Fall on Hard Times, Have Your Kids Taken Away? How America Treats Poor Parents Like Criminals
by Alex Kane
The following article is part of an AlterNet series, Hard Times, USA, which shines a light on poverty in America. Click here for other stories in the series. [3]
February 3, 2013 | Shakieta
Smith needed a place to go. The homeless mother of two called a
Washington, DC shelter hotline last year, but was told there were no
available spaces. Then the intake worker told her that “if she and her
kids had nowhere safe to sleep, she’d be reported to the city’s Child
and Family Services Agency for a possible investigation into abuse and
neglect,” the Washington Post reported. [4]
Smith is not the only mother to fear having her children taken away and put into foster care due to homelessness. According to the Post, 32 other families in DC have been threatened in a similar way. And about 25 states in the country “list a caregiver’s inability to provide shelter as part of their definition of abuse and neglect,” though some of those laws have been challenged in court. It’s yet another heartwrenching reminder of the myriad legal troubles that accompany being poor and homeless.
Smith is not the only mother to fear having her children taken away and put into foster care due to homelessness. According to the Post, 32 other families in DC have been threatened in a similar way. And about 25 states in the country “list a caregiver’s inability to provide shelter as part of their definition of abuse and neglect,” though some of those laws have been challenged in court. It’s yet another heartwrenching reminder of the myriad legal troubles that accompany being poor and homeless.
“These people are simply walking in the door for assistance and people don’t have shelter and they’re saying, ‘We’re calling [Child Protective Services] on you?' It’s ridiculous,” homeless advocate Ruth Anne White told the Post.
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