Contact Us
On This Page
Texas Adoption Resource Exchange (TARE)
- Mail: 701 W. 51st Street
P.O. Box 149030
MC-W-157
Austin, Texas 78714-9030 - Phone: (800) 233-3405
- Web: www.adoptchildren.org
- E-Mail: click here
Contact for questions about approval process to foster and/or adopt
If you are not approved to foster/adopt and have specific questions, contact your regional representative (see chart right). Please note: Using email may produce a quicker response (click on contact name). |
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When You Hear About Children in the News
It is a sad fact that children are too often in the news because they have become victims of abuse, neglect, abandonment, or other terrible crimes. Naturally, these situations create an outpouring of concern from the general public. People of good conscience want to know what will happen to these children after Child Protective Services obtains legal custody. Most of all they want to know what they can do to help.
Many caring adults are motivated to become the foster or adoptive parents of the children they see featured in the news. However, the process for these children is to immediately place them with existing, certified foster parents while their cases are investigated.
Next Steps by Child Protective Services
If these children cannot be returned to their parents the next
alternative is to reunite them with other relatives who may be located
or may come forward. Placing children with people they know is best
because it may help ease the trauma and sense of loss they have experienced.
Sometimes, however, these options are not viable and the court may choose to terminate the birth family’s legal rights. In these cases the children then become available for adoption.
In Texas, more than 60 percent of foster parents adopt the children in their care once the children become legally available for adoption. Therefore, there is a chance that foster parents will adopt some of the children you see in the news.
If the foster family does not wish to adopt them, Child Protective Services will search for other adoptive families and the children may be listed in the Texas Adoption Resource Exchange (TARE). This photo listing makes it possible for any approved adoptive family in the U.S. to submit a form expressing their interest in the children.
How You Can Help
Please review the steps to become a foster or adoptive family
in our “Get
Started” section. There, you will find an overview of the
foster/adopt program, the steps involved, and the requirements to become
a foster or adoptive family. You may also read what others say about
foster care and adoption at our “Success
Stories.”
You may also want to volunteer with our agency. Our web site includes a list of volunteer opportunities, along with a listing of the volunteer coordinators in your region.
You may be interested in making a donation of clothing, school supplies, toys, or other items to help the children you see in the news; or perhaps this child’s needs are being taken care of and you would like to help one of the many other children who are waiting. If so, please contact the Community Initiatives Specialist in your region -- they will connect you with an organization near you that provides resources to our children.
Thank you for your concern and interest in helping “children in the news.” It is individuals and families like you who make a difference in the lives of children who, through no fault of their own, find themselves in very difficult situations and in need of loving and caring families to call their own.
Become a foster or adoptive family
Texas Residents. Submit an interest form found in the Get Started section, or leave a message on the statewide foster/adopt toll-free inquiry line, (800) 233-3405.
Non-Texas Residents. Texas works with interested families from other states. However, we cannot approve or develop home studies on families outside Texas. We encourage you to get approved to foster or adopt within your state first. Find your State Adoption Website.
Inquire about a child you saw in our photo listings
Families with current home studies. Please fill out the child or sibling group interest form found at the bottom of their profile page. It will go directly to their contact.
Families without current home studies. See Become a foster or adoptive family (above).
Ask questions about adoption or foster care
- please send your questions via e-mail -
Questions about... | Contact | Title |
---|---|---|
TARE Children | Susan Hutsko | Texas Adoption Resource Exchange (TARE) Specialist |
AFN Families | Blanca Denise Lance | Adoption Family Network (AFN) Specialist |
Foster Care policy | Denise Lange | Texas Foster Care Specialist |
Foster Care Billing | Texas Foster Care Billing Specialist | |
Adoption policy | Audrey Jackson | Texas Adoption Specialist |
Adoption Subsidy | JoAnn Cajas | Texas Subsidy Specialist |
Child Care Licensing | Kaye Tinsley | Child Care Licensing Specialist |
Kinship Care | Stacy Lake | Kinship Care Specialist |
PAL Services | Gaye Vopat | Preparation for Adult Living (PAL) Specialist |
TARE website |
Note: Children come into the care of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) due to abuse or neglect. Therefore, families who foster or adopt children through the agency should have an understanding or be willing to learn the dynamics of neglect or physical or sexual abuse.
Notice: The assistance and services of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) are available to anyone without regard to age, race, marital status, color, religion, sex, disability, national origin, or political belief. If you feel that you have been discriminated against, you may complain to the Equal Opportunity and Client Compliance Section.