in the hospital and begging to go back to his father. David Greeley, Mathews caseworker at DHS,
comments rather matter-of-factly, But you cant leave a kid in a traumatic
situation with his family thats been going on for years just because taking him into
custody would be traumatic for him. Another
case involves Mark, a two-year-old boy who lives in a run down farmhouse with a number of
adults, one of whom pled guilty to assaulting a teenage girl. The DHS caseworker, Shaleigh Anthony, is on her
first case and appears particularly concerned about the deplorable condition
of their house. And finally there is Shirley,
a single mother with four children. Shirleys
fourteen-year-old daughter was taken into DHS custody when she accused Shirleys
boyfriend, Dan, of molesting her. Now DHS was
threatening to take Shirleys three sons away too unless she would acknowledge that
Dan had in fact molested her daughter.
These stories are made particularly compelling by the shades of gray
involved. The viewer can sense the
frustration of the caseworkers who bear the brunt of angry parents, ever growing
caseloadsabout 200,000 children in the United States are removed from their homes
each yearand the lingering uncertainty of whether they have done the
right thing. But Failure to Protect also offers the perspectives of
the families and their trials once DHS enters their lives.
The parents in the documentary are not portrayed as inherently evil,
but as ordinary people who lead difficult lives. When
Shaleigh complains about the dangerous living conditions, Marks grandmother gets
exasperated: I mean, Ive
explained time and again: we dont have the money. Such exchanges reveal the moral ambiguities in
child abuse and neglect cases. The term
neglect is itself ambiguous and can cover a range of situations. Can living below the poverty line, for example, be
associated with neglect?
Failure to Protect also looks
into the problems of the child welfare system itself.
There are hints of the somewhat inadequate training that caseworkers receive
and high turn-over rates that result in a severe shortage of experienced caseworkers. For the most part, the narrator seldom interrupts
the DHS staff with questions and the documentary consists of a series of snippets from
their conversations and activities. This
appears to be a deliberate strategy designed to give the viewer a flavor of the general
chaos of the operations of DHS. The only
missing piece in Failure to Protect is any
mention of the woefully inadequate funding available to child welfare agencies, given the
importance of their mission. While this could
be implied from other issues discussed in the documentary, it is a strange oversight.
The work of most child welfare systems in the country is shrouded in a
veil of secrecy, a custom that the state of Maine broke in 2001 when it gave
Frontlines cameras unrestricted access to its Bangor DHS office. Yet, rather than damaging the reputation of the
child welfare system, a documentary like Failure
to Protect is likely to make the public sympathetic to the moral dilemmas and
difficult judgments that child welfare agencies and caseworkers confront every day. Failure to
Protect examines the complexities and tensions involved in child welfare cases and the
difficulties in resolving them.
- Nigam Nuggehalli