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Children and teens belong with their own families whenever possible. KVC works to safely reintegrate hundreds of families each year by providing parenting skills training, therapy and other support.
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On any given day, KVC Kansas provides out-of-home care for thousands of youth. Relatives, non-related kin like teachers and neighbors, and foster families are all critical to providing temporary care for these children and teens. See how you can make a difference.
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Children and Families Need You
Through KVC, you can strengthen families, prevent child abuse and neglect, and help create a bright future where every person is safe and connected to a strong family and a healthy community. Please join us today! Learn More
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Our free resources help you stay informed and educated about foster care, child welfare, adoption, mental health and childhood trauma as well as how KVC Kansas is working toward building healthier communities.
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About KVC Kansas
KVC Kansas is a private, nonprofit organization that serves over 15,000 children and adults each year. Our team of professionals provides family strengthening and preventative services, parent training, foster care case management, family reunification services, foster family recruitment and support, adoption, aftercare, outpatient therapy and more.
We envision a world in which every person is safe and connected to a strong family and a healthy community.
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Foster Parent and Kinship Caregiver Bill of Rights
The Representative Gail Finney Memorial Foster Care Bill of Rights
(Part of and supplemental to K.S.A. 38-2201 et seq.)
The Representative Gail Finney Memorial Foster Care Bill of Rights highlights 22 specific rights that foster parents and kinship caregivers are entitled to concerning the care and support of children in the custody of the Secretary in Kansas. These include being treated with respect, receiving adequate training and financial reimbursement, being included in the planning and decision-making process for the child, and more. See all 22 specific rights below and find the full bill text here.
Consistent with the policy of the state expressed in K.S.A. 38-2201 et seq., and amendments thereto, in order to ensure active participation of foster parents and kinship caregivers as an integral, indispensable and vital role in the state’s efforts to care for children in the custody of the secretary, unless otherwise ordered by the court, such foster parents and kinship caregivers shall have the right to:
- Be treated by the Kansas Department for Children and Families and other child welfare system stakeholders with dignity, respect and trust as a primary provider of care and support and a member of the professional team caring for a child in the custody of the secretary;
- not be discriminated in accordance with the Kansas act against discrimination, K.S.A. 44-1001, et seq., and amendments thereto, and federal law;
- continue with such foster parents’ and kinship caregivers’ own family values and beliefs with consideration given to the special needs of children who have experienced trauma and separation from their biological families, if the values and beliefs of the child and the biological family are respected and not infringed upon;
- make decisions concerning the child consistent with the policies, procedures and other directions of the Kansas department for children and families and within the limits of state and federal law;
- receive standardized preservice training by the Kansas department for children and families or the department’s designee and at appropriate intervals to meet mutually assessed needs of the child, such foster parents and kinship caregivers;
- receive timely financial reimbursement and be notified of any costs or expenses for which such foster parents and kinship caregivers may be eligible for reimbursement in accordance with K.S.A. 38-2216, and amendments thereto;
- receive information regarding services and contact the Kansas department for children and families or the department’s designee during regular business hours and, in the event of an emergency, by telephone after business hours;
- receive any information on issues concerning the child and known to the Kansas department for children and families or the department’s designee that is relevant to the care of the child or that may jeopardize the health and safety of the foster family, the kinship care placement or the child or alter the manner in which care and services should be administered prior to the placement of such child;
- discuss known information regarding the child prior to placement and be provided additional information from the Kansas department for children and families or the department’s designee as such information becomes available under state and federal law;
- refuse placement of a child in such foster parents’ and kinship caregivers’ home or request the removal of a child from such foster parents’ and kinship caregivers’ home after providing reasonable notice;
- receive any available information through the Kansas department for children and families regarding the number of times a child has been placed and the reasons for such placements, and receive the names and phone numbers of any previous placements if such placements have authorized such a release by law;
- receive information from the Kansas department for children and families that is relevant to the care of a child when the child is placed with such foster parents and kinship caregivers;
- provide input and participate in the case planning process for the child and participate in and be informed about the planning of visitation between the child and the child’s biological family, recognizing that visitation with the child’s biological family is important, in accordance with K.S.A. 38-2255, and amendments thereto;
- communicate with the child’s child welfare case management provider and share and obtain relevant and appropriate information regarding such child’s placement;
- communicate with members of the child’s professional team, including, but not limited to, such child’s child welfare management provider, therapists, physicians and teachers as allowed by rules and regulations and state and federal law, for the purpose of participating in such child’s case plan;
- be notified in advance of any court hearing or review where the case plan or permanency of the child is an issue, including periodic reviews held by the court, in accordance with the revised Kansas code for care of children;
- be considered as a placement option, if a child who was formerly placed with such parents or kinship caregivers is in the custody of the secretary again;
- continue contact and communication with a child subsequent to the child’s placement from such foster parents’ and kinship caregivers’ home, subject to the approval of the child and the child’s biological parents, if such biological parents’ rights have not been terminated;
- direct questions to the Kansas department for children and families regarding information, concerns, policy violations and a corrective action plan relating to licensure as a family foster home;
- have the rights described in this section be given full consideration when the Kansas department for children and families develops and approves policies regarding placement and permanency;
- submit a report to the court pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2261, and amendments thereto; and
- request a court hearing regarding a change of placement notice pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2258, and amendments thereto, if a child has been placed with the same foster parents for six months or longer.