New Report Examines Root Causes of West Virginia’s Child Welfare Crisis, Provides Recommendations to Address

Charleston, WV – West Virginia’s child welfare system is in crisis. Currently, the Mountain State places four times as many children per capita in the foster care system as the United States as a whole. West Virginia permanently terminates parental rights faster and more often than any other state in the country. While the child welfare system is designed to protect children, foster care involvement can have harmful effects on children and their families.

Recognizing the trauma of separation and the important bonds that children share with their families, federal law requires states to enact reasonable efforts through services and supports to preserve and reunify families. However, West Virginia’s high per capita rates of children in foster care and the frequency and speed with which parental rights are terminated suggest that our state is falling short of its obligation to make reasonable efforts to help children remain with their families.

The WVCBP’s new report details why improving the child welfare system in West Virginia requires addressing the root causes of hardship for families—often related to disordered substance use and economic insecurity—and provides recommendations for how our state can begin to do so. The report was authored by executive director, Kelly Allen, and child welfare research fellow, Veronica Witikko.

Key Findings

“The issues within our child welfare system are systemic in nature rather than the result of individual moral failings among parents who are struggling. One of the most effective ways to reduce systemic harm is to focus attention and efforts on preventing families from encountering the child welfare system in the first place,” says Witikko. “For West Virginia to better serve families, help children thrive, and reduce the number of children being placed in our foster care system, we must prioritize policy change upstream of the foster care system. Families need supports before they are in crisis.”

Recommendations to Address Root Causes of Hardship

West Virginia’s future depends on our ability as a state to nurture the health and well-being of the next generation of West Virginians—our children. Essential to that goal is investing in high-quality, evidence-based programs to reduce and prevent child abuse and neglect. By providing the concrete economic and social supports highlighted above to households broadly, fewer families will become involved in the child welfare system.

You can read the full report here.