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September e-Newsletter
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Volume 2 Edition 8September 2010
FAM Balloons Autumn Has Arrived in New England!

The children are back at school and fall sports have begun.  Parents are busy checking backpacks and helping with homework.  It is a new beginning for some children and a time to reconnect with friends for othersFor foster children this can be an especially poignant time - and for foster parents this can be both a rewarding time and a challenging time.  Hopefully, the rewards far outweigh the challenges!

Please join me in congratulating the Doucette family on their Angels in Adoption Award.  You may remember that the Doucettes were featured in a recent newsletter as one of our FAM families.  If you did not have a chance to read their story, click here to read it on the FAM website.  Doris will be traveling to Washington, D.C. in early October to accept the award on behalf of her and her husband, John.  while there she will be visiting the White House and taking part in discussions with legislators on the topics of foster care and adoption.  Doris has begun a blog to so that we can take this journey with her. Click here to check the latest entries on her blog.  I'm sure this will be a blog well worth following in the weeks to come! Another FAM family also won an Angels in Adoption Award.  Lenny and Phyllis Abelson of Tamarac, Florida are also being honored.  Click here to read their story.

The second annual Bells of Hope is fast approaching.  Consider approaching your faith community (with or without bells) or a local organization with bells to join the other participants this year.  My children were the honorary bell ringers at our church last year.  It was thrilling to hear them ring the 200 year old bells in the bell tower and quite an honor - apparently, they were the youngest bell ringers in over 50 years.  It was all they talked about for days.  And, what was most thrilling was knowing that many other families were doing the exact same thing at the exact same time across the state.  We felt a part of a community. We are all part of the CT foster care and adoption community and it is a wonderful gift to ourselves and our children to participate in events where we can celebrate our commonalities and do a good deed for others still waiting for the love and comfort of their very own "forever families." 

Enjoy the changing leaves and the return of the crisp, cool air!



 
 Can We Spread the Bells of Hope Across Connecticut?  
On November 7, 2010, faith communities will once again be offering prayers and ringing bells for children in need of permanent homes in CT.   We need faith community members who care about "our kids" to reach out to their communities and ask them to participate.
 
 Last year 120 faith communities and schools rang their bells and prayed on the first Sunday in November, marking a statewide kickoff to National Adoption Month.  This year we are once again requesting your assistance to make this event a success. 
 
How can you help?  Call or email your faith community leadership asking them to be a part of this awareness building event.  This year Bells of Hope has it's own website where participants can access event information as well as contact information.  
  • Did you know that last year many adopted children and their families rang the bells at churches across the state?
  • Did you know that some communities held interfaith services?
  • Did you know that adult adoptees spoke at some services?
  • Do you know the story behind the event?  See below.
 
Please feel free to contact FAM if we can help or if you need more information. 

 Justin's Story  by Deb Kelleher 

     The idea for Bells of Hope came to me in early spring 2009. I was working on ideas to increase adoptions in Connecticut and kept coming back to thoughts of my son's brother, now 20, who had never been adopted. For purposes of confidentiality I call him Justin.
    Justin is my son's biological brother. I am the adoptive mom of three boys, all of whom were adopted through the CT foster care system, and one biological son.  I had tried to adopt Justin, but, as a single parent of four boys, I was not considered an appropriate resource for him. He needed more than social workers felt I could give to another special needs child. Truth be told, I secretly shared their fears, and although I did come forward and offer to be a resource for him I knew their decision was the right one for my family. 
    I met Justin when he was 9. He was a handsome young man living in a group setting. I would often bring my son, his brother, to visit him. And I also frequently had him to my home for the day. Our whole family came to love him and consider him a member of our extended family.
At one point when Justin was hospitalized, a social worker called me from the hospital. You see, Justin had told her that I was to be his adoptive mom soon.  He had our phone number memorized, which made it easy for her to believe him. That situation nearly broke my heart. Here he was in the hospital, vulnerable and lonely and reaching out to me.  This kind and understanding hospital social worker and I had many long talks about Justin's future. She counseled me to continue as his "beloved aunt" because, she said, he needs a consistently loving adult in his life and if I were to ignore the wise advice of the social workers he could end up with no one - a disrupted adoption and feelings on both sides that might not heal well enough for our relationship to continue.
    Well, Justin was never adopted. He moved from placement to placement for 10 long and lonely years.  When he turned 19, his worker found an aunt to care for him temporarily while the state looked for a transitional life-skills program for him to attend and reside at. After having lived in congregate care for so many years he would need some help navigating the world. Unlike typical children, he had never had an allowance; his own room; regular chores to learn from; increasing responsibility and freedom to explore the world from a safe place; the ability to make mistakes and learn while being loved by a family. So, he was vulnerable to making mistakes once released into the world.
    Justin did not stay with his aunt long. He found family rules confusing and stressful. For instance, he could not figure out why his aunt was angry when he ran up a cell phone bill of over $150 for ring tones! So, he ran away and joined a gang. He called them his new family. He claimed they accepted and valued him. From time to time he would return to his aunt's home for brief stays but each time he would return to the streets where he felt more comfortable.
    Our family spent time with Justin during the 2008 Christmas season. He spent a week with us. While doing his laundry during his visit, razor blades fell out of his pockets into my washer. He said he needed them for protection on the streets. My heart broke. Shortly after his visit he went back to the streets.  Recently he was arrested.  We have tried to maintain contact but it has been very difficult.  
   I hope he's okay. I think about him all the time. His little brother misses him and worries about his safety. We hope he will find someone to help him transition away from the streets and find a better life for himself - one he can be proud of.  The truth is: far too many teens in foster care age out of the system. Nationally about 28,000 youth "age out" of foster care every year. "Teens who are emancipated from foster care have higher rates of incarceration, unemployment, homelessness, and dependence on public assistance than non-foster youth. In fact, one in four will be incarcerated within two years of leaving foster care; one in five will become homeless at some point after age 18. Moreover, many studies have documented a bleak outlook in education as well: only 58 percent of foster youth who aged out of the system had a high school degree at age 19, compared to 87 percent of non-foster youth; and less than 3 percent of emancipated foster youth over the age of 25 earned college degrees, compared to 28 percent of the general population." *  In fact, many studies show that approximately 50% of all youth who have been in foster care will become homeless at some time in their lives. I do not want to think of someone I love as one of these statistics. And I do not want to think of all of the other youth who age out of foster care continuing to make up these statistics. That is why I came up with Bells of Hope.
    The idea for "Bells" was shamelessly stolen from the Special Olympics. Back in 1995 the Worldwide Special Olympics Games were held in New Haven. My adopted son, a Special Olympian himself, was asked to do the honor of ringing the bells in our church to mark the Opening of the Games. He was thrilled and it was exciting for the whole family! Church bells rang all over Connecticut as the Games opened. What a beautiful sound! And we felt a part of something larger than ourselves.
    My son was so proud to be asked to ring those bells. So I thought why can't the bells be rung for foster kids? Surely this is a worthy cause. And wouldn't adopted kids get a kick out of being the "bell ringers?"  So the seeds of Bells of Hope were born. Others have helped to tweak the idea and help bring it to fruition. 
    Last year some town councils issued proclamations last year declaring the day the official Bells of Hope Day. Some congregations held candlelight vigils while the bells rang. Others simply rang the bells. But everyone heard them.  My goal was and is simply to get folks to think about the kids - and hopefully a few will come forward to adopt or become foster parents - because these kids are our kids - our Connecticut kids - and at the very least they deserve a few minutes of our time on a Sunday in November. 
    As we did last year the FAM website will post a listing of the 2010 bells ringing in your community as well as the new www.bellsofhope.org website. As we receive word from churches and schools they will be added to the list.  On or around October 10 we will post the official number of times the bells should ring.  Faith communities that can, will ring the designated number of times at 6 p.m.  Communities that have less control over their bells may choose to ring at a different time, a different number of times or if they have no bells they can participate (and be included on the list) by placing a prayer request in their bulletins asking for prayers from their congregants on November 7 or including the prayers in services that day. 
       
    *Taken from Youth Aging Out of Foster Care by Sharon Landvoy
 star of the month
Each month one of our member agencies honor a "star" whose service to children in foster care deserves special recognition.  Stars receