A12 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 2018 NEWS STAFF PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Rep. Greg Walden, right, listens to swing shift team leader Richard Lewellen talk about the veneer production line at the Greenwood Resources tree farm Friday, Jan. 22, 2016, near Boardman. Pundits see Walden as safe bet for re-election By PHIL WRIGHT STAFF WRITER EO FILE PHOTO CASA volunteers take the oath of office from Umatilla County District Court Judge Lynn Hampton in August at the Umatilla County Courthouse in Pendleton. Many ways to help foster kids By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER Whether opening up your home or being their cheerleader, there are many ways to help foster children. Children in foster care have varying needs, from a temporary place to stay to therapy for emotional and behavioral issues. Some people help fos- ter kids as Court-Appointed Special Advocates, or CASAs. These volunteers will spend time with and get to know a foster child, serv- ing as a friend and stabiliz- ing force for them. CASAs will speak on the child’s behalf at court hearings, based on the time they’ve spent with them. “By visiting with the kids, it gives us the ability to advocate for what’s in their best interest,” said Judi Allison, a recently sworn-in advocate. “Most likely they’ll say, ‘I want to be with mom or dad.’ That may not be in their best interest. But we have that time to be able to invest with them.” In Umatilla and Mor- row counties last year, there were 83 foster youth paired with 42 special advocates. Once a child enters foster care, they will be assigned an advocate who is usually with them all the way until they find a permanent home. “Even if a kid moves from home to home, their CASA is ideally consis- tent,” said Jesus Rome, executive director of Uma- tilla and Morrow County CASA. The advocate meets with the child at least once a month, whether at their home, school, or at the child’s extracurricular activ- ities. They also communi- cate with the other people in the child’s life — foster par- ents, caseworkers, teachers. “It removes that sense that they’re a number,” said Maureen McGrath, direc- tor of Umatilla Morrow Head Start, CASA’s parent organization. Steve Frazier, an advo- cate in Hermiston, noted that often they are the only consistent person to spend time with a child through the life of their case. “There’s a lot of pieces to the puzzle,” he said. “We have the opportunity to make sure things are going OK.” Advocates can choose if there’s a certain age group they like to work with. Fra- zier said he tends to work with teen boys, while Alli- son is currently working with several elementary school children. CASAs can’t trans- port children, but can meet them at their foster homes, school, or at sporting events or activities. While many CASAs are over 55, Rome said anyone can do it, whether a young, single person or a retiree. CASA is offering a training starting April 2. Deeper needs The Department of Human Services contracts with various behavioral rehabilitation services for some of the higher-needs children. One program is Therapeutic Foster Care, run through the coordi- nated-care organization Greater Oregon Behavioral Health, Inc. Children will be referred to that program if they meet the DHS defi- nition of having a “debili- tating psychosocial or emo- tional disorder.” Adam Rodakowski, director of the program for GOBHI, said the TFC pro- gram faces many of the same challenges as DHS, including recruiting par- ents willing to take on the responsibility of a high- needs child. Throughout their service area, which includes Eastern Ore- gon, the Columbia-Pacific region and parts of the Wil- lamette Valley, Rodakowski said there are about 25 chil- dren in the program, and 23 therapeutic foster care families. He said they’ve found the most success recruit- ing through current foster parents. Once a child is in the program, Rodakowski said they typically stay anywhere from six to 18 months, but there is no maximum length of time. Children in the program usually have some sort of treatment plan, which par- ents help facilitate. The goal, he said, is to transition the child out of the program. “That doesn’t necessar- ily mean into a different foster home,” he said. “It may mean parents choose to adopt the child.” He said one component of training foster parents receive is in collaborative problem solving, an inter- vention strategy which is taught by GOBHI employee Kate O’Kelley. The method is used in foster care as well other set- tings, such as school and juvenile justice. “The primary philoso- phy is that people will do well if they can, and that if people are