In Today's News :"Baker, Coakley Wrangle Over DCF"
Baker, Coakley Wrangle Over DCF
10:48 AM WED OCTOBER 15, 2014
By RUPA SHENOY
http://wgbhnews.org/post/baker-coakley-wrangle-over-dcf
By RUPA SHENOY
http://wgbhnews.org/post/baker-coakley-wrangle-over-dcf
Republican gubernatorial candidate Charlie Baker has faulted
his Democratic rival, Martha Coakley, for her handling of a lawsuit brought by
a New York nonprofit against the state of Massachusetts.
Baker charges that by fighting an out-of-state, nonprofit
child advocacy group in court, rather than negotiating with them, Coakley
missed an opportunity to improve care for the Bay State’s most at-risk
children.
That was four years ago, when a New York-based group called
Children’s Rights alleged in federal court that the state Department of
Children and Families exhibited a detailed and troubling pattern of negligence
in the care of some of its charges. Coakley, representing the state as attorney
general, convinced a Boston federal judge that Children’s Rights hadn’t made
its case. The nonprofit is appealing.
Baker says Coakley could have done more for Massachusetts
children by compromising.
"I simply believe — and I think the history has borne
me out on this — that Massachusetts and the children served by that department
would have been better served if the commonwealth had moved instead to fix what
was wrong at that agency instead of litigating that case.”
Coakley disagrees.
"We made the right decision because what those lawyers
from outside looking for millions of dollars was, was one-size-fits-all,"
she said. "It wasn’t right for Massachusetts. The Globe said that. The
only ones standing up for it were the lawyers who would benefit."
Children's Rights' most recent tax filing shows the highest
paid person there earned a total of nearly $313,000 in one year. That may sound
like a lot, but it’s a fraction on what skilled litigators make.
Mary Collins, a professor of social welfare policy at Boston
University, doesn’t think the Children's Rights group is out for money.
"I think that they — obviously, in the context of these
lawsuits — need to recover the cost of the litigation," Collins said.
"My understanding of Children's Rights organization is that they are
committed to the well being of children, and again, sometimes forcing system
change — this might be one of the only ways to do it."
Children’s Rights lead attorney Sara Bartosz points out the
group is only paid when it wins.
"These salaries that are paid are competitive with
nonprofit advocacy organizations that do the kind of work we do and take into
account that we’re a New York-based organization with lawyers living in a very,
very, very expensive city and marketplace.”
Bartosz says a settlement would hold the commonwealth
accountable for change.
"The key thing we were looking for, of course, was a
reform plan that would stand the test of time," she said. "So instead
of having a new initiative or a blue ribbon panel look into possibilities of
change, actually sit down and work out and tailor for Massachusetts a reform
plan that would be an enforceable plan — a plan where a promise is made you’re
saying to the court, 'Hold us to this. It’s that important and we’re going to
get this done right for the kids once and for all.'”
Children’s Rights has sued about 20 governments to improve
their child welfare systems. Three states and the District of Columbia fought
back, while others settled. Fifteen of the cases resulted in consent decrees.
Some examples of the results: Independent monitors report New Jersey has made “significant
progress,” while Washington, D.C. and Connecticut are still lagging in
important ways.
A somewhat similar effort in Massachusetts also resulted in
a mixed bag. The 55-year-old children's advocacy organization Mass Kids filed a
class-action suit against the state in the 1980s. The group’s executive
director, Jetta Bernier, says the administration of former Gov. Michael Dukakis
settled, but many of the improvements they achieved weren’t lasting.
“After four years of litigation that was very expensive and
time consuming, we learned an important lesson as advocates," Bernier
said. "And that was essentially that you can make gains, but if you can’t
sustain them, you’re back at square one. If the parties are willing to come to
the table and have the mission of child safety first and foremost in their
minds, a lot can be accomplished. I don’t think litigation is necessarily the
way to go."
But rather than talk about this case, Bernier wants the
candidates to detail the ways they plan to improve DCF.
So here are the specifics — or at least a summary of them:
Coakley’s plan to improve the Department of Children and Families includes
creating a separate child protection division to investigate allegations of
child abuse and neglect. Baker says he would perform detailed audits to
identify failing DCF offices, then give those offices new management and
oversight.
Whatever citizens may think of these two plans on will
eventually emerge a winner in the court of public opinion called the November
election.