Look at the youngest children in any adoption photolisting. The kids you usually see there are either part of a sibling group, or very disabled. (Example). There are children born with severe disabilities who are given up by their birth parents and are never adopted. (Example) The government pays foster parents to care for them. That’s up to $2,000 per month for care, plus all medical expenses.
Meanwhile, other kids are dying for lack of cheap mosquito nets. This use of money does not seem right to me.
At national level and above, the argument about “use of money” just plain fails. If you’re looking for expenses to cut so that the money could be redirected for glaring needs like mosquito nets, foster care can’t realistically appear on the cut list next to nuclear submarines and spaceflight.
Look at the youngest children in any adoption photolisting. The kids you usually see there are either part of a sibling group, or very disabled. (Example). There are children born with severe disabilities who are given up by their birth parents and are never adopted. (Example) The government pays foster parents to care for them. That’s up to $2,000 per month for care, plus all medical expenses.
Meanwhile, other kids are dying for lack of cheap mosquito nets. This use of money does not seem right to me.
At national level and above, the argument about “use of money” just plain fails. If you’re looking for expenses to cut so that the money could be redirected for glaring needs like mosquito nets, foster care can’t realistically appear on the cut list next to nuclear submarines and spaceflight.
True. I’d be happy to see those things cut as well. Though foster care is funded at a state level, I believe.