struggling, it’s because there’s some situ- ation that’s hard for them,” O’Kelley said. “They don’t have the [cognitive] skills in that moment.” O’Kelley said collabora- tive problem solving helps children develop those skills by shifting away from blaming them for their behavior, and instead try- ing to help them understand why something may trigger them. They work with chil- dren on behaviors ranging from aggressive outburts to understanding boundaries to impulse control. “We give them sim- ple prompts — OK, you’re mad. What made you mad?” O’Kelley said. “Building new cognitive skills — it does take time.” Mounting caseloads keep DHS workers busy By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER Child welfare casework- ers often spend money out of their own wallets, hours after the work day ends. “I remember once I took a kid out of detention, and had to take him to Portland for drug and alcohol rehabil- itation,” said Jody Frost, the supervisor for DHS District 12, which oversees Child Welfare for the Department of Human Services in Uma- tilla and Morrow counties. “He came out wearing an orange jumpsuit. I had to take him and buy him clothes.” DHS workers face a chal- lenging job — helping chil- dren and families in peril, while managing ever-grow- ing caseloads. The state’s foster care sys- tem and DHS recently came under scrutiny, An audit of the state’s foster care system released in January said the system’s needs are mounting, and criticized practices such as case workers housing fos- ter children in motel rooms. The audit made recommen- dations to DHS, including organizing its management system and finding a con- sistent plan to recruit foster parents. Local case workers said they face the same issues as the state — a dearth of foster parents, growing caseloads, and a lack of time to recruit new employees. There are 5,256 foster homes statewide, including 106 in Umatilla and Morrow counties. Of those, 60 are rel- atives or somehow known to the foster children. She said DHS always attempts to place children with family members, or with someone significant in their lives, such as a coach or a neighbor. According to a DHS report, a total of 11,645 chil- dren statewide were in fos- ter care for at least one day in fiscal year 2017. Of those, just over 4,000 entered the system that year. Frost said the national average for caseworkers is eight new cases per month, while in her district it’s 14 to 16. “They’re doing their best to ensure the child is safe while getting assigned new cases all the time,” Frost said. A case can take any- where from a few months to a few years to be resolved, and case worker is only reim- bursed for $150 per child for the life of the case, no matter how long. “Caseworkers spend so much money out of their pockets,” she said. “They buy kids lunch, haircuts.” She said the most needed STAFF PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Monica Gilbertson, with the Morrow County Department of Human Resources, looks through donated foster care bags as Ron Benage drops off more donations from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Hermiston on Tuesday in Boardman. donations are hygiene items, baby wipes and diapers. Frost said there are never enough general applicants to be foster parents. According to the DHS audit, because of that short- age, many longtime foster families have been asked to take care of more children than they can handle. “And very few are willing to take in teens,” said Marvin Hamilton, a DHS certifier. Certifiers work with families on adoptions, and to make sure a family is ready to fos- ter or adopt. Many children enter fos- ter care with high emo- tional needs, often the result of abuse or neglect. Those challenges can deter poten- tial foster parents, Frost said. Children with severe psycho- social or emotional disorders often need to be placed in behavioral rehabilitation ser- vices such as therapeutic fos- ter care. While there is some reim- bursement for foster parent- ing, the audit said the recent- ly-revised payment model is still inadequate, granting fos- ter parents roughly $26.50 per day. There are other options to help foster children and families outside of full-time care, Hamilton said, includ- ing weekend and respite care. Most national pun- dits see Republican Greg Walden as a lock to win an 11th term representing Oregon’s 2nd District in the U.S. House. Political analysts Char- lie Cook, Larry J. Sabato and Nat Gonzales all have Walden rated as “safe” for reelection. Yet the grip he and the GOP have on the district shows signs of slipping. The district is larger than 29 states and primar- ily conservative. But Ore- gon political analyst Bill Lunch said that has not curtailed energized Demo- crats this year, with seven vying in the primary for their party’s nomination to challenge Walden. “I think that reflects the level of unhappiness among active voters with the Trump administra- tion,” Lunch said. “And we’re seeing that all over the country.” The U.S. has about 7,400 state legislative seats, and many of those state level offices are effec- tively held by one party, he said, predominately Republican or Democrat. “But we’re seeing Democrats filing for lots and lots of seats, which (had been) effectively out of reach for them,” he said. Republicans and polit- ical insiders considered the 18th congressional dis- trict in Pennsylvania out of reach for Democrats. The Cook Political Report even rated it the same as Oregon’s 2nd — solidly Republican. Yet Dem- ocrat Conor Lamb then squeaked out a win in the March 13 special election against Republican Rick Saccone in a race where there was no incumbent. The Pennsylvania 18th consists largely of south- ern suburbs of Pittsburgh, but there are rural swaths on its eastern side. Voters in the rural parts shifted Democrat, but Lunch said that shift away from Republicans in the subur- ban areas was “massive.” Using the 18th as a model for what could take place in the Oregon 2nd, Lunch said Walden could run into trouble in parts of Bend and Medford. And Hood River, Walden’s home county, is firmly blue. The latest voter reg- istration statistics from the Oregon Secretary of State show Dems have almost twice the votes there as Republicans. Walden is less likely to run into trouble around Klamath Falls in the south or Pendleton to the north. But a “slow transforma- tion” is coming over the district, Lunch said. The high-tech companies set- ting up shop along the Columbia River bring employees that tend to be Democrats. Local govern- ments, including Uma- tilla and Morrow coun- ties, want those workers to move into the Oregon, buy homes and get on the tax rolls. Hood River County, then, could be on the lead- ing edge of change or just an outlier as other coun- ties in the Gorge remain Republican strongholds. Morrow County Com- missioner Jim Doherty said he also sees politi- cal change in the district and thinks a Democrat could get some traction. Walden’s views still repre- sent the majority of voices in the district he said, but this year his margin of vic- tory could drop to 60 per- cent, maybe lower. Lunch said Walden’s margin taking a signifi- cant drop would not be a surprise, but “it is a real stretch to see him losing.” Walden’s closest mar- gin was 61.2 percent in 1998, the first time he ran for Congress. Two years ago he won with almost 72 percent. A 12-point drop would show significant erosion of support, maybe enough to embolden Dem- ocrats and donors in the next election cycle. Democrats nationwide have the opportunity to pick up as many as 110 seats in the U.S. House. But Lunch said that’s not going to happen. “I can see them picking up 50 seats,” he said, in a wave akin to 2010 when Republicans gained 61. In 80-90 percent of the races, he said, Republicans have better funding. Fed- eral Elections Commis- sion campaign financial summaries show Walden has more than $3.1 mil- lion cash, while Jamie McLeod-Skinner leads the Democrats with just $37,000. Some of the Dems have not even met the $5,000 threshold to report finances. Walden has spent more than $930,000 already this election cycle, about six times as much as the entire field of seven Democrats has raised. Walden came into office as a moderate Republican, but how moderate he is today is debatable. Walden is firmly ensconced in Republican leadership, supporting both House Speaker Paul Ryan and President Donald Trump. Walden supported the heath care bill that dropped coverage for pre-existing conditions after he said at Oregon townhalls that he would not. That kind of back-track- ing should give challeng- ers openings to attack. But Umatilla County Commis- sioner George Murdock said the emotions sur- rounding the health care vote along with tax reform have subsided to some degree, even if the issues have yet to play out. Mur- dock, who is plugged into the area’s politics, said the race has one overriding theme: No one is talking about it. For challengers, silence does not bode well, and Walden’s name recog- nition alone gives him a huge advantage in the race. Walden’s seniority and leadership position in the House also help him to deliver on key issues, such as more funding for wildfires in the bud- get that passed the House on Thursday. And the needs in the district vary so much from one area to the next that single-issue candidates cannot cobble together a majority.