Licensing Reforms Benefit Children and Families in Kinship Care
In the past year, 16 states and tribes have revised their foster care licensing requirements to improve support for kinship caregivers and the children placed with them.
These jurisdictions are the first to create and implement kin-specific licensing rules since the Administration for Children and Families allowed states and tribes to simplify the pathway to approval, which occurred in 2023. As a result, more kinship caregivers may become licensed and gain access to financial assistance and vital support services.
“The rapid uptake of these standards shows how ready and eager jurisdictions are for this flexibility to help support their goals of child welfare transformation through a kin-first culture,” said Ana Beltran, director of the Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network at Generations United, a leader among kinship organizations developing best practices and resources to help states adapt the federal rule.
With support from the Annie E. Casey Foundation, Maryland’s Department of Human Services (DHS) introduced streamlined licensing in December 2024 as part of a larger effort to make kin placements the preferred option for children who cannot stay in their original home. This statewide shift in philosophy, policy and practice — an initiative called Family Matters — is designed to ensure that young people and their families have access to the connections and resources they need to thrive.
Lawmakers laid groundwork for Family Matters by expanding the state’s definition of kin to include not just blood relatives but also adult family friends whom a child knows and trusts.
Click here to read the full article.
Source: Youth Today
FIND MORE BY: