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Policy&Practice

August 2016

6

I

n December 2015, the Monterey

County community was devastated

to learn of the grisly murder of two

children and the severe physical

abuse of a third child. The children’s

caretaker and her boyfriend have

since been charged with murder,

torture, and child abuse. There were

several child protective services and

law enforcement referrals that did

not have sufficient cause for foster

care or court dependency prior to the

tragic incident. When children die

at the hands of a parent or guardian,

the shared sense of outrage has deep

impacts throughout the commu-

nity and within our child protective

services system. But, our calling is to

channel that outrage and mourning to

action that mobilizes the community to

not only work harder to prevent fatali-

ties, but to improve community-wide

child well-being.

According to the Commission to End

Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities,

every year between 1,500 and 3,000

children die as victims of maltreat-

ment. The commission frames its

report as “Within Our Reach.” Bringing

this mission of ending child abuse

and neglect fatalities into reach takes

dedicated community-wide action to

address the well-being and standing

of children in our communities as a

whole. It takes the coordinated part-

nership between child welfare, law

enforcement, heath care services, edu-

cation, and our many community and

faith-based partners. It takes concerted

commitment to action at the local,

state, and national levels.

In the immediate aftermath of a child

death, such as the one mentioned, it is

expected that the child welfare agency

conduct a critical incident review

and take every appropriate action

locally

speaking

Roadmap to Child Well-Being

to improve its processes; but, those

inwardly focused system improvement

efforts alone are not enough. Child

abuse and neglect occurs in the context

of a host of stressors that take a toll

on child and family well-being: over-

crowded housing, poverty, community

violence, and unstable employment

opportunities. These stressors also

take a toll on public systems committed

to improving community quality of

life—human services, health, law

enforcement, and education. A more

meaningful system improvement

process recognizes this broader context

and works toward strengthening the

overall public and community-based

network that needs to work together for

child safety and well-being.

In Monterey County, like so many

other communities, the economy is

largely based on lower paying jobs—

agricultural, hospitality and retail

in our case—and the cost of living

is driven up by a broken housing

market that is too often beyond the

reach of working families. These

circumstances place heavy stresses

on child and family well-being. At

the same time, organized gangs and

a thriving drug market poach on the

vulnerabilities that come with these

stressors and fuel violence. In our

public and community-based service

By Elliott Robinson

Author photo by Arlene Boyd / Photo Illustration by Chris Campbell