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About Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 2018)
SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 39, NO. 45 SECTION A AUGUST 10, 2018 $1.00 Two arrested in biz burglary spree Silas Andrew Scott Richard Wayne Berlin By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes Two Keizer men have been arrested in connection with a string of business bur- glaries in the city last month. Since July 3, fi ve Keizer businesses have been burglarized after hours and Keizer police suspect that the spree ex- tended into Salem. On July 3, Mobil Gas Station, 6160 River Road N., and Sonic Drive-In, 3775 River Road N., both reported bur- glaries. On July 6, Burger King, at 2655 Jorie Lane in Keizer Station, reported an- other burglary. On July 24, the opening manager at Dairy Queen, 761 Lockhaven Drive N.E., reported a burglary. A window had suspects forced been shattered to “ We have reason to entry, usually gain entry. breaking glass to Finally, on July believe there may be make entry into 30, Los Dos Her- more suspects involved the businesses,” manos, at 3590 River Road N., and we know the criminal said Deputy Chief Jeff Kuhns, of the was burglarized. activity they engaged in Keizer Police De- A GoFundMe partment. campaign in sup- extends beyond the city On Wednesday, port of the Keizer of Keizer.” Aug. 1, a search family's restaurant warrant was exe- has been launched — Deputy Chief Jeff Kuhns, cuted at 1691 Eu- at bit.ly/2nksLtr. Keizer Police Department gene Court N.E. More than $2,500 in Keizer that had been raised in resulted in the arrests of Richard Wayne seven days with a $12,000 goal. “Each business burglary occurred after Berlin, 30, and Silas Andrew Scott, 27. the business had closed for the day. The Please see SPREE, Page A10 Lady Celts shine on diamond PAGE B1 A new conversation about school safety? By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes A stalwart city volunteer and a candidate for the Keizer city council tried to jump- start a new conversation about school safety at the Keizer City Council meeting Mon- day, August 6. Matt Lawyer, a volunteer on several city committees, and Dan Kohler, a candidate running to replace Bruce An- derson when his term expires in January, presented the fi nd- ings from an online survey Lawyer conducted in recent weeks regarding school safety. While somewhat limited in terms of scope and responses (roughly 420), Lawyer said the overwhelming majority sup- ported increasing school safe- ty through additional school resource offi cers provided by National Night Out PAGE A3 Please see SAFETY, Page A10 Foster system changing from outside and in The Oregon foster care system has some serious issues. That isn't news. But initiatives in the Oregon Legislature and within the Oregon Department of Human Services are attempting to address the problems that have plagued the system for decades. By CASEY CHAFFIN Keizertimes Intern In the state legislature, the past several years have ushered in several reform efforts, often spearheaded by youth working with the Oregon Foster Youth Connection advocacy group. The newest statewide reform was passage of the Foster Sibling Bill of Rights in 2017. At the national level, the Family First Act, passed in February, is now being worked into state priorities. Senator Sara Gelser (D-Corvallis) has made child welfare reform a cen- terpiece of her legislative career and takes the importance of foster youth voices to heart. “Hearing directly from the youth makes so much more sense and has a greater impact than hearing from a professor,” she said. “That lived experience of those kids, that’s the real thing. It’s not anecdotal, it’s real, those kids are speaking truth.” In her role as a child-welfare ori- ented legislator acting in a moment dubbed a “crisis” for foster care by the Oregon Secretary of State, Gelser has co-sponsored and chaired several new initiatives in foster care reform. Last year, the Foster Sibling Bill of Rights was signed into law. The leg- islation mandates the maintenance of sibling bonds after sibling groups en- ter care and was proposed by and lob- bied for by the Oregon Foster Youth By CASEY CHAFFIN Connection. Gelser co-sponsored the Keizertimes Intern bill. The Oregon Department of Hu- The Sibling Bill of Rights is still man Services, under pressure from a in the process of being implemented state audit and from years of unpleas- statewide, but the goal of that legis- ant news coverage, is implementing lation is to put greater emphasis on major reform projects to better serve keeping siblings who enter into care young people in Oregon foster care. together if at all possible, and if a The Secretary of State’s audit re- single placement isn’t possible, then sulted in 24 recommendations to im- to require that prove Oregon’s foster par- child welfare ents provide and foster care avenues for system. Subse- youth to visit quently, Fari- and communi- boz Pakseresht, cate with their the director of siblings living DHS, released elsewhere. a response to When asked the audit, de- The foster care system in Marion County about how tailing plans to is struggling to meet demand. implementa- address all 24 tion of the law recommenda- This is the fi nal part of a continuing series in the Keizertimes investigating the state of is progressing, tions. In the local foster care and shedding light on Gelser said opening let- ways to get involved. there is still ter to the re- work to be sponse, Pak- done to educate those who work in seresht writes, “We need to tackle the DHS and foster families about the ne- root causes of these issues, not just the cessity of maintaining sibling connec- symptoms. That means focusing on tions, both for the youths' sake and for recruiting and retaining foster parents the sake of compliance with the law. and caseworkers, leveraging data and “You have it, it’s out there, but analytics in our strategic planning, and continuing our efforts to better part- Please see OUTSIDE, Page A7 ner with communities and support SUMMER SALES EVENT our existing foster parents.” Many of the 24 recommendations involve collecting better data about those who function in the foster care system—about the youth in care, about foster parents, about casework- ers, and when and why they burn out of their jobs. Paul Bellatty, Director of the Offi ce of Reporting, Research, Analytics, and Implementation, is in charge of over- seeing many of the data-collection efforts. The fi ve research projects cur- rently in progress are: utilizing predic- tive analytics to be more discerning about when to remove a child from their biological home; understanding the makeup of youth in the foster care system to provide better services to those youth; where caseworkers’ work can be streamlined; and recruitment and retention of both caseworkers and foster parents. The fi rst project uses predictive analytics to better understand when a child should be taken from their biological home after a report comes into the child welfare system. Pairing employee judgement calls with data about how other cases similar to the one on the line have panned out will allow DHS to fi gure out which youth should be pulled from their homes. City to water CCMS fields? 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