Kansas
Related: About this forumRequirements for foster care workers too high, Kansas agency says
TOPEKA - Requirements to work in Kansas foster care system are too high, the agency in charge said Friday after a new audit found the states foster care contractors have difficulty employing enough workers.
Phyllis Gilmore, secretary of the Department for Children and Families, called the states requirements overly restrictive (and) out of step with national trends. She called on lawmakers to review the requirements.
Kansas requires foster care workers to be licensed social workers, and they must hold a bachelors degree in social work. Gilmore said nearly every other state does not require licensure, and that a handful of states do not require social workers to have social work degrees, but instead degrees in related fields, such as psychology.
We believe we can further recruitment in Kansas by loosening restrictions, Gilmore said.
Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article147426524.html
Phoenix61
(17,648 posts)Reduce case size to realistic levels so social workers with a license aren't afraid they will lose it because a child they were responsible for got hurt. I worked as a CPS investigator in Alabama and we had to be licensed at the graduate level. The case load size was insane. I was 35 and my hair started falling out from the stress. There was just no way to ensure a child's safety when you have so many families to oversee. I wonder if the Kansas foster care workers are responsible for returning the child to their family?
spooky3
(36,207 posts)Phoenix61
(17,648 posts)Not sure how their raise system works, but a salary bump at the 3 and 6 month post hire would be nice.