Oregon lawmakers are considering bills that would expand access to services and support foster kids in the state’s troubled child welfare system. Royce Bowlin is the executive director of the Oregon Alliance, a coalition of 40 child advocacy groups in the state. Those member groups work with OHA, DHS Child Welfare and the Oregon Youth Authority. They are also the second biggest provider of foster care in the state. Bowlin says the state must boost wages to bring down the sky-high turnover rate, which is between 40-60 percent.
We talk to Bowlin about those bills and about SB 707, which would allow all Oregon youth sent across state lines between 2016 and 2019 to access all their relevant records documenting their treatment during that time. In those out-of-state facilities, children and youth experienced abuse, neglect, and sexual assault.