RCW 74.13.096
Representation of children of color -- Advisory
committee. (Expires June 30, 2014.)
(1) The secretary of the
department of social and health services shall convene an
advisory committee to analyze and make recommendations on the
disproportionate representation of children of color in
Washington's child welfare system. The department shall
collaborate with the Washington institute for public policy and
private sector entities to develop a methodology for the advisory
committee to follow in conducting a baseline analysis of data
from the child welfare system to determine whether racial
disproportionality and racial disparity exist in this system.
The Washington institute for public policy shall serve as
technical staff for the advisory committee. In determining
whether racial disproportionality or racial disparity exists, the
committee shall utilize existing research and evaluations
conducted within Washington state, nationally, and in other
states and localities that have similarly analyzed the prevalence
of racial disproportionality and disparity in child welfare.
(2) At a minimum, the advisory committee shall examine and
analyze: (a) The level of involvement of children of color at
each stage in the state's child welfare system, including the
points of entry and exit, and each point at which a treatment
decision is made; (b) the number of children of color in
low-income or single-parent families involved in the state's
child welfare system; (c) the family structures of families
involved in the state's child welfare system; and (d) the
outcomes for children in the existing child welfare system. This
analysis shall be disaggregated by racial and ethnic group, and
by geographic region.
(3) The committee of not more than fifteen individuals shall
consist of experts in social work, law, child welfare,
psychology, or related fields, at least two tribal
representatives, a representative of the governor's juvenile
justice advisory committee, a representative of a community-based
organization involved with child welfare issues, a representative
of the department of social and health services, a current or
former foster care youth, a current or former foster care parent,
and a parent previously involved with Washington's child welfare
system. Committee members shall be selected as follows: (a)
Five members selected by the senate majority leader; (b) five
members selected by the speaker of the house of representatives;
and (c) five members selected by the secretary of the department
of social and health services. The secretary, the senate
majority leader, and the speaker of the house of representatives
shall coordinate appointments to ensure the representation
specified in this subsection is achieved. After the advisory
committee appointments are finalized, the committee shall select
two individuals to serve as cochairs of the committee, one of
whom shall be a representative from a nongovernmental entity.
(4) The secretary shall make reasonable efforts to seek
public and private funding for the advisory committee.
(5) Not later than June 1, 2008, the advisory committee
created in subsection (1) of this section shall report to the
secretary of the department of social and health services on the
results of the analysis. If the results of the analysis indicate
disproportionality or disparity exists for any racial or ethnic
group in any region of the state, the committee, in conjunction
with the secretary of the department of social and health
services, shall develop a plan for remedying the
disproportionality or disparity. The remediation plan shall
include: (a) Recommendations for administrative and legislative
actions related to appropriate programs and services to reduce
and eliminate disparities in the system and improve the long-term
outcomes for children of color who are served by the system; and
(b) performance measures for implementing the remediation plan.
To the extent possible and appropriate, the remediation plan
shall be developed to integrate the recommendations required in
this subsection with the department's existing compliance plans,
training efforts, and other practice improvement and reform
initiatives in progress. The advisory committee shall be
responsible for ongoing evaluation of current and prospective
policies and procedures for their contribution to or effect on
racial disproportionality and disparity.
(6) Not later than December 1, 2008, the secretary shall
report the results of the analysis conducted under subsection (2)
of this section and shall describe the remediation plan required
under subsection (5) of this section to the appropriate
committees of the legislature with jurisdiction over policy and
fiscal matters relating to children, families, and human
services. Beginning January 1, 2010, the secretary shall report
annually to the appropriate committees of the legislature on the
implementation of the remediation plan, including any measurable
progress made in reducing and eliminating racial
disproportionality and disparity in the state's child welfare
system.
[2007 c 465 § 2.]
NOTES:
Findings -- 2007 c 465: "The legislature finds that one in
five of Washington's one and one-half million children are
children of color. Broken out by racial groups, approximately
six percent of children are Asian/Pacific Islander, six percent
are multiracial, four and one-half percent are African American,
and two percent are Native American. Thirteen percent of
Washington children are of Hispanic origin, but representation of
this group increases in the lower age ranges. For example,
seventeen percent of children birth to four years of age are
Hispanic.
The legislature also finds that in counties such as Adams,
Franklin, Yakima, and Grant, more than half of the births are of
Hispanic origin. Three-quarters of the state's African American
children and two-thirds of Asian/Pacific Islander children live
in King and Pierce counties. The legislature finds further that
despite some progress closing the achievement gap in recent
years, children of color continue to lag behind their classmates
on the Washington assessment of student learning. In 2005
children of color trailed in every category of the fourth-grade
reading, writing, and math assessments. On the reading test
alone, sixty-nine percent of African American students,
sixty-four percent of Native American students, and sixty-one
percent of Hispanic students met the standards, compared with
eighty-five percent of caucasian students. And, since 1993, the
number of Washington students for which English is not their
first language has doubled to more than seven percent of students
statewide.
The legislature finds further that according to national
research, African American children enter the child welfare
system at far higher rates than caucasian children, despite no
greater incidence of maltreatment in African American families
compared to caucasian families. This trend holds true for
Washington state, where African American children represent
approximately nine and one-half percent of the children in
out-of-home care even though they represent slightly more than
four percent of the state's total child population. Native
American children represent slightly over ten percent of the
children in out-of-home care although they represent only two
percent of the children in the state. In King county, African
American and Native American children are over represented at
nearly every decision point in the child welfare system.
Although these two groups of children represent only eight
percent of the child population in King county, they account for
one-third of all children removed from their homes and one-half
of children in foster care for more than four years.
The legislature finds also that children of immigrants are
the fastest growing component of the United States' child
population. While immigrants are eleven percent of the nation's
total population, the children of immigrants make up twenty-two
percent of the nation's children under six years of age. These
immigrant children are twice as likely as native-born children to
be poor." [2007 c 465 § 1.]
Expiration date -- 2007 c 465: "This act expires June 30, 2014." [2007 c 465 § 3.]