PH as a Community Resource - "Prosecutor: Mother of 5-year-old boy found buried in yard refused to get medical treatment for him"
PH as a Community Resource - "Prosecutor: Mother of 5-year-old boy found buried in yard refused to get medical treatment for him"
Author: News 5 Staff, Homa Bash
CLEVELAND – The mother accused of killing her 5-year-old old son and burying his body in the backyard faced a judge for the first time Friday.
Jordan Rodriguez disappeared nearly three months ago but until this week, no one seemed to notice.
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Now, 34-year-old Larissa Rodriguez will be spending Christmas behind bars, charged with murder.
The medical examiner positively identified Jordan’s body on Friday and said the boy was buried in bags in the ground. Cause of death has not yet been determined.
Larissa was stone-faced as she faced a murder charge. Bond was set at $1 million. Her attorney argued that wasn’t fair.
“Since the state doesn’t have any indication really of what happened, we don’t even know if murder is the correct charge,” the attorney said.
Larissa has no prior criminal history.
The mother of nine has been held in police custody since Monday. The boy’s remains were found in her backyard Tuesday.
The prosecutor’s office is claiming she failed to get medical attention for her special needs son until his condition worsened.
“Even though it was readily apparent he needed medical attention,” the prosecutor said.
Records show Jordan died on Sept. 22. He had not been reported missing.
Larissa is expected to be back in court next Friday.
Most of her other children will be spending the holidays in foster care. She is currently pregnant with her 10th child.
There are many resources available for families in need of help across Cleveland.
One of them is the Providence House, a nonprofit emergency crisis nursery on the city’s west side.
The Providence House takes in children from newborn to 10-years-old while they work with parents who have come in voluntarily. It is a free service. The goal is to help before abuse or neglect can begin — and to keep families together, instead of children ending up in foster care.
“If they knew they could just get connected to different resources in the community, and ask for that help, would things have turned out differently?” said Kayla Naticchioni with Providence House.
How did Jordan’s disappearance go unnoticed for nearly three months? It is one of the many unanswered questions in this case.
According to the Cuyahoga County missing persons database, there are currently 253 people missing in the county. Thirty four of those people are listed as “unidentified remains.”
According to Cleveland Police’s database, there are roughly 100 missing persons cases open.
There is also the tragic case of a 4-year-old boy whose bones were discovered in a bag on Longmead Ave. in September. Investigators have not been able to find anyone reported missing matching his description in state or national databases.
FirstEnergy Foundation Surprises 40 Non-Profit Agencies in Ohio with $1,000 Gifts of the Season Donations
FirstEnergy Foundation Surprises 40 Non-Profit Agencies in Ohio with $1,000 Gifts of the Season Donations
AKRON, Ohio, Dec. 18, 2017 /PRNewswire/ — The FirstEnergy Foundation has presented surprise Gifts of the Season of $1,000 each to 40 non-profit agencies working to make lives better in Ohio communities where FirstEnergy has utilities or power plants.
“We’re pleased to provide this surprise support to so many agencies throughout Ohio, particularly during the holidays, when the services they provide to the least fortunate are often most vital,” said Dee Lowery, president of the FirstEnergy Foundation. “The winners were chosen secretly by FirstEnergy employees, who identified organizations in their areas that do extraordinary work to make our communities better. Our goal was to focus on programs that enhance children’s services, or provide additional support for organizations facing a critical need during the holiday season.”
Recipients in Ohio Edison’s service area are:
- El Centro, Lorain – Provides mental health and other social services to Hispanic families.
- Hattie Larlham, Mantua – Enhances quality of life for people with disabilities and their families.
- Hearts for Music, Mantua – Provides those with special needs the opportunity to create and perform music.
- Inspiring Minds, Warren – Engages and inspires youth to expand their potential through education and life-changing experiences.
- Nehemiah Partners of Sandusky, Sandusky – Empowers and educates children to reach their God-given potential through Christian programming.
- Nord Center, Lorain – Provides culturally competent and evidence-based behavioral healthcare services.
- North End Community Improvement Collaborative, Mansfield – Connects residents of north Mansfield with local services and advances economic development.
- On-The-Rise, Springfield – Serves at-risk youth suffering from family, social educational or behavioral issues.
- Renaissance Performing Arts Association, Mansfield – Presents and produces live performances and symphonic music to enhance quality of life.
- Rocking Horse Community Health Center, Springfield – Offers facilities where residents can improve their physical, emotional and mental health.
- The Purple Cat, Youngstown – Provides day programming alternatives for adults with special needs.
- Turning Point, Marion – Provides counselling, shelter and other support to victims of domestic abuse.
Recipients in The Illuminating Company’s Service area are:
- The Black Professionals Association Charitable Foundation, Cleveland – Offers programming and resources for professional development leadership, coaching and mentoring.
- Catholic Charities of Ashtabula County, Ashtabula – Provides food and gifts to the poor, homebound and disabled this holiday season.
- Geauga Faith Rescue Mission, Chardon – Offers services for the homeless of Geauga County.
- Karamu House, Cleveland – The nation’s oldest African-American performing arts theater offers academic programming and economic development opportunities.
- Open Doors Academy, Cleveland – Offers educational support systems for at-risk middle and high school students to break the cycle of poverty.
- Greater Cleveland Youth for Christ, Cleveland – Embraces youth of all backgrounds who may be engaging in at-risk behaviors to help them make better life choices.
- Ronald McDonald House, Cleveland – Allows families to stay together during their children’s health care, which promotes better outcomes and better healing.
- Senior Transportation Connection, Cleveland – Serves those with mobility or other age-related difficulties with transportation across Cuyahoga County.
- DDC Clinic – Center for Special Needs Children, Middlefield – Supports those with special needs with medical research and affordable care.
- The Hubbard House Underground Railroad Museum, Ashtabula – Celebrates Ashtabula County’s civil rights history through programs and curated exhibits that are accessible for all.
- Providence House, Cleveland – Builds safer communities by addressing the cycle of abuse and strengthening neighborhoods and families.
- Prevent Blindness, Northeast Ohio Chapter, Cleveland – Offers early detection of possible vision problems through screening and provides education to the community to prevent blindness.
Recipients in Toledo Edison’s service area are:
- Hospice of Northwest Ohio, Perrysburg – Provides compassionate end-of-life care for terminally ill patients.
- Cherry Street Mission Ministries, Toledo – Provides meals, shelter and spiritual programs for the poor and homeless.
- Four County Family Center, Four County ADAMH’s Board, Toledo – Provides counselling, home care, outreach, advocacy and prevention education for families in the four-county area.
- Lott Industries, Toledo – Serves individuals with developmental disabilities with educational and vocational training services.
- Toledo Northwestern Ohio Food Bank, Toledo – Obtains and distributes food to the needy in eight northwestern Ohio counties.
- Prevent Blindness Northwest Ohio, Toledo – Provides vision screenings, eye health and safety programs and other services to help prevent blindness.
- Bittersweet Farms, Whitehouse – Works to positively impact the lives of those with autism and those whose lives they touch.
- Camp Courageous, Whitehouse – Provides outdoor educational experiences, education, advocacy and support to enrich the lives of people with developmental disabilities.
- Ronald McDonald House Charities of Northwest Ohio, Toledo – Enriches the lives of children with medical issues by providing comfort, care and support for their families.
- YMCA of Greater Toledo, Toledo – Builds strong communities through youth development, healthy living and social responsibility programs.
- Hayes Presidential Library & Museum, Fremont – Enriches lives through historical preservation of the President Rutherford B. Hayes home and museum.
- SeaGate Foodbank, Toledo – Provides food and other services free-of-charge to those in need.
Recipients near the W.H. Sammis Plant in Stratton, Ohio, include:
- YWCA Steubenville, Steubenville – Offers programs for women that promote peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all.
- Ohio Valley Health Center, Steubenville – Provides health care services to all in the region, regardless of their ability to pay.
- A Caring Place Child Advocacy Center, Wintersville – Serves abused and neglected children and their families with prevention programs and medical care, free of charge.
- ALIVE Shelter, Steubenville – Offers emergency shelter, a 24-hour hotline and other services to those victimized by domestic violence and their children.
These gifts are part of the FirstEnergy Foundation’s “Gifts of the Season” campaign, which includes a total of 132 $1,000gifts given to 132 non-profits across the company’s six-state service area and in communities where the company does business.
Ohio Edison, The Illuminating Company and Toledo Edison are subsidiaries of FirstEnergy Corp. The W.H. Sammis Plant is owned by FirstEnergy Generation, LLC., a subsidiary of FirstEnergy.
The FirstEnergy Foundation is funded solely by FirstEnergy Corp. (NYSE: FE) and provides support to non-profit, tax-exempt health and human services agencies; educational organizations; cultural and arts programs and institutions; and civic groups in areas served by FirstEnergy’s 10 electric operating companies and in areas where the company conducts business.
Kevin Zeitler’s battle through thumb injury exemplified why he’s emerged as ‘exceptional leader’
Kevin Zeitler’s battle through thumb injury exemplified why he’s emerged as ‘exceptional leader’
Author: Patrick Maks
CLEVELAND — Kevin Zeitler wasn’t even halfway into the Browns’ season opener against Pittsburgh when he suffered a thumb injury so significant that the right guard needed surgery hours after the game.
But Zeitler, who came to Cleveland last spring in free agency after four seasons with the Bengals, played the next week in Baltimore and has yet to miss a snap this season.
Widely viewed as one of the NFL’s best right guards, he joined the Browns as a building block amid a comprehensive reshaping. So there was no way, Zeitler said, he was going to miss a play.
“We’re in the facility every day working hard, you don’t want to let anyone down,” he said. “You want to be out there playing with your teammates and doing whatever you can to help your team win. You don’t think about, you kind of just like ‘OK, let’s go, let’s do it.’”
For that, Zeitler was voted by his teammates to receive the 2017 Ed Block Courage Award, which is given annually to a member of each of the 32 NFL teams who exemplifies the qualities of Ed Block, the former head athletic trainer of the Baltimore Colts, based on courage, compassion, commitment and community.
Zeitler shrugged off the honor and pointed to teammates such as left guard Joel Bitonio, who has bounced back from a 2016 foot surgery.
“I was surprised. I guess in my mind, yes, I hurt my thumb and needed surgery and all that but there’s so many other guys who have gone through things that I would consider worse,” he said. “I’m honored but I was surprised.”
Zeitler, who has started 71 of 72 games in Cincinnati, has started all 12 games for the Browns this season and been an important veteran presence on a team that lost Pro Bowl left tackle Joe Thomas to a season-ending triceps injury earlier this year.
“Kevin is an exceptional leader on our team through the example he provides his teammates of consistently doing things the right way with his consummate professionalism, steady demeanor and dedication to his craft,” coach Hue Jackson said. “Kevin will and has done everything in his power to be on the field battling alongside his teammates, and we are fortunate to have someone of his caliber represent the Browns both on and off the field.”
To be sure, Zeitler, a former first-round pick out of Wisconsin, said playing through his thumb injury was a new and challenging experience.
“I’ve never needed surgery before in my life. I’ve never not been able to use my hand before and, obviously as an offensive lineman, hands are a pretty big deal,” he said.
“I think the biggest thing was I didn’t have too much time to think about it, we had to get it done and then it was game day right away again. I think kind of not thinking about it helped and you just go out there and make it work.”
Zeitler was presented the award at the Providence House Annual Deck the House Benefit Auction at FirstEnergy Stadium, where Annie and Joe Thomas served as honorary co-chairs for the event. Providence House, which fights to end child abuse and neglect by protecting at-risk children, empowering families in crisis and building safe communities for every child, has been the Cleveland Browns Courage House for Children since 1999.
“The Providence House is a great organization I’ve been involved with for a long time here, they do a great job of offering resources to babies and others in certain situations where a mother’s been taken away from her baby or vice versa and it provides excellent resources,” Thomas said.
The Providence House cares for roughly 400 children from the Greater Cleveland area, is privately funded and, as such, Tuesday night’s fundraiser is key in supporting the organization’s mission.
“Tonight’s event Deck the House is our No. 1 fundraiser, we’re entirely privately funded so it’s huge. But what’s really cool for us is how our mission and the focus of the Cleveland Browns come together,” said Providence House CEO & President Natalie Leek-Nelson.
“Year over year, we come together and watch it get bigger and better every year … Everyone rallying around our community’s kids is incredible and tonight is a huge fundraiser for us, but I also think it’s a huge message to the community that our organization and this team are here for our kids.”
Providence House collects Christmas gifts for Cleveland abuse victims
Providence House collects Christmas gifts for Cleveland abuse victims
Author: Alyson Bruner, Reporter
CLEVELAND, OH (WOIO) –
As Christmas approaches, some kids in Northeast Ohio may not even be waking up in their own home or have gifts under the tree.
Some of those kids live at the Providence House in Cleveland, a shelter committed to child abuse prevention and family preservation.
Members from the Providence House are working hard to collect gifts for around 400 kids.
If you are interested in donating, you can find the items that Providence House are looking for by clicking here.
Providence House Celebrates 22nd Annual Deck the House Auction Benefit Presented by the Cleveland Browns
Providence House Celebrates 22nd Annual Deck the House Auction Benefit Presented by the Cleveland Browns
Kick-Off the Holidays with an Evening of Mingling, Shopping & Supporting Providence House Babies and Children at the 22nd Annual Deck the House Auction Benefit Presented by the Cleveland Browns
What:There is only one holiday party in town where you can kick-off your holiday shopping, mingle with Cleveland Browns players, and enjoy breathtaking views of Cleveland, all while supporting children and families in crisis: The Providence House 22nd Annual Deck the House Auction Benefit presented by the Cleveland Browns. Over 700 guests are expected to attend and offer their support to the babies and children protected by Providence House this holiday season. Step into a festive holiday atmosphere at the City View Lounge at FirstEnergy Stadium, complete with an elegant dinner buffet and professionally decorated Christmas trees while listening to live performances by the North Coast Men’s Chorus. With hundreds of items, the silent auction offers guests the opportunity to check off their holiday shopping list with something for everyone.
Special highlights of this year’s silent and live auction include:
- The Dolan’s “Owner’s Loge” for 32 guests at an Indians game
- “Make Your Own Ice Cream Flavor” party for 5 at Mitchell’s Ice Cream with celebrity ice cream makers Joe and Annie Thomas
- Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers autographed guitar
- Autographed Cleveland Cavaliers #23 LeBron James 16×20 photo
A special feature of the evening will be the presentation of the 2017 Ed Block Courage Award to a Cleveland Browns player that has been voted by his teammates as a community role model and a player exemplifying professionalism, strength, and dedication.
Who: Honorary chairs Annie & Joe Thomas, #73, Browns Offensive Lineman
Celebrity Emcees Joe Thomas and Andrea Vecchio
Where: FirstEnergy Stadium, Home of the Cleveland Browns City View Lounge100 Alfred Lerner Way
Complimentary valet parking at the University Hospitals Southeast gate and entrance
When:Tuesday, December 5 5:30-9:30 p.m.
Media passes available at the registration table. Please check in for pass.
About Providence House
Providence House – Ohio’s first Crisis Nursery – has cared for over 8,000 families and children in crisis, living for days, weeks, or years without the support they need to help get them back on their feet. For 36 years, Providence House has protected children, supported families in crisis, and strengthened communities for every child. Their nationally recognized, evidenced-based model prevents child abuse and neglect, reduces system involvement and foster care placements, and keeps families safe, stable, and together. Visit provhouse.org for more information.
Providence House Receives Certification from the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services
Providence House Receives Certification from the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services
Providence House Receives Certification from the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services
CLEVELAND– Providence House, a non-profit crisis nursery providing emergency shelter and services to children at risk of abuse and neglect, has received a 3-year certification to provide mental health services for children and their parents at Providence House by the Ohio Department of Mental Health & Addiction Services (OMHAS). Providence House has been certified specifically to offer the following mental health services: Behavioral Health Counseling & Therapy, Mental Health Assessment, and Community Psychiatric Supportive Treatment (CPST).
“Providence House is proud to be an OMHAS certified provider,” said Natalie Leek-Nelson, CEO and president of Providence House. “We know from our nearly 40 years of working with children and families in our community that mental health, trauma, and other issues related to behavioral health are oftentimes a key component of a family’s issues and struggles. By providing these essential services to our families at Providence House, we are helping support them as they work to get back on their feet and reunite with their children.”
The OMHAS certification is in addition to the 3-year accreditation from the Council on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) in spring of 2016. These accreditations and certifications represent the quality and commitment to providing the highest standard of care, programs, and services to the children and families that Providence House serves.
For more information about Providence House and their work, visit provhouse.org.
About Providence House
Providence House – Ohio’s first Crisis Nursery – has cared for over 8,000 families and children in crisis, living for days, weeks, or years without the support they need to help get them back on their feet. For 36 years, Providence House has protected children, supported families in crisis, and strengthened communities for every child. Their nationally recognized, evidenced-based model prevents child abuse and neglect, reduces system involvement and foster care placements, and keeps families safe, stable, and together. Visit provhouse.org for more information.
WTAM hosts ‘Stuff the Truck' for Providence House
WTAM hosts ‘Stuff the Truck' for Providence House
Author: WKYC Staff
CLEVELAND — The community is joining together again to lend a hand toward a good cause.
WTAM 1100 is hosting a “Stuff the Truck” charity drive for Providence House Tuesday and Wednesday from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m.
CLICK HERE to see the Providence House wish list.
Donations can be made at WTAM’s studios at 6200 Oak Tree Blvd. in Independence.
According to their Web site, Providence House protects at-risk children and supports families through crisis, strengthening communities to end child abuse and neglect.
Cleveland Indians wives maintain strong involvement in local charities
Cleveland Indians wives maintain strong involvement in local charities
Author: Marc Bona, cleveland.com
Providence House to Host Free, Fun-Filled Christmas in July Community Event
Providence House to Host Free, Fun-Filled Christmas in July Community Event
Providence House to Host Free, Fun-Filled Christmas in July Community Event
Special appearance from Santa Claus
WHAT:What is more fun for celebrating the holidays without the snow and cold? Providence House is celebrating the joy of the holidays with their first Christmas in July. This is a FREE, family-friendly event open to the community. Activities are planned throughout the day including face-painting, sand art, balloon animals, games, crafts, refreshments, and a visit from the big man himself, Santa Claus. Suggested in-kind donations to Providence House are welcomed, but not required for admission to the event. Donations include canned fruit and vegetables, 100% fruit juice and paper towels.
WHERE: Providence House 2050 West 32nd Street Cleveland, Ohio 44113
WHEN: Sunday, July 23 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
About Providence House
Providence House – Ohio’s first Crisis Nursery – has cared for over 8,000 families and children in crisis, living for days, weeks, or years without the support they need to help get them back on their feet. For 36 years, Providence House has protected at-risk children, empowered families in crisis, and built safer communities for every child. Their nationally recognized, evidenced-based model prevents child abuse and neglect, reduces system involvement and foster care placements, and keeps families safe, stable, and together. Visit provhouse.org for more information.
Testimony on H.B. 49: Main Operating Budget for FY 2018-2019 Senate Finance: Health and Medicaid Subcommittee
Testimony on H.B. 49: Main Operating Budget for FY 2018-2019 Senate Finance: Health and Medicaid Subcommittee
Natalie A. Leek-Nelson, President and CEO
Providence House – A Crisis Nursery – Cleveland, OH – Cuyahoga County
Chairman Hackett, Vice Chair Tavares and members of the Subcommittee; thank you for allowing me to offer testimony on House Bill 49.
My name is Natalie Leek-Nelson, President and CEO of Providence House, a crisis nursery in Cleveland, Ohio that has supported over 8,000 children and families in crisis since 1981. I have served as the head of the organization for 16 years and bring over 25 years of experience in corporate and non-profit management to my role.
As Ohio’s first crisis nursery, Providence House has been licensed by the State of Ohio as a Crisis Care Facility since 1990 through the Department of Job and Family Services. Today we provide free, voluntary, non-custodial care for up to 30 children at time, newborn to age 10. Annually we receive over 1,000 inquiries for admission and are serving nearly 400 children from 200 families who are in crisis – and our waiting list continues to grow – nearly 100 children just last year. In Lorain County, Blessing House is the only other currently licensed crisis nursery in Ohio.
We are grateful to have received state support in the last two budget cycles. This has allowed existing crisis nurseries to protect children in situations where they were at risk of abuse or neglect, due to homelessness or unsafe housing, having a caregiver in need of medical or mental health services, substance abuse treatment, or families struggling with poverty, and community or domestic violence. We are helping families who are impacted by many of the state’s greatest challenges, such as the opioid epidemic and Ohio’s high infant mortality rate.
As just one example of our intervention and success with families facing these overwhelming challenges, I want to share the story of Paul, Jr. with you. Baby Jr. was born premature at 29 weeks and opiate addicted. His mother, who used throughout her pregnancy, refused treatment and walked away from her baby. Baby Jr.’s father stepped in and was supported by Providence House while his son stayed with us after he was weaned off of the opiates in the hospital. We provided medical support and loving care to help Baby Jr. who was not only premature, but also failure to thrive and had a gastrointestinal disorder which made him difficult to feed. While he stayed with us, we also helped his daddy, a first-time single father, learn nurturing parenting techniques, infant care practices, and medical skills so that he could care for his fragile baby. They were successfully reunified after 90- days, participated in our Aftercare Program, and remain safe, healthy and together today. Baby Jr.’s outcome could have been very different, and likely another tragic statistic in our State’s infant mortality and opioid outcomes, without our intervention.
At Providence House, we focus on proven prevention and early intervention services to strengthen and preserve families, support healthy child development, and reduce foster care placements. We use a two-generation approach to address needs of both the child and their parent. Children receive emergency shelter and direct care services, pediatric medical examinations, developmental assessments, and trauma screenings with onsite enrichment activities focused on educational, developmental, and social-emotional skill building while they stay with us for up to 60 to 90 days. Meanwhile, Licensed Social Workers work with parents to identify unmet needs and connect families to service providers ranging from mental health services and addiction services to employment agencies and early childcare programs, to assist parents in maintaining family stability. Social workers are also meeting with parents to build parenting skills and address the impact of trauma they may have experienced. Our direct services and intensive intervention are focused on ensuring long term safety, resiliency, and self-sufficiency for parents and the well-being of their children.
In 2016, 98% of the children who stayed at Providence House were reunified with their parent or guardian after an average length of stay of 20 days and 90% of families fully complied with our program requirements. This means that parents were actively engaged with all of our case management, parent education, and trauma services. 83% of parents who engaged in our services felt their family stability increased.
Through a long-term outcomes study conducted by Case Western Reserve University published in the national Children and Youth Services Review last year, we know that Providence House services have an enduring impact on families and significant economic benefits to our communities. The study compared the children we served to local foster care data and found that 82% of children who stayed at Providence House were never substantiated for abuse or neglect and never entered foster care. Knowing the average cost annually for each child in foster care is $25,782i, our services saved $8,404,932 in foster care costs just last year alone. Factor in additional costs for higher need childrenii and related medical and legal costs for foster care placements and this figure quadruples to nearly $30 Million annually. For just one county through just one Crisis Nursery. Imagine the impact and the savings that a network of Crisis Nursery services could have on the lives of children and the costs incurred by the State in foster care and over the lifetime of at-risk children. But we need your help to do it.
We know that the costs associated with child abuse and neglect are not just limited to those associated with foster care. When children experience maltreatment, it causes life-long cognitive, developmental, and social-emotional consequences with emerging research even linking child maltreatment and trauma to chronic health conditions in adulthood. While a child’s memory of maltreatment may fade, their brains and bodies remember it for the rest of their lives. Over one-third of adolescents who have been maltreated as children will have a substance abuse disorder by their 18th birthday and 80% of 21 year olds abused as children meet the criteria for at least one psychological disorder. Research indicates, almost to the birthday, when these children will become teen parents, drop out of school, be incarcerated, homeless, and even abuse their own children. Altogether, the average lifetime cost for each child maltreatment victim is over $210,000 including costs associated with productivity losses and impacting our medical, criminal justice, child welfare, and education systems. This means that the 17,693 children substantiated for abuse or neglect in Ohio in 2015 will cause over $3.7 trillioniii to be spent in direct and indirect costs over their lifetimes. And that’s just for the children maltreated in 2015. Year after year, these numbers compound as more and more children are substantiated for abuse and neglect – costing our state millions year in costs across our systems throughout their lives due to lack of early prevention and intervention.
Crisis Nursery programs like Providence House and Blessing House step in before abuse or neglect occurs to protect children and strengthen families before the intervention of law enforcement and child protection agencies is needed. Knowledge of our successful outcomes and interest in bringing the crisis nursery model to other Ohio communities like Columbus, Akron, and Cincinnati is growing. Providence House hopes to help replicate our model in these communities to provide a viable alternative to foster care and extended public systems involvement through our Every Child Ohio strategy. These additional crisis nurseries would generate exponential savings for these counties and the State.
The House included $150,000 each fiscal year to support children’s crisis care facilities. While we are extremely grateful for this support in a very tight budget cycle, this is a fifty percent reduction from the previous biennium and would result in fewer services we are able to provide to children and families during a time of increased need. To ensure that Ohio’s currently licensed children’s crisis care facilities can continue to protect children and serve families in crisis who need our services, I am asking you to support an amendment to dedicate $350,000 in each fiscal year of the upcoming biennium. These funds will be allocated to licensed Crisis Care Facilities based on the number of beds in a licensed crisis nursery; offering not only Providence House and Blessing House support to serve as many children and families as possible, but also provide a stream of state support for others who choose to open these facilities in Ohio.
Thank you again for the opportunity to speak with you about House Bill 49 and the amendment to support the vital work done by Crisis Nurseries to keep hundreds of children like Baby Jr. safe and their families together while bringing significant cost savings to the state. I am happy to answer any questions you may have.
i The average annual cost for a child in foster care is $25,782. (2011 White paper)
ii $91,250 per child in foster care with physical/mental/behavioral health problems and related costs
iii Children substantiated for abuse or neglect in Ohio 2015, Kids Count Data Center
(17,693 x $210,012 = $3,715,742,316)
