This is safe and supportive place for current or former foster Youth, Foster Parents, and friends.Feel free to browse our site, get great ideas for projects that you can do with the kids, find resources. Ask questions, and maybe even answer some questions yourself. If you're aware of any up coming events/ news articals that can help the Foster care community, Please post away! It would be awesome to get some real life experiences on here from both youth and th parent's perspectives as well.
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Youth Employment Opportunity Program (YEOP
http://www.edd.ca.gov/Jobs_and_Training/Services_for_Youth.htm
Friday, March 22, 2013
VSP is now hiring Seasonal Production Workers & Part-time Mail Openers
Monday, March 18, 2013
APRIL is National Child Abuse Prevention Month !!! Get Involved
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Bright Idea: How to look for signs of sex trafficking when young people come to your organization for shelter and support
Foster Youth Services (FYS)
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Support Parenting Youth in Foster Care.
Young parents in the foster care system face both the
challenges of being in foster care as well as the
challenges of being a young, often single, parent.
Studies of both groups have found that they will
experience higher than average rates of poverty,
unemployment and low educational attainment. While
this has long been the case, the issue of parenting
youth in foster care has become more pressing with the
implementation of extended foster care in California.
Fortunately, California State Senator Leland Yee
has introduced Senate Bill 528, legislation that will
make important changes to how the foster care
system serves parenting youth.
SB 528 does four things:
ensures that there is adequate planning for
pregnant youth in foster care by implementing
specialized conferences that have been piloted
in Los Angeles;
prioritizes children of parenting foster youth for
subsidized child care, allowing the youth to
pursue their education;
ensures that all children in foster care have
access to medically-accurate, age-appropriate
reproductive health education to prevent
unintended pregnancy;
requires the State of California to track the
number of parenting youth in foster care;
currently we do not know how many parenting
youth are in foster care.
SB 528 has the potential to make a real difference
in the lives of young parents in foster care. SB 528
will be heard in the Senate Human Services
Committee on April 9th. To support SB 528, there
are three things you can do:
1. Send a letter of support by March 29th
2. Endorse SB 528, as an individual or an
organization
3. Attend the Senate Human Services hearing on
Tuesday, April 9th
And of course- please forward this information
along to others interested in improving outcomes
for parenting youth in foster care.
SB 528 is sponsored by the Alliance for Children’s
Rights, Children’s Law Center of California, the
John Burton Foundation and Public Counsel.
Free job workshop at SCC
Thursday march, 21. 11:00 am to 1:00 pm
Place: 2115 12th ave North corner of campus.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Private Organizations Fund Foster Youth Scholarships
Youth After Foster Care Statistics (Shocking numbers!!)
~*~Housing options for foster youth~*~
Governor Brown Proposes Elimination of Foster Youth Services
School Based Program-In L.A
Friday, March 8, 2013
Tell us your story.
Please tell your foster care story here and support others as well!
Thursday, March 7, 2013
YOUR FUTURE AFTER 18
Foster care: Advocates demand more oversight on how children enter California system.
These 12-Year-Old Children Are NOT Being Protected !!
100 Strong for Teens in Foster Care
Former foster youth step into the workplace to shadow mentors
What do the young people think? What do the young people need? It's about more than the money, or shifting responsibility from one department to the other.
Sacramento International Airport Is Now Hiring!!
Friday, March 1, 2013
Support Safe Housing for All Youth Aging Out of Foster Care .




by Jim Theofelis, Guest Contributor
KING5.com
Posted on February 28, 2013 at 4:04 PM
Updated yesterday at 4:07 PM
Jim Theofelis is a guest contributor and Executive Director of The Mockingbird Society
Imagine a world where your child is forced to leave your home at age 18. You can no longer provide the love, support and roof you worked so hard for throughout your child’s life. On his or her 18th birthday, your child must instantly transition into adulthood with little more than a suitcase of their belongings. Would your child be ready?
This is the reality for too many of the nearly 10,000 children and adolescents who have been removed from their families and placed in the foster care system because of abuse or neglect. They enter the foster care system in a time of crisis only to be kicked out at age 18, unprepared for the crises to come.
It is unacceptable that in a society where approximately half of all youth live with their parents until age 24, we expect those who have experienced PTSD-inducing childhood trauma to be the ones surviving completely on their own at age 18 – with no family to fall back on when things get rough. And what happens to these youth? Study after study demonstrates that they end up homeless. In its most recent annual survey, the National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH) estimated that one of every eleven youth from foster care will experience being homeless.
The Mockingbird Society, in collaboration with community partners, foster parents and legislators, is laser focused on reversing the longstanding pattern of Washington discharging youth from foster care into homelessness. This pattern is not unique to Washington. In fact, it is a national epidemic. The NAEH has rightly identified stopping foster care systems from this practice as a key strategy for ending youth homelessness in America.
In 2006, Washington established the Foster Care to 21 pilot program thanks to forward-thinking legislators. This program allowed up to 150 youth to remain in foster care to age 21 to pursue their post-secondary education. The evaluation results are consistent with national research as well as what most parents and grandparents might say: youth who had safe housing and other supports did significantly better than those who were literally on their own. Not only did they reduce their negative behaviors such as stealing, early parenting, and reliance on public assistance, but they also increased their academic achievement, gained valuable work experience, and began the successful transition to healthy adulthood. In fact, for every Washington tax dollar invested in this service, our community received a return on investment of $1.35. Ensuring youth have safe housing to utilize as a foundation for achievement makes both fiscal and common sense.
Thanks to the bi-partisan support of our Legislature, we have made great gains ensuring foster youth have the opportunity to remain in foster care to age 21. Currently, youth who pursue their secondary or post-secondary education are eligible to remain in foster care to age 21. But certain populations don’t get this support.
Now, we are asking our elected-leaders and community members alike to provide this opportunity to those youth who need it most. Current proposed legislation (Extended Foster Care HB 1302/SB 5405) would extend this support to the remaining youth who are not able, or not yet ready, for the educational track. This includes youth who have serious medical issues including cognitive or physical disabilities, youth who have significant barriers to employment or academia, and youth who are working part time but still unable to afford full independence.
Earlier this year I testified in favor of HB 1302 with a courageous young man with a seizure disorder which would have qualified him for Extended Foster Care had this legislation been in effect when he turned 18. He modestly said that his condition made things more complicated after leaving care, and that pursuing his education or employment was not a realistic option for him at 18. Soon after his testimony he had a minor seizure, right in the hearing room. Are we really going to kick youth like him out at age 18?
Imagining a world where we cannot provide our children the support they need to be successful, independent adults is a nightmare. The moment the state decides to remove a child from their home, that child becomes our collective responsibility as a community. As parents, our care and support guides our own children safely into young adulthood. Our commitment should be no less for youth in foster care.
I call on legislators and community members alike to fulfill this responsibility and support Extended Foster Care, House Bill 1302 and Senate Bill 5405.