"Everybody has an empty bed or empty cottage but they can't fill it," Michelle Sanborn, president of Children's Alliance, told Yetter. The group represents private agencies, many nonprofit or faith-based, that provide care for children with emotional or psychiatric needs. "Now with this workforce crisis, and increased need for therapeutic services, it's really hitting a crisis point," Sanborn said.
Cheryl and Jacob White (Cheryl White via CJ) |
Jacob's mother, Cheryl White, is fighting the move in court, saying that if the state can't find a place for him in Kentucky, it should let him come home. "If they succeed in taking him to Florida, I don't know how to get him back," White, a single mother who relinquished custody of Jacob to the state in 2018, told Yetter. "They're going to make it so I can't even visit my son."
White, who works at a Frankfort store, told Yetter that she visits Jacob weekly but can't afford flights and a Florida hotel, "and doesn't trust her 15-year-old Toyota with 275,000 miles to make the trip," Yetter reports. "The matter is scheduled to go before a Family Court judge in December." A court-appointed special advocate for the child has recommended against sending him to Florida.
But in Kentucky, Sanborn told a legislative committee last month, Yetter reports, "administrative demands, stress and better-paying jobs elsewhere have caused workers to leave in droves, with employee turnover at a record 81 percent. . . . She said some private facilities the state depends on are at the brink of closing."
from KENTUCKY HEALTH NEWS https://ift.tt/RQNPs3V State has fewer spots at facilities that care for children with emotional or psychiatric needs, threatening family breakupsHealthy Care
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