Tuesday, June 25, 2019

For generations, Illinois' child welfare agency has failed to adequately serve Spanish-speaking families

When his son was born in 2014, Jorge Matias held the infant in the hospital and sang him the lullabies he had learned as a child in Guatemala. He teased the boy’s mother that he would raise their son to speak Spanish, and one day the two of them would talk in secret around her.

But the boy was born with heroin in his system and, when it cleared from his body, Illinois child welfare officials placed him in a foster home. To get his son back, Matias had to complete a long list of requirements, including ending his relationship with the boy’s mother, a heroin addict.

More >> For generations, Illinois' child welfare agency has failed to adequately serve Spanish-speaking families

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