Anonymous wrote:The definition of "Reunification" can be quite broad. Social services contacted us with the invitation to adopt a baby girl from foster care on the basis that we had previously and privately adopted the little girl's older brother, and therefore we were considered family. The siblings met each for the first time when we brought our daughter home. We would say that we adopted from foster care, while social services has probably categorized this as a reunification.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for the thoughtful responses. We are nowhere near the point of fostering yet but I am really asking a lot of questions. I can understand the high potential for reunification in cases where a parent is actively in treatment for addiction issues etc. I guess I was more unsure when it came to issues of severe physical abuse/neglect. I figure if a parent is acting that bad then they have such severe mental and emotional problems that it seems impossiblet o overcome. But I a PP made a point that almost all kids want to hope for the best in their families and maybe the devil you know is better than an unknown family. Very interesting topic and I have a ton a respect and admiration for foster families.
Anonymous wrote:Because foster care is not set up to meet you need to adopt. It is to help families be successful. The last resort is adoption. If something happened in your. Life and your child was placed in foster care, would you want the opportunity to get them back or would you allow them to be adopted by strangers who have a need for a second child.
Anonymous wrote:Because foster care is not set up to meet you need to adopt. It is to help families be successful. The last resort is adoption. If something happened in your. Life and your child was placed in foster care, would you want the opportunity to get them back or would you allow them to be adopted by strangers who have a need for a second child.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes children are removed from parents on false grounds. Social workers make mistakes too. Sometimes it is mothers illness, like post natal depression, which does not last a lifetime, sometimes a parent agrees to bring a child in. Not all drug addicts.
Anonymous wrote:the law should not try and break up families, but help them look after their own.
Say a car accident with 2 dead parents and 3 live kids. Should the law prevent a family member from claiming the kids even if that family member is distant?
Anonymous wrote:There are like three recent threads from OPs who clearly don't understand the point of the foster system.