Transcript Slide 1

WELCOME TO FAMILY
TEAM DECISION
MAKING MEETINGS
THE PURPOSE OF THIS
TRAINING IS. . . .
•
Explain how Family Team Decision-making
Meetings (FTDMs) are part of a larger
initiative to improve child welfare.
•
To describe FTDMs and explain how
professionals & community members can
help at FTDMs.
Explain clarity of roles
Define participation
Importance of confidentiality
Encourage participation
FAMILY TO FAMILY OVERVIEW
Overview and Principals:
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A child’s safety is paramount.
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Children belong in families.
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Families need strong communities.
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Public child-welfare systems need partnerships with the
community and with other systems to achieve strong outcomes for
children
Four Strategies:
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Recruitment, Development & Support
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Building Community Partners
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Family Team Decision-Making Meetings
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Self Evaluation
Strategies in Our Work
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To achieve these changes in the child welfare system, we are
committed to implementing four core strategies:
Recruiting, Developing, and Supporting Resource Families. Finding
and maintaining foster and kinship families who can support children and
families in their own neighborhoods.
Building Community Partnerships. Establishing relationships with a
wide range of community organizations in neighborhoods where referral
rates to the child welfare system are high and collaborating to create an
environment that supports families involved in the child welfare system.
Making Decisions as a Team. Involving not just foster parents and
caseworkers but also youth, birth families and community members in all
placement decisions to ensure a network of support for the children and
for the adults who care for them.
Evaluating Results. Collecting and using hard data about child and
family outcomes to find out where we are making progress and to show
where we need to change.
Family Team Decision Making:
 Improves
the child welfare decision
making process
 Improves safety outcomes for
children
 Increases cooperation
 Decreases the length of time children
stay in foster care
 Improves child welfare's relationship
with the broader community
Definition of FTDM
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A meeting that brings together people
who are involved with the family to
make a decision during the meeting
and with all participants about the
placement of the child.
Types of FTDM’s
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Imminent Risk or Emergency Removal
Scheduled when SW assesses child(ren) at high risk for
abuse/neglect, or within one working day after emergency
removal/placement of child/youth. FTDM team determines whether
agency should file for custody and facilitate placement; or
child/youth can return safely home with services; or voluntary
placement by parents with provision of services and safety plan, etc.
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Placement Move or preservation
Requested before child(ren) moved from one placement to
another. Meeting scheduled when potential disruption of
placement is perceived, safety issues exist or move from
current placement is believed necessary to benefit child/youth.
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Exit from care
Scheduled as soon as risk level reduced and parental progress in
ability to protect and provide safety for child/youth is recognized.
Team determines if child(ren) can safely return to own family, and is
held before overnight visits begin.
FTDM Meeting Structure
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INTRODUCTION
Have team members state who they are and their relation to the family.
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IDENTIFY THE SITUATION
Social worker will explain the situation that brings the team to the meeting
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ASSESS THE SITUATION
Talk about the families strengths and concerns.
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DEVELOP IDEAS
Brainstorming ideas that may elevate the families risk or safety concerns
and possible placement options for the children.
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REACH A DECISION
Determine the placement decision for the children and develop the action
plan.
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RECAP/CLOSING
Go over the decision and action plan with the team and see if any members
have any questions the adjourn the meeting.
WHO PARTICIPATES AND ROLE
Each participant is present either because they were invited or
their participation was agreed to by the birth parent(s), or
because they are involved with the agency team serving the
family.
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Birth parents
Recognized as the expert on their family’s needs and strengths. Presence
and involvement integral to meeting, however with exception of FTDM for
reunification, absence or non-participation would not be cause to cancel
or postpone the scheduled FTDM meeting.
Child(ren)
Children/youth age twelve and over or as developmentally appropriate
should be invited and supported to participate and attend the meeting.
Children younger than age twelve should be considered for participation
on a case-by-case basis.
Extended family and non-relative supports
Invited by parents and/or Children’s Administration as support/ to assist/
be resource to the child and/or parent. Also participate in developing
ideas and reaching a placement decision during the FTDM.
WHO PARTICIPATES AND ROLE
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Caseworker/supervisor
Convener of meeting; content expert; with facilitator, leads
discussion. Responsible for making decision if absence of
consensus
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Guardian ad litem (e.g. CASA or Attorney GAL)
Court-appointed representative responsible for representing
child’s best interest. Attorney GAL always included.
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Attorneys
Attorneys may be invited by the parent; however, these meetings
are not litigious and attorneys do not have to be present.
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Current caregivers—kin, foster, relative
Key team member; assists in providing information regarding
child(ren)’s adjustment, progress, needs; and in developing ideas
and reaching placement decision.
WHO PARTICIPATES AND ROLE
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Facilitator
Trained process expert who works with social worker to lead
group through solution focused process. A full team member who
is responsible for high quality decisions. The FTDM facilitator is
expected to seek review of the social worker’s decision in
situations where consensus is not reached, if he/she is unable to
support the decision due to belief that it puts child at risk of
serious harm or violates law or policy. Provides action plan to
meeting participants.
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Community Members
There are different types of people who represent the community
at meetings.
Three different types of “community”
people at the table
1. Support persons who are invited by the family (as
many as they like and whoever they are.)
2. Service providers, either formal or informal, who
serve the family either presently or potentially (in the
second case, family permission is required at an initial
meeting.) They can be invited by anyone, and can be
community-based or agency-based.
3. Specific “Community Representatives” who are
defined by their identity as a member of the family’s
‘community,’ whether based on neighborhood,
ethnicity, religion, or other connection. They are
invited by agency, based on existing partnership, to
provide support, resource expertise, external
perspective to decision making. Their presence in
meeting must be agreed to by parents.
Some things to know:
Consensus driver
decision-making process
The goal is a consensus decision by the team regarding
placement that protects child(ren), preserves or reunifies
family, and/or prevents placement disruption, however,
consensus does not have to be unanimous. Consensus
allows individual’s ideas and suggestions to be heard and
considered during the FTDM, however Children’s
Administration, by law, is ultimately responsible to make
the decision that protects and provides safety for the
child(ren). The social worker and/or the supervisor will
make the placement decision in absence of consensus.
Some things to know:
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Confidentiality
The confidentiality of information shared at the FTDM meeting is not
guaranteed. Privacy and respect are emphasized, but parents are
informed that information from the meeting may be used for case
planning, in subsequent court proceedings if necessary, and in the
investigation of a new allegation of abuse or neglect should such
information arise.
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Strength based approach
The direction of the FTDM should look at the strengths of the family to
assess if the families strengths can be used to alleviate the safety and risk
issues the family may have.
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Straight talk
It is very important for the team to address all the safety issues. Do not
minimize or omit any significant issues even if it is uncomfortable to do so.
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Debriefing
It is often good to debrief after the end of the meeting to make sure the
team has full understanding of the meeting outcome.
Excluding Participants
Certain circumstances may necessitate that an
individual be excluded from participation in the
FTDM. Those circumstances include:
 Police investigations
 Domestic violence
 No contact order
 It has been determined that participation could
create an unsafe situation for other participants
If exclusion of a participant is necessary, it is
done through consultation with the FTDM
Facilitator.
WRAPPING IT UP
 Questions
 Feedback
and Answers