October IO, 2007 Page A3 il!l |J o rth tn ò © b sertfer Child Custody Eludes Couple Latinos Stung in DMV Crackdown Suspicious applicants are reported to police Even after injury in state foster­ care system by R aymond R endleman T he P ortland O bserver T w o -y e a r-o ld S tep h an ie K untupis rem ained in Legacy Emanuel Hospital more than two months after suffering head inju­ ries while in Oregon Department of Human Services’ foster-care sys­ tem. Herbirth parents. Monique Peals and Steven Kuntupis, lost custody after being arrestedJan. 3 1 for meth­ amphetamine possession, but they have been in drug treatment since then. The tw o contend that their progress in treatment and their ea­ gerness to take care of their own child should merit reunification considering how much trouble DHS has had attracting foster parents. But after their child was seriously injured in state-sponsored foster care, they were horrified to see their child going to another set of foster parents. DHS failed to interview the first set of parents or make sure that they took the required I O-hour train­ ing c o u rse b efo re sending Stephanie to live with them, ac­ cording to reports in the Orego­ nian. The foster parents alsohad crimi­ nal histories, but DHS considered them suitable parents because their crimes did not include homicide or sexual abuse. Other records show they had many false names. As DHS redoubles efforts to re­ cruit foster parents, the newspaper found that O regon's child-protec - photo by R aymond R endi . eman /T he P ortland O bserv er Monique Peals and Steven Kuntupis hold a picture of their two-year- old daughter Stephanie as they await her release from Legacy Emanuel Children's Hospital, more than two months after she suffered head injuries while in state-sponsored foster care. tion agency often skips required monthly visits to foster parents due to lack of funds. Stephanie’s parents claim that their daughter’s injury could have been avoided if the state had re­ sponded to a previous complaint regarding injuries tochildren under the foster couple's care. The parents understand the child-protection agency's predica­ ment, given its limited funding, but argue that it should loosen regula­ tions in minor cases so resources can be left for parents truly unable or unwilling to care for their chil­ dren. Instead, the agency orchestrates a complex series ofhoops for every parent that it determines to be a danger to a child. In the case of Stephanie's parents, the couple attempted to gain trust by follow- ing specific procedures delineated for an outing that apparently be­ came grounds for further restric­ tions. "I'm not getting my daughter back because of a miscommunica­ tion,” says Peals, who is African American. "I feel like my rights are being violated, because I've been staying clean and sober.” Both parents, especially the child's father who has Greek heri­ tage, have begun to see the agency’s practices as stemming from racial prejudice. The agency processes nearly three times as many African-American children as proportional to their numbers in Oregon. “We just want justice for our daughter,” says Kuntupis. “Even though we do everything right, they make us out to be villains.” (AP) — Workers in Oregon's Department of Motor Vehicles have begun calling police when applicants for driver’s licenses have suspicious documents, rather than just turning them away. The intent is to deter people that are trying to create fake identification from shopping among driver's license offices in search of a lax employee. From June through August, 140 people were turned in — about 94 percent of them with Latino names, according to Driver and Motor Vehicle Services records obtained by the Or­ egonian newspaper. In one case, a Clackamas County woman in the country legally on a visa was arrested, but later her birth certificate was found to be legitimate. And in another, it said, a woman in the country illegally presented her Mexican birth certificate and was arrested on forgery ch arg es. P ro secu to rs later dropped both cases. Reporting applicants with suspicious docu­ ments was one of the few alternatives for a division charged with providing valid identifi­ cation but with few tools to curb fraud, said Lorna Youngs, administrator of the agency. Oregon State Police and police in Portland, Beaverton and Albany, who have gotten many of the referrals, report 13 people have been convicted of crimes, and a dozen others await prosecution. Suspects have confessed to buying Social Security cards in Montana, Los Angeles and Hillsboro, police said. Dubious documents in­ clude Social Security cards, bank statements, consulate cards and out-of-state driver's li­ censes, as well as identification from Mexico, Brazil, El Salvador, Costa Rica and other coun­ tries. "Perhaps a large portion of people that are offending with bogus documents happen to be Latinos," said Angel Lopez, attorney for the woman with valid papers in Clackamas County. "But it's equally plausible that Latinos are being ferreted out in the first place because clerks do not understand the validity of documents that seem strange and foreign." David Simon, acting consul of the Mexican Consulate in Portland, said the consulate wants the state agency to rely on it to validate certain forms of identification before calling police. "Before they take steps that affect people's lives, they should look at other solutions and have other methods to verify documents," he said. Youngs said she does not know why so many of those suspected of fraudulent activity by DMV employees appear to be Latino. "If that is an accusation people could level, we would want to address it because that was the last thing that was intended," she said. 3 bedroom home starting at $220,000 Located in North Portland. HOST Home Ownershi a Street at a Tim e All homes are Earth Advantage certified. Price includes kitchen appliances, single car attached garage, window blinds, tank­ less water heater, fencing, cable wiring and front yard landscaping. FREE WASHER AND DRYER MOVE IN READY NOW! Up to $5,000 in closing cost assis­ tance to qualified buyers! Ask about the TEN YEAR property tax abatement!! Deborah Johnson at 503-804-0063 or deborah@hostdevelopment.com or www.hostdevelopment.com CCB#71658 s * e a rth Columbia R iv e r Crossing Open Houses A Annual Wellness Village & Health Disparities Conference Do you drive, walk, bike or take the bus across the © Bridge? ÌA A L n A Healthy Community Starts With You! F Friday Oct 19th, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. SATURDAY, OCT. 2 0 10:00#.zw. - 2:00/>.w. F orm er H ayden Island Yacht C lub 12050 N Jan tzen Drive Lincoln Elementary' 4200 N W Daniels Street Portland, O R Vancouver, W A providers, and policy makers to generate TriM et Bus #6 C - T R A N B us #2 solutions to health disparities in Oregon. Saturday Oct. 20th, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 12th Annual Wellness Village at The Blazers Boys & Girls Club 5250 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. 3rd Annual Health Disparities Conference: We Can Make a Difference Ambridge Event Center (formerly Portland Convention Center) 300 NE Multnomah Street WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17 5 :3 0 - 7:30/>. tw . Free health services and activities at the Wellness Village include: For community members, health care- Health Screenings & Services Secrett: the Impact o f Mental Health on • • • • Health.” • Diabetes • 11:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. Registration (,200 for lunch) • Massage therapy • HIV & STD screenings • And more Keynote address by Dr. Marilyn Gaston G e t th e new est project info rm atio n , look at detailed m aps a n d sketches, an d tell us w h a t you th in k about bridge, tran sit and highw ay im provem ents for 1-5. dedde^oSrfUtUli^ R H L R U J J I IN U /x\ Afrtcon Am«rk or Hootth CooHtton inc i t lv Talk w ith us. Columbia River m r r n f \ m a K hc fidC and Dr. Gayle Porter: “Let't Talk Family • 12p.m. - 12:20 p.m. Introduction Activities & Exhibits • • • • • • 12:20 p.m. -1 :3 0 p.m. Keynote Address bv Dr. Gaston & Dr. Porter and Lunch , , n WEB www.ColumbtaRtvcrCrossing.org PHONE 360-737-2726 or 503-256-2726 A m e ric a n s w ith D isa b ilitie s A c t (ADA) In fo rm a tio n : M aterials can be provided in alternative form ats: large print. Braille, cassette tape, or on computer disk for people with disabilities by calling the Office of Equal Opportunity (0E0) at (360) 705-7097. Persons who are deaf or hard o, hearing may contact 0 E 0 through the Washington Relay Service at 7 11. 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