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CYFD Forging Ahead With Native American Court, Kinship Care

CYFD: Smiling man with red beard talks to other men in hallway

Gabriela Campos/The Santa Fe New Mexican

Brian Blalock, new secretary of the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department, speaks to people in the Rotunda after his Behavioral Health Day presentation in February 2019 at the Capitol. | Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican file photo

It’s nearing the close of normal business hours on a Wednesday afternoon at the Albuquerque, N.M., offices of the Children, Youth and Families Department as Brian Blalock munches on a vegan cookie he’s brought from a local ayurvedic restaurant. The CYFD cabinet secretary looks spry in a navy blue suit, even though he’s been at it since 2 a.m.

“This is a perfect job. I love it,” said Blalock, 43, a vegan who sports a bald head and a red beard. “We have a governor who genuinely cares about [child and family welfare] and prioritizes it and only wants us to go faster.”

As the leader of the state’s child and family protective services since January 2019, an upbeat Blalock sees the extreme working hours as a necessity to reverse New Mexico’s alarming child well-being results of the past decade.

CYFD has been under fire in the public eye and in the legal system. But the state agency is making wholesale changes to the way it approaches child welfare, both through internal improvements in morale and holistic, inclusive external policies. 

A concentrated effort to align with New Mexico’s Native American tribes and pueblos led to the creation of one of the country’s few Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) courts. There has also been a push, both in New Mexico and nationwide, to place youth with relatives instead of with someone they may not know well. 

Over the past few years, the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s annual Kids Count has placed New Mexico near or at the bottom of the country for child well-being. The recently released 2019 New Mexico Kids Count Data Book shows the state has improved the rate of child poverty, teen births, child health insurance and preschool attendance, but regressed in fourth grade reading and eighth grade math proficiencies. 

The state also tops the nation for youth suicide ages 15 to 19, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data and ranks number one in the country for alcohol-related death and disease, according to a New Mexico Department of Health report.

On Martin Luther King Day of this year, three Republican lawmakers — Reps. Rebecca Dow, Kelly Fajardo and David Gallegos — asked the New Mexico Attorney General to examine whether CYFD has been abusing the Open Meetings Act by holding closed sessions for a foster care task force. 

The Attorney General ruled that task forces, like fact-finding committees and advisory boards, are not subject to Open Meetings Act because they do not make binding decisions.

A history of poor performance, along with a governor whose top priority is making New Mexico a safer place for children, has led to an unusual experiment in state governance.

Instead of appointing public servants with career trajectories that may suggest that they’ll soon be moving up another rung of the political ladder, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat who recently completed her first year in office, employed problem solvers with substantive expertise in related fields.

“If we need back-up politically or help figuring out something, [Lujan Grisham] is there for us and has our back,” said Blalock, who didn’t have any previous job experience in government or ties to New Mexico. Before leading CYFD, which administers child protection and juvenile justice services, he worked as an attorney for Bay Area Legal Aid, a nonprofit that represents children with disabilities as well as youth in the juvenile justice system.

The unusual strategy models an out-of-the-box movement that’s starting to surface across the country, one that foster care expert Amelia Franck Meyer, who has more than 30 years of experience in child welfare, says could profoundly shift foster care within the next five years.

‘Perfect Child Welfare System Already Exists’

National and statewide leaders and practitioners described the country’s foster care and child welfare systems — which critics say is poisoned with irrevocable racial and class biases — as beyond repair at this year’s New Mexico Children’s Law Institute (CLI) conference earlier this month in Albuquerque.

“It’s important to understand that our foster care system only appears to be broken,” said Lexie Gruber, a vocal proponent of foster care reform who spent seven years as a youth in care in Connecticut. “In fact, it is currently working exactly as it was designed — separating children from their loved ones and underinvesting in helping families in crisis … it’s one of the most violent acts that the government can do.”

A number of child welfare advocates are proposing a new foster care method that avoids family separation at all costs and prioritizes kinship guardianship, or relative placement, where the child lives with a grandparent, aunt, uncle, brother, sister or even a trusted neighbor or teacher instead of with a stranger. Several studies, including a 2007 Pew Charitable Trust report and a 2018 report in Research on Social Work, show that out-of-home placement with strangers yields little to no measurable benefit for the child and actually inflicts needless trauma. 

Alabama, which flipped from ubiquitous child welfare dysfunction in the 1990s to a nationwide model for child protective services agencies, is seen today as an example to follow.  

“The perfect child welfare system already exists. It’s called the family,” said Meyer, CEO of Alia, during the CLI conference. Her St. Paul, Minn.-based nonprofit has instigated profound child welfare reform throughout the country, she said, with positive turnarounds for children and families in Cass County, Mo.; Washington County, Md.; two Wisconsin counties, and 10 counties in eastern Iowa.

In Washington County, the number of youth in care and children in residential care facilities dropped by 12% and 37%, respectively, from fiscal year 2018 to 2019, she said. 

“They did it with no new funding, no new rules, no new guidelines, no new laws, no new service providers. They did it by changing their mindset,” Meyer said. Holistic approaches to foster care, if correctly implemented, can thoroughly and swiftly change the face of child welfare, she said. 

[Related: Carlsbad Center Partnering With Eddy County CASA to Serve More Young People]

[Related: Las Cruces Expanding ‘One-stop Shop’ of Services at Community School to Another]

[Related: McKinley County Could Benefit From New Court For Tribes]

[Related: Native American Court to Run Under Bigger Concept of Family]

Relative placement is one of CYFD’s top priorities, given that only 23% of the state’s foster youth are officially living with a relative, Blalock said. According to Cynthia Chavers, acting field deputy director, metro region at CYFD’s protective services division, the agency is investing in software to find kin “as early as possible and as the initial placement whenever possible.

CYFD eased its stringent licensing requirements for relative, fictive kin (not related by blood) and nonrelative foster and adoptive care providers on Jan. 31. This was an issue that had hampered statewide kinship care efforts, said state Democratic Rep. Gail Chasey.

Some had brushed aside the proposal, which also allows reunification with a child’s biological parents if the family’s challenges have been rectified. T he American Bar Association will use New Mexico’s example as a best practice for other states, Blalock said. A handful of child welfare systems throughout the country don’t require a kinship care license for relatives.

Chasey, an attorney who has been a state representative since 1997, says a bold maneuver might be the panacea that’s required to ease the rip current for the state’s at-risk kids and families.

“I think we need to take a more radical approach,” she said, “but radical might be hard given the years and years of a certain culture.”

Internal Culture Changes

Before external reforms could take hold, Blalock realized that he needed to reprogram thought patterns within and outside of CYFD.                                

“There’s developed this culture when talking about children in New Mexico that’s focused on all of the things that are going wrong and all of the problems,” he said. “For somebody that’s coming in from the outside, it has created a bit of an echo chamber that I feel is incredibly misleading.” He has been able to fill many case worker openings.

Long-standing child welfare policies (or lack thereof) have roadblocked the state, he said. New Mexico was late to extend eligibility for foster care services from age 18 to 21 — the bill was partially drafted and advanced by former youth in care during the 2019 legislative session — that has helped youth in other states shun prison and homelessness. New Mexico’s 27% rise in its homeless population from 2018 to 2019 was the highest in the nation, according to a new report from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 

Additionally, until last year a state law made it legal to prosecute youth under 18 for prostitution “instead of treating them as survivors of sex trafficking,” Blalock said. CYFD’s new focus on such survivors includes the rollout of a tool that screens children for human and sex trafficking risks.

The agency was recently awarded up to $1 million from the Bernalillo County Board of Commissioners to open the state’s only Shelter and Family Empowerment (S.A.F.E.) House for sex trafficked teens. CYFD is also working on procuring government funds to establish another S.A.F.E. House near Ruidoso. “Currently, we have zero beds in the state dedicated to victims of child sex trafficking,” Blalock said.

CYFD, in an effort to align with the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) — a congressional law that aims to keep Native American children with Native families — created an all-woman, all-Native American ICWA unit within the child protective services division. Additionally, the state’s first — and only the nation’s sixth — ICWA court officially opened on Jan. 1. According to Special Master Catherine Begaye, the presiding officer of the ICWA court who spoke at the conference, the Second Judicial District (Bernalillo County) court will adjudicate foster care, pre-adoptive and adoption placement cases for indigenous children.

CYFD’s infant mental health program, in 2018, served approximately 200 babies, none of whom were re-referred to child protective services. The plan is to double the program’s capacity and expand to eight Northern Indian pueblos, five Sandoval Indian pueblos and the Navajo Nation, as well as Bernalillo, Lea, San Juan, San Miguel, Sandoval and Valencia counties.

These positive changes are a direct reflection of a sweeping culture shift across multiple state departments, Blalock said.

“The governor says that the problem solvers have to work together or they’re going to get fired,” he said. “That’s all tongue in cheek and everyone laughs and then everyone collaborates because they actually like to work together. I think that’s starting to seep downward, which is awesome.”

A Governor Who Means Business

Lujan Grisham, who views an improved and family-involved public education system as a life raft for children who might be floating toward foster care, isn’t always flippant about cleaning house when her standards aren’t met. 

In July, she fired Karen Trujillo, her original pick for Public Education Department (PED) secretary, for underperforming during her six months on the job. Three weeks later, the governor announced 39-year-old Ryan Stewart as the first African American to lead PED. He comes from Philadelphia, where he worked in the public schools and as a regional executive director at Partners in School Innovation, a national nonprofit that supports low-income students of color.

Stewart is facing a pressure-cooker scenario. In 2018, now-retired First Judicial District Judge Sarah Singleton, in a bombshell ruling, concluded that New Mexico had violated the state constitution by failing to invest in an adequate education for its students, especially for low-income people of color and children with disabilities. In 2019, the Quality Counts Highlights Report ranked New Mexico 51st of the 50 states and the District of Columbia in overall educational opportunities and performances.

Like Blalock and Stewart, Mariana Padilla, aside from a brief stint as Grisham’s congressional district director, didn’t come from the government world. A former Albuquerque Public Schools teacher, Padilla, 44, was asked to rejuvenate the dormant Children’s Cabinet, which is responsible for collecting and analyzing data about New Mexico’s kids in order to improve educational and economic results.

For many in the child and family welfare field, conditions can’t pivot until leaders resurrect the state’s behavioral health services from — as it’s known in the industry — the “shake-up.” 

In 2013, former Gov. Susana Martinez claimed that 15 of the state’s mental health providers overbilled Medicaid by a combined $36 million and promptly shut down their funding, which caused many of these providers to go belly up. The overcharges were debunked by a state Attorney General’s Office investigation, which found minuscule errors in billing totaling $1.16 million.

It was horrible,” Chasey said. “I had a client who was court ordered for things that they simply could not do. They had to be in family therapy, but there were no therapeutic services in Valencia County.” The state is still struggling to recover.

Lujan Grisham is trying to fund a recently revived Behavioral Health Collaborative via a $28 million budget request at the current legislative session. The collective, comprised of CYFD, the Department of Health, the Human Services Division, and Aging and Long-Term Services, hopes to house victims of sex trafficking, deliver services for families struggling with generational patterns of substance use and offer intensive “high fidelity wraparound” mental health supports for youth and families.

State leaders could be aided by a robust cash flow. In January, ahead of the 2020 Legislature, Lujan Grisham revealed a $7.7 billion budget proposal, which will be debated during the 30-day session that’s scheduled to take place through Feb. 20. Approximately half the 8.4% budget increase, boosted by $797 million in new money catalyzed by an oil bonanza in the southeastern part of the state, would be earmarked for educational programs.

Blalock says there are about 2,500 youth in care in New Mexico. Though it’s a high number, it’s nothing like Los Angeles County, where there are approximately 30,000 youth in child protective services in one county, albeit a heavily populated one, he said.

“You’re talking about an imminently fixable problem to a certain extent in New Mexico. If we’re talking about fixing child abuse or poverty, then no. That’s way more difficult and will take a longer period of time to have a real impact,” Blalock said. “But as far as putting certain systems in place to keep children safer to start getting better results to help support families so that they’re able to have better outcomes, it’s just an incredible opportunity.

“If we’re not successful, we only have us to blame.” 

This story is part of a Youth Today project on foster care in New Mexico. It’s made possible in part by the May and Stanley Smith Charitable Trust. Youth Today is solely responsible for the content and maintains editorial independence.

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