By Lila Brown
Contributing Writer
LOS ANGELES — Before becoming a nationally recognized social justice leader and a member of California’s Mandated Reporting Taskforce, Shane Harris spent 13 years as a foster care youth after he lost both of his parents.
As president of the national civil rights organization, People’s Association of Justice Advocates, he’s aiming to solve some of the toughest challenges Black and brown children in the foster care system face.
During National Foster Care Month in May, Harris visited the Sanctuary of Hope to host a roundtable meeting with current and former foster youth, many of whom, like Harris, have beaten the odds and become successful professionals — government officials, social workers and community activists leading their own organizations.
Sanctuary of Hope is a nonprofit organization that works to empower youth through education, stabilization initiatives and the dismantling of social and economic barriers that may impede their progress.
According to the federal government’s Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System, there are nearly 370,000 American children and youth in foster care. Approximately 18,500 youth are emancipated from foster care without a permanent family annually and in 2021, 77% of eligible youth in foster care, ages 14–21 years old, left care without receiving the federally funded services necessary to prepare them for adulthood and independent living.
Nationally, Black children are overrepresented in foster care. According to datacenter.kidscount.org, Black children represented 14% of the total child population in the United States. However, they represented 23% of all children in foster care.
Harris said that one out of every four foster youth go homeless upon exiting foster care in California. Across the state, there are nearly 65,000 children in foster care, he added. Of the 65,000 children in foster care across California, 14,000 of them are Black.
Harris also announced a new effort already underway to push for the removal of the term “case” in L.A. County when referring to foster youth during the roundtable which featured Hafsa Kaka, senior advisor to Gov. Gavin Newsom and Janet Kelly, the founder and director of Sanctuary of Hope. The session focused on solving problems foster youth face.
Sharing personal stories, insights and various visions for policy changes, the participants discussed numerous solutions and addressed specific concerns about ongoing challenges with the foster care system.
One top priority was how to close the foster care to homelessness pipeline for the disproportionate number of Black and brown children in L.A. County and the state’s foster care system.
Los Angeles County has the highest number of children in foster care of any county in California, with roughly 25,000 children.
“When you see the direct connection between the disproportionate rates of Black children in foster care and the disproportionate rates of Black people in the general homeless population, there is a very clear connection there in which our foster youth are coming out of care,” Harris said during opening remarks. “Even though there are more programs, housing programs and transitional housing programs, we are still not nearly doing enough. The state’s budget cuts play a role into services being provided, and how that then could create a homelessness pipeline.”
Kaka said the governor has been intentional about making sure that foster children are homeless prioritized as the state addresses homelessness across different sectors.
“This is a critical moment for foster care,” Kaka said. “The systems that are working together are looking at leveraging federal, state and local funds. Prop. 1 funds will create more dollars for youth, as well as the general population experiencing mental health, substance abuse and abuse at the intersection of homelessness.”
Harris said he has already begun efforts in San Diego County to drop the word “case” when referring to homeless youth.
“We are asking for a 90-day public input period, in which the county CEO and leadership can facilitate discussions with the community on replacement terminology. There’s plenty of ideas,” Harris said. “It is a criminal justice related term. Foster care to prison pipeline is already large and vast.”
Kelly said a majority of the youth who go through the Sanctuary of Hope program are young people who have experienced some form of housing instability or housing crisis.
“The goal of the work that we do is really centered around helping young people leave here with leadership skills and other forms of what we call protective factors in order for them to continue on with their stabilization journey and become loving, caring and active citizens in this world,” Kelly said.
“It’s always great for me, especially during national foster care month, to see many of the young people that I’ve seen from the time that we founded almost 14 years ago, to see them grow or whether they are getting married or they’re graduating, becoming doctors, having children, because it really talks to the promise and the possibilities, because as individuals, we need to invest in their being, their social being, their emotional well-being, all of those things,” she added.
Last year, Gov. Newsom vetoed a bill that would have allowed foster youth to keep the money they accrue through Social Security benefits when they become adults. The bill also would have required the state to pick up the tab for foster care costs.
A similar bill, Assembly Bill 2906, has since been introduced by Assemblyman Isaac Bryan, D-Culver City, to address the issue.
AB 2906 would require social service agencies to ensure that a foster child’s federal Social Security survivors’ benefits are not used to pay for, or to reimburse, the placing agency for any costs of the child’s care and supervision. Existing law requires every youth who is in foster care and nearing emancipation to be screened by the county for potential eligibility for Supplemental Security Income. The bill would also increase benefits and access to Social Security benefits for foster children.
If passed by the Legislature and signed by Newsom, AB 2906 would take effect next Jan. 1.
Lila Brown is a reporter for California Black Media.