
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Since July, a new streamlined process in Washington allows family members of children in the foster care system to become licensed caregivers. As first reported in the Imprint, the change allows "kinship caregivers" to receive resources that were initially not available to them. The updates made by the state of Washington come after federal policy changes made under the Biden administration to allow states to come up with their own licensing standards. Ruben Reeves is the assistant secretary of licensing for Washington's Department of Children, Youth and Family. Jeanine Tacchini is the agency's deputy assistant secretary of licensing. They both join us to share what this streamlined process has meant for youth in foster care.
By Oregon Public Broadcasting4.5
281281 ratings
Since July, a new streamlined process in Washington allows family members of children in the foster care system to become licensed caregivers. As first reported in the Imprint, the change allows "kinship caregivers" to receive resources that were initially not available to them. The updates made by the state of Washington come after federal policy changes made under the Biden administration to allow states to come up with their own licensing standards. Ruben Reeves is the assistant secretary of licensing for Washington's Department of Children, Youth and Family. Jeanine Tacchini is the agency's deputy assistant secretary of licensing. They both join us to share what this streamlined process has meant for youth in foster care.

38,501 Listeners

6,963 Listeners

9,201 Listeners

4,022 Listeners

25 Listeners

6,444 Listeners

134 Listeners

225 Listeners

113,368 Listeners

32,398 Listeners

4 Listeners

10,347 Listeners

4,211 Listeners

7,255 Listeners

16,474 Listeners

975 Listeners

16,487 Listeners

218 Listeners

10,932 Listeners

1,628 Listeners

614 Listeners