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Children's Bureau Safety, Permanency, Well-being  Advanced
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National Resource Center for Family-Centered Practice and Permanency Planning

Who We Are

The National Resource Center for Family-Centered Practice and Permanency Planning focuses on increasing the capacity and resources of the State, Tribal, and other publicly supported child welfare agencies to promote family-centered practices that support the safety, permanency, and well-being of children while meeting the needs of their families. The NRCFCPPP helps States and Tribes to implement strategies to expand knowledge, increase competencies, and change attitudes of child welfare professionals at all levels, with the goal of infusing family-centered principles and practices in their work with children, youth and families who enter the child welfare system. The NRCFCPPP builds states knowledge of foster care issues including placement stability and other foster care issues.

How We Can Help

On Site Training and Technical Assistance
The NRCFCPPP offers on site training and technical assistance to States, Territories, Tribes, and other publicly supported child welfare agencies on a wide range of issues which promote sustainable systemic reform in child welfare. The NRCFCPPP is particularly focused on working with states throughout all stages of the Child and Family Services Reviews (CFSRs), including the development and implementation of the States' Program Improvement Plan (PIP).

Sample areas of technical assistance include:

  • Supporting practices such as family group conferencing and family group decision making that engage families in assessment, case planning, case review, and timely decision making about reunification, adoption, guardianship, kin placement or appropriate use of APPLA
  • Strategies to engage parents, courts, legal personnel and community partners in the provision of safety focused, family-centered services to children, youth, and families
  • Promoting quality goal-oriented worker/child visiting, worker/parent (foster & birth) visiting and goal-oriented visitation between children and youth in care and their parents
  • Permanency planning, effective concurrent planning and goal achievement for all children and adolescents
  • Supporting recruitment and retention of resource families and dual licensure issues
  • Foster care issues including increasing placement stability, reducing disproportional representation of children and youth of color in foster care and development of effective post permanency services
  • Building relationships between tribes and states including promoting cultural competency to increase understanding of Indian culture and improving state compliance with ICWA
  • Facilitating IV-E Agreements between states and tribes
  • Engaging fathers and paternal resources in permanency planning
  • Consideration of sibling issues
  • Working with birth families to promote reunification
  • Service enhancement including developing and strengthening home-based services to preserve families and supporting child welfare practice that addresses substance abuse, domestic violence, and mental health issues for families and health and mental health care issues for children and youth in foster care

Information Services
The NRCFCPPP also offers information services to State, Tribal, and other publicly supported child welfare agencies to promote family-centered practices that support the safety, permanency, and well-being of children while meeting the needs of their families. Information is provided in the following formats:

  • NRCFCPPP Weekly Update
  • NRCFCPPP Web-Based Information Services
  • Publications, Curriculums in English/Spanish
  • NRCFCPPP Quarterly Webcasts
  • NRCFCPPP Semi-Annual Newsletter
  • NRCFCPPP Teleconference Series
  • Response to State/Tribe Requests for Information

For More Information

Address:

Hunter College School of Social Work
129 East 79th Street, Suite 801
New York, NY 10021

Phone:

(212) 452-7043

Fax:

(212) 452-7475

E-Mail:

gmallon@hunter.cuny.edu

Web site:

http://www.nrcfcppp.org

Contact:

Gerald P. Mallon, DSW, Executive Director


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