August 27, 2020
A
lawsuit filed in federal court aims to stop the rollback of rules that
monitor American Indian and Alaska Native children foster care.
"I
was 12 years-old and there was reoccurring abuse in my house, as well
as neglect that resulted in us being taken away," said 22-year-old
Natilia Edwards of Anchorage, Alaska.
Edwards and her four sisters, all Alaskan Natives, were placed in foster care outside of their tribal community.
"So, I was in care for a total of seven years and then I was in a total of 14 different placements," said Edwards.
But
a change in the way the federal government protects and tracks kids
like Natilia and her sisters is worrying some. And there are special
reasons why.
Despite making up just 1% of the U.S. juvenile
population, American Indian/Alaska Native are disproportionately
represented in the foster care system. They make up 2.6% of kids in
foster care, according to the most recent government data.
"The
institutional racism, some of the bias and also just some of the staff
who are working with Native children and families, not having the kind
of the relationships you need to have with tribal communities, it leads
to children being removed in numbers that are much higher than they
should be," said David Simmons, Government Affairs and Advocacy Director
at National Indian Child Welfare Association.
For centuries,
American Indian children were forcibly taken from their families and
tribes; often placed in boarding schools and adopted by white families
without consent.
In 1978 Congress passed the Indian Child Welfare
Act, or ICWA. It requires, in part, that states first identify family or
tribal members who can take a child before placing them in a home
outside of the tribal community. And they had to continue to keep track
of Native children in their systems. However, that hasn't always
happened.
"There has never been data, federally mandated data
collected on all elements of the Indian Child Welfare Act," said
Professor Kate Fort of the University of Michigan Law School. "So we
actually don't have nationwide data at all on ICWA."
So, in 2016,
the Obama administration worked to change that. It required states to
use the federal, Adoption and Foster Care Analysis Reporting System, or
AFCARS, to expand the amount of information states gather about American
Indian and Alaska Native children.
This summer, the Trump
Administration rolled back that expansion. States no longer needed to
gather all the additional data related to American Indian and Alaskan
Native children. Also, they will no longer collect information related
to youth who identify as LGBTQ+.
According to the Department of
Health and Human Services, its "streamlined" version came after some
states described the data collection as overly burdensome. The
administration also said it would be too costly.
A lawsuit filed today in federal court aims to stop the rollback and maintain the 2016 data collection.
"The
effect of this rollback, it's going to be to keep these issues in the
dark, to keep up, to keep LGBTQ plus children and American Indian and
Alaska native children essentially in the shadows so that we're not
collecting data on them and thus not doing all that we can to address
the problems," said Senior Attorney Jeffrey Dubner of Democracy
Forward.
Supporters say it’s all to ensure every effort is made
to keep American Indian and Native American foster children protected
and connected to their tribes and culture. Something Natalia wishes she
would have experienced.
"I mean, how cool could it be, you know. I
wouldn't have to have all these thoughts and these wonders," said
Edwards. "I would really know and be so secure within my culture, my
sense of community."
**
Here is the
Complaint.
Plaintiffs include California Tribal Family Coalition, Cherokee Nation,
and Yurok Tribe along with a number of LGBTQ+ organizations.
Similarly,
Defendants eliminated most questions related to how child welfare
agencies treat children to whom ICWA applies. Although ACF had in 2016
found these questions essential to guide its allocation of resources to
help AI/AN youth, Defendants abandoned them without any discussion of
the value of the information being lost for AI/AN youth and the tribes
seeking to protect them.