Background

On August 10-11, 2020, the Ensuring Justice in Child Welfare virtual summit convened teams inclusive of leadership from the courts as well as from the child welfare agency to attend a series of online presentations focused on strategies to support racial justice in the child welfare system. Almost 500 team members attended, representing every state, three territories, and five tribes, in addition to several hundred observers.

The purpose of the Ensuring Justice in Child Welfare virtual summit was to energize teams comprised of court and child welfare system leaders and stakeholders around collaborative efforts to intentionally focus on racial justice by harnessing the power of judicial leadership and embracing strategies that strengthen families, prevent unnecessary removal of children, and provide equitable access to justice for all families.

Learn more about the Child Welfare Summit

Washington State Team

Washington State assembled a team of ten court and child welfare system leaders and stakeholders to create strategies to meet the goals of the summit. Our State Team has been meeting twice monthly since the spring of 2021 and has identified the three strategies below as priorities to enact first. At this time, there is one workgroup working on strategy #3 Meaningful Shelter Care Hearings.

Strategy 1

  • Improve practice at shelter care hearings by emphasizing safety planning and utilize court as next step with in-home dependencies.
  • Require specific findings regarding reasonable efforts – not just a checked box.
  • In order to make accurate reasonable efforts findings, AOC work with DCYF on providing information regarding available resources in each community to courts and court partners.

Strategy 2

  • Remove barriers to placement with family criminal history, prior founded allegations.

Strategy 3

  • Provide meaningful parent representation PRIOR to shelter care hearing by enforcing RCW 13.34.090 regarding the provision of counsel and discovery prior to shelter care.
  • Research how/when counsel is being appointed and how discovery is occurring in each county.
  • Develop best practices and possibly court rule to implement practice standards statewide. AOC/CITA to include these expectations in annual judicial training and other training venues.

For more information about the Safety Summit Project, please contact Sarah Burns, Senior Court Program Analyst at sarah.burns@courts.wa.gov