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<text id=94TT1737>
<title>
Dec. 12, 1994: Society:The Storm over Orphanages
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SOCIETY, Page 58
The Storm over Orphanages
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Wendy Cole/Chicago, Jenifer
Mattos/New York, Sylvester Monroe/Atlanta and James Willwerth/Los
Angeles
</p>
<p> Seven months ago, soon-to-be Speaker of the House Newt
Gingrich suggested in a speech that unwed teenage mothers
should be denied welfare. If they could not support their
children, America should tell them, "We'll help you with
foster care, we'll help you with orphanages, we'll help
you with adoption"--but not with the cash that might
keep mother and child together. Orphanages were not the
subject of Gingrich's speech, but they were not a throwaway
either. The notion reappeared in the Republican welfare-reform
bill (with the inflammatory word orphanages changed to
"children's homes"), which is a basis for Gingrich's famous
"Contract with America."
</p>
<p> It was not a smart move. The news media were quick to note
the orphanage proposal's obvious incompatibility with "family
values." Hillary Clinton told a New York audience last
week that the "idea of putting children into orphanages
because their mothers couldn't find jobs" was "unbelievable
and absurd." Eager to be seen as the way of the future,
the Newtonians found themselves tarred with images of the
distant, Dickensian past.
</p>
<p> Many Republicans were loath even to repeat the dread word.
So it was left to a lowly House staff member who handles
welfare policy for the Republican conference to deliver
its likely epitaph. Were Republican lawmakers serious about
the orphanage option? "If they were, they have buttoned
their lips. This thing has been mercilessly crucified,"
he says. "I would not be surprised if they strike the provision
from the bill, because it's given us so much grief."
</p>
<p> Nearly everyone agrees that illegitimacy and teen pregnancy
are key elements in poverty's vicious cycle and that the
government should try to reduce them. Gingrich's orphanage
proposal, however, seems punitive--not to mention odd,
coming from a man who was born to a 16-year-old mother
eight months after she left his abusive father. It would
violate federal law, which mandates family-based care over
institutions, and ignore the public policy consensus--first expressed by the Teddy Roosevelt White House--that
"no child should be deprived of his family by reason of
poverty alone."
</p>
<p> It would also be a budget buster. According to an analysis
done for TIME by the Child Welfare League of America, the
annual welfare cost of one child living with his or her
mother is $2,644. The same child living with a foster family
costs the public $4,800 a year. The average cost for the
child's care in "residential group care," today's closest
approximation of an orphanage, is $36,500. If even a quarter
of an estimated 1 million children who would be cut loose
under Gingrich's plan ended up in orphanages, the additional
cost to the public would be more than $8 billion.
</p>
<p> That said, however, Gingrich perhaps inadvertently stumbled
into a contentious ongoing debate among child-welfare experts
about "congregate care." The wrangle is not about whether
half a million mothers who may love their children should
be forced to give them up to institutions. It is about
the half a million children already in the system, whose
parents are either dead or have proved themselves abusive
or negligent, and whether orphanages should be used to
supplement foster placements that don't work out. "Orphanages"
proper have been out of vogue for so long that it is hard
today to locate a building with "orphanage" in its name.
However, a small but growing number of social scientists
and social-welfare professionals has been advocating their
return. And in so doing, they have broached a disturbing
question: Have America's attempts to find families for
its abandoned and damaged children failed so badly that
some institutionalization looks good?
</p>
<p> "Jason," a thin eight-year-old, cracks his knuckles as
he tries to explain how he ended up at a place called Hollygrove.
"It was time for me to go," he says. "I wasn't being bad
or nothing, it was time for me to go."
</p>
<p> The places he had to leave were foster homes. He liked
two of them because "they had a lot of bugs, and I like
to catch bugs." Some of his foster parents were nice and
some were mean: "They pinched me, or they would spank me."
It is impossible for a visitor to tell what really went
wrong, and who, if anyone, was "bad." But someone is listening
carefully to Jason now. "It's good here because you get
to talk to your social worker about stuff that's private,"
he explains. "You talk about things you miss, or things
you want to do."
