Pubdate: Sun, 25 Mar 2007 Source: Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City, UT) Copyright: 2007 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 Author: Sara Israelsen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG WAR ENSNARES CHILDREN Utah County Task Force, DCFS Pulling Kids From Homes PROVO - A 9-year-old girl sketches a marijuana bong for her social worker, saying she found one beside her bed. A young boy shows the social worker a cigarette burn on his hand given to him by his dad. Stories like these are heart-wrenching. And unfortunately they're all too common, say Utah law enforcement officers and social workers who pull babies, toddlers and school-age children out of drug houses and meth labs. During the six-month period between last July 1 and Jan. 1, Utah's Division of Child and Family Services removed 631 children from homes due to drug and alcohol problems. Not unexpectedly, the Salt Lake Valley had the most: 223. In the state's Western region, which includes Utah, Wasatch, Summit, Juab and Millard counties, workers removed a total of 158 children from homes during that same period. Drug and alcohol abuse was a factor in more than 60 percent of those cases, or 94 of them. Forty-five of the latter children were pulled out specifically because their parents or guardians were involved in the use, sale or production of methamphetamine, according to DCFS statistics. The Utah County Major Crimes Task Force, a group of officers that targets drug dealers in Utah Valley, serves an average of four search warrants a week, Task Force Lt. Mike Forshee said. His worst fear? Finding children in the homes among the marijuana plants and meth pipes. "The thing that frustrates me and makes me personally the maddest is when we serve a search warrant ... and I hear kids screaming," Forshee said. "That just turns my stomach every single time." In a lab raid in January, one SWAT member said, the team found the chemical ingredients to make meth on the same shelf as baby food, with a crib only feet away from the meth-cooking table. When they encounter such situations, the task force refers the case to DCFS to investigate if removal would be the safest option. Bill Duncan is the social worker who watched the girl draw the bong and listened to the little boy describe his burn. Despite the perception that the DCFS is full of "jack-booted thugs who steal your kids away," Duncan insists that he's there to protect and serve children who may be in danger. That starts by having a Child Protective Services worker on scene during a raid - if the task force knows ahead of time there's a need. While there, the worker can ask the parents about the child and if there are any relatives who could take custody. If there aren't any responsible family members available, the children are taken to temporary housing and given physical, dental and mental evaluations, Duncan said. "I've never had a case where I thought the parent didn't love the child," Duncan said. "But how do you tell someone, 'You've hurt your child?' All we're trying to do is protect ... the kids." Duncan is also working to protect children from abuse, abandonment and neglect. And neglect is the first thing DCFS case worker Abel Kanigan notices when he's called to the early morning search warrants where drugs are involved. "You've got someone on meth, and everything else is secondary - kids, food, dishes," he said. "The parent is someone other than who they used to be." Kanigan gets the child to a safe house or temporary shelter then monitors the case for 30 days. He also must defend in front of a juvenile judge the decision to remove the child from the home. Then, he'll pass the case to folks such as Emily Helm, a DCFS permanency case worker, who helps parents begin the process of rebuilding their families. Helm connects parents with substance-abuse programs, parenting classes or anger-management workshops and helps them devise a service plan - a structure to help them stay drug-free and productive. Parents also go through the 4th District juvenile drug court, a system that monitors families through weekly check-ins, to regain their children. The program, with about 40 participating families, is successful, officials say. "We know ... drug courts work," said Brent Platt, DCFS Western regional director. "They've been proven to work and definitely increase the chances of kids going home." In 2006, statewide, 36 percent of children pulled from their parents' care as a result of substance-abuse issues were reunited. Twenty-seven percent were placed with a relative. Helm has eight months to work with parents whose children are younger than 3, according to federal mandates. If the child is older than 3, she has a year to help the family reunite. Those families able to reunite did so in about 10 months on average, according to DCFS data. Judges can also grant extensions if they see signs of improvement, Platt said. It's a tough job, Helm says, and some days are definitely better than others - for her and the parents. "Some days it's real rare you would ever see a positive outcome," Helm said. "Even the kids that go back, you always wonder what you're sending them back to. It's a very bittersweet thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin