Page 6 M Artin l uther K ing J r . 2019 special edition January 16, 2019 New Lifeline for Foster Youth of Color Agency focuses on culturally-specific care, services by D anny p eterson t he p ortlanD o bserver In response to African American children being overrepresented in Or- egon’s child welfare system, a new foster care agency led by a black ex- ecutive is working to close that gap by providing culturally specific foster care services and recruiting new foster par- ents of color. Incorporated in 2016, and licensed a year ago, Youth Unlimited, Inc. is working with some of the Portland black community’s most vulnerable kids, helping place black foster chil- dren into the hands of highly qualified foster homes of color. The agency considers itself a “treat- ment foster care” organization, where foster parents volunteer at least 10 hours each week to teaching life skills to their foster children. Many of the children come in with behavioral or health issues that need to be addressed, Youth Unlimited found- C ontinueD on p age 15 photo by D anny p eterson /t he p ortlanD o bserver April Johnson (left), the chief executive and founder of Youth Unlimited, a foster care agency that is focused on supporting foster youth of color, and Denzel Davis, one of the agency’s foster dads, pose in front of the agency headquarters in Gresham.