</p>
<p> Hollygrove is filled with kids like Jason. "It's not uncommon
to see a seven-year-old who has come in with four failures,"
says assistant director Bob Morgan. In Hollygrove's seven
houses, occupying most of a block in a faded neighborhood
of Los Angeles, 54 children are taking a rest from what
have thus far been taxing lives. Each house has three "child-care
counselors"; there are six full-time social workers, a
24-hour clinic and a visiting psychiatrist. Behavior modification
is mild: the kids receive ratings on a point system that
is linked to privileges.
</p>
<p> Hollygrove is not an orphanage. It is something called
a residential-treatment center, a phenomenon very much
of the current century. The last time orphanages were seen
as a cutting-edge reform was in the 1820s: they removed
destitute children from almshouses, into which they had
been packed with adult paupers of all descriptions. But
when researchers publicized the stunting effects of institutional
life, group care gave way to welfare programs that allowed
children who were simply poor to remain with their mothers.
Children who were "parentless" owing to abuse or neglect
or death were remanded into a new system, foster care.
By 1980 the Federal Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare
Act had codified the general expert consensus: families
were almost always preferable to institutions. Any stay
in an institution must be as brief as possible and aimed
at reuniting the child with a family--biological, foster
or adopted.
</p>
<p> Around this mandate grew a loose spectrum of care. The
first stop for the children was a foster family. Sometimes
adoption followed, but often it did not, in large part
because of an official disinclination to terminate parents'
rights. Most of the children stayed in foster care, sometimes
bouncing from one family to another until they were pronounced
"failures." Only then were they sent to group residential
programs or--for more troubled children--facilities
like Hollygrove. In accordance with the act, children were
intended to stay at residential-treatment centers no more
than two years. After that, "stabilized" kids were put
back into the foster-care system; those still obviously
asocial went to small "group homes" with psychiatric supervision.
</p>
<p> The progression was always a bit jury-rigged. But in the
1980s it imploded, leaving massive carnage. The crack epidemic
unleashed a new tide of kids on overburdened social-service
agencies. Beleaguered child-welfare workers juggled huge
case loads, and soon the newspapers were filled with horror
stories not only about failures to remove children from
dangerous homes but also about abuse in foster families
and kids who bounced almost unnoticed from one inappropriate
foster-care experience to the next. A report commissioned
by the Reagan Administration in the late '80s concluded:
"Foster care is intended to protect children from neglect
and abuse at the hands of parents and other family members,
yet all too often it becomes an equally cruel form of neglect
and abuse by the state."
</p>
<p> A new category of "extraordinary-needs children" was invented
and quickly overpopulated by children drug addicted at
birth, sexually abused at an early age or impaired by fetal
alcohol syndrome. Many were doomed to fail in foster care.
Annette Baran, 67, a psychotherapist and adoption expert,
recalls, "In 1945, when the Holocaust children began arriving
from Europe, everyone was dying to rescue them. But these
kids could not be in nuclear families. They were so traumatized
they couldn't trust. They couldn't be vulnerable. This
is true of today's kids."
</p>
<p> The system buckled, especially in the big cities. In some
places the small group homes that absorbed the most troubled
kids were themselves rife with drugs, violence and sexual
abuse. Recalls 19-year-old Kenyetta Ivy, a survivor of
nine New York group homes: "There were rats in the stove.
I know some girls who tried to commit suicide, and the
staff wouldn't even check on them." A traumatized child-care
community launched the debate that continues today. Some
championed earlier and more extended placement of damaged
children in residential treatment, maintaining that institutional
permanency was far preferable to a nightmare sequence of
foster-care failure after foster-care failure. Says Sarah
Breding, Hollygrove's director of social work: "These kids
learned through their birth families that adults are going
to hurt them. And a foster home is itself a really emotionally
charged situation. But they can be successful in residential
care." Others argued that foster care had been fairly effective
until the '80s onslaught--and could be made so again.
"The foster family is the solution to our problems," says
Joe Kroll of the North American Council on Adoptable Children.
"Professionalize it, support it, compensate it. The costs
of foster care would go up, but they would still be far
less than the costs of institutions." Awarding foster-parent
status--and financial support--to a child's relatives
became a new focus.
