Date Published: 04/24/07
A report urged more states to appoint lawyers for abused or neglected children.
Fifteen states, including Florida, get failing grades on a first-of-its-kind report card assessing the legal representation provided to abused and neglected children as courts make potentially fateful decisions about whether to separate them from their families.
The report, being released at a Capitol Hill briefing today by the Washington-based child advocacy group First Star, is sharply critical of states that do not require all children in these proceedings to be represented by their own attorneys.
It also says more states should join the 17 that require lawyers in these cases to represent the child's expressed wishes and ensure that those preferences are heard in court.
VOICELESS
''In these proceedings the family of a child can be created and or destroyed based on the determination by the court,'' the report says. ``And too often, the child, although most impacted by the court, has the least amount of input.''
Since 1974, Congress has required states to appoint a representative -- often known as a guardian ad litem -- for any child involved in abuse and neglect proceedings. However, states have interpreted the federal law in varying ways; the First Star report said 16 do not require that these children be represented by their own attorneys.
''If you or I have a traffic accident, we can hire an attorney to represent our interests,'' said First Star's chief executive, Deborah Sams. ``If a child has been the victim of abuse and neglect, they deserve the same right.''
The report assigned grades based on several criteria, most importantly whether legal counsel for children is mandatory and whether that attorney is required to advocate for the child's expressed wishes.
Other criteria included requiring specialized training in child-advocacy law, the attorneys' ethical responsibilities and the child's right to attend key court hearings,
Only five states earned 'A' grades: Connecticut, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York and West Virginia.
THE LIST
The 15 states receiving an 'F' were Alaska, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota and Washington.
Whytni Frederick, a First Star lawyer who was principal investigator for the report, stressed that the grades were based on analyzing state laws, not on day-to-day practices.
For example, Rhode Island got a low grade in part because its relevant statute does not specify that the child's representative must be an attorney. But Family Court Chief Judge Jeremiah S. Jeremiah Jr. said the court's ongoing policy is to appoint attorneys.
''It's unfortunate the study didn't involve any research into the day-to-day operations of the state's Guardian Ad Litem Program,'' said Al Zimmerman, press secretary for the Florida Department of Children and Families. ``We're proud of the work these people do and how extremely passionate they are about representing Florida's neglected and abused children.''
The ideal solution, according to Howard Davidson of the American Bar Association, would be for each child to have both an attorney and a nonlawyer advocate.
Davidson acknowledged that mandatory use of lawyers can raise costs.
''But one has to look at the financial impact on all of us,'' he said. ``If these young people don't get the services they need, they're more likely to go into the juvenile justice and prison systems, or on public assistance.''
BY DAVID CRARY
Miami Herald
04/24/07
Miami Herald staff writer Evan S. Benn contributed to this report.