</p>
<p> Then in 1988 a retired senior trial judge in Philadelphia
named Lois Forer published a heartfelt article in the Washington
Monthly about children she hadn't been able to save. There
was April, age 10, her molesting stepfather had been jailed,
but she was forced to continue living with her retarded
mother and her alcoholic grandfather because, wrote Forer,
"it was the policy...to keep the family together."
Also Tyrone, 8, whose father, a boxing trainer, had beaten
him so badly for wetting his bed that he bore 70 permanent
scars: "No agency would even attempt to find placement
for Tyrone; the family should be kept together."
</p>
<p> In summation, the judge declared, "For at least the past
quarter-century, Americans have been captivated by two
concepts that have become accepted public policy: deinstitutionalization
and preservation of the family. Both are worthy goals pursued
to unworthy ends. I suggest that it is time for us to demand
that government provide permanent, well-run orphanages
for the more than 2 million abused children who are de
facto orphans."
</p>
<p> Forer's modest proposal drew support from a few child-welfare
experts like Joyce Ladner, now acting president of Howard
University, and from such conservative social theorists
as Charles Murray and James Q. Wilson. "Not all families
are worth preserving," Wilson wrote. "And...foster
care has its own problems. We don't know as much as we
should about how well institutional care might function
under contemporary conditions." (To which Murray added,
"Think of it as 24-hour day care.")
</p>
<p> But it was only in 1993 that a whole state, Illinois, began
considering orphanages on a practical level. Between 1986
and 1994, the number of children in the Chicago area's
substitute-care system skyrocketed from 8,000 to 36,000.
The public faces of this catastrophe appeared in 1993,
when a toddler named Joseph Wallace was returned from foster
care to his mother, who hanged him with an electrical cord;
and again last February, when 19 children were discovered
living in squalor in a North Keystone Avenue apartment.
</p>
<p> Such incidents supercharged a campaign by state senator
Judy Baar Topinka, who was recently elected state treasurer.
"I've lost my patience," she declared in July. "I want
to act now. Act yesterday. Kids are being killed, tortured,
starved, abandoned." She adds now, "Illinois will have
orphanages. It's just a question of what form they will
take." Both Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, a Democrat, and
Illinois Governor Jim Edgar, a Republican, are on board.
But perhaps most vociferous on the subject has been Cook
County public guardian Patrick Murphy, whose father spent
three years in an orphanage. "Foster care cannot handle
adolescent kids," maintains Murphy. "What residential care
provides is consistency." Consistency is a function of
duration-of-stay, however, and proponents await a commission
report due out at the end of this month to suggest whether
Illinois may actually defy the family-first paradigm and
invest more in institutions that do what orphanages once
did: hold on to children for five, 10, even 15 years.
</p>
<p> Informally, in dozens of residential-treatment facilities
around the country, some of this occurs in any case. David
Tribble, head of the Bethesda Home for Boys outside Savannah,
Georgia, insists, "We're not an orphanage. That's not what
we do." Yet at least one child lived at Bethesda for 14
years, and stays of four or five years are not uncommon
there and at similar institutions around the country. The
trend's most adventurous examples are, coincidentally or
not, in Illinois. Hephzibah Children's Association, named
after a biblical benefactor, operates a small facility
funded by the mostly well-to-do citizens of Oak Park; it
accommodates children ages 3 to 11 for however long it
takes them to be adopted, thus sparing them the foster-care
shuffle. Even more unusual, it allows them to veto adoptive
parents they don't like. "They stay here until they find
a place they are comfortable with," says executive director
Mary Anne Brown.
</p>
<p> The average length of stay at Mooseheart, near the city
of Aurora, is six years. Run by the Loyal Order of Moose
and financed mostly through charity, the institution currently
houses 230 children, from infancy to age 18, in 24 houses.
Mooseheart, where all placements are made on a voluntary
basis, will give a child back to his or her biological
parents or legal guardians on request. But Rose Haggerty,
its director of student services, states firmly, "We don't
try to reunite families. We don't mean to usurp biology,
but we promote the idea that the child is growing here."
</p>
<p> An even more interesting enterprise is 35 miles southwest
of Chicago. The SOS Children's Village in rural Lockport
contradicts standard protocol in any number of ways. For
one, SOS accepts, or rather seeks, sibling groups, which
are difficult to place in foster care. It looks for children
10 and younger--an age at which most states believe children
should still be trying to fit into foster homes. And it
does so with the goal of long-term residency that replicates--and replaces--family life. "We are a source of frustration
for the Department of Children and Family Services," says
Village director Bill Mathis. "They would like us to have
a more open policy and offer short-term emergency placements.
We felt that if we started that, we would be locked into
it."
</p>
<p> One of the reasons Mathis may sound so sure of his unorthodox
arrangement is that the SOS Village, and a sister operation
in Florida, are part of a mammoth chain based in Innsbruck,
Austria. Founded in 1949 for war orphans, SOS-Kinderdorf
International, now established in 124 countries, cares
for a total of 180,000 children. In each "village," the
concept is the same: long-term residency and house mothers
who commit to 20 years with the project.
</p>
<p> So far, the Lockport SOS Village has assembled only 10
of a projected population of 60 children. In one house,
Toni Wagner, a Franciscan nun from Dubuque, Iowa, cares
for an abandoned family of five siblings, who are white.
Michele Haldeman, the "mother" next door, oversees five
children, all black, from three different families. The
two "families" mix happily in the common yard.
</p>
<p> One of the most troubling unresolved issues about "congregate
care" is its psychological effect. Doctors familiar with
children adopted from foreign orphanages have noted delayed
cognitive development, an inability to form emotional attachments
and alienation. But not everyone shares that view. Richard
Hoover, who met his wife Darlene 40 years ago at the Tressler
Orphans Home in Loysville, Pennsylvania, says, "I really
feel it was the best place to grow up. Though you had no
parents, you had no worries. You always had someone to
look after you."
</p>
<p> And Jennifer Butler, 19, a graduate of Wayside Union Academy
who spent two years in short-term group homes before being
placed in the Marlborough, Massachusetts, treatment center,
says, "I'm so glad I got help. A lot of kids say, `They
stole my teenage years from me.' But I would rather be
a normal adult than a normal teenager. A lot of teens see
`normal' as having a mom, dad, brother, sister and a dog.
But 9 times out of 10, that doesn't become reality, just
a fantasy."
</p>
<p> Cost alone ensures that the U.S. will not institute congregate
care for children on a large scale--quite aside from
the abysmal record of most state-run residential-care facilities.
"Whatever the abuses in foster care--and there are many--there is absolutely no reason to believe that equal,
if not worse, abuse won't occur behind the walls," says
David Rothman, a professor of social medicine at Columbia.
"The difference will be that nobody will hear the screams."
Even at well-regarded private institutions such as Mooseheart,
four house parents were arrested and convicted of sexually
molesting about a dozen children between 1988 and 1992.
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, it may be time to admit that in the case
of some subset of the system's children, the American foster
family in its current, underfunded state cannot answer
their needs. Even Americans appalled by the hard-line rhetoric
out of Washington may find themselves supporting further
experiments with long-term residential care, whether the
word orphanage is attached to them or not. "Steve's" mother
gave him up, but she did so only because she was dying
of cancer. When he was eight, she sent him to the Bethesda
Home, a 50-child establishment on the banks of Savannah's
Moon River, which was erected on the site of an orphanage
by the same name founded in 1740. The grounds are dotted
with live oaks, a herd of cattle roams its own 100-acre
pasture, and there is an Olympic-size pool. But there are
also intensive instruction in Christian values, psychological
counseling and a grueling "total restriction" discipline
program that most residents care to experience only once.
The home has paid Steve's tuition at a private school in
Atlanta and will fund his college education. Because of
the circumstances of his arrival, Steve has never been
in a foster home, and he has never rotated out--he has
spent 10 years at Bethesda. "I've been through four sets
of cottage parents," he says, "and I learned something
from all of them." Steve has noticed that people who have
spent their whole life with a real family don't understand
the place, and "some boys say it's a prison and don't like
it," he says. "But ((to me)), it's home away from home.
There are people who want to see you make it through thick
and thin. I kind of think growing up at Bethesda is going
to help me a lot."
</p></body>
</article>
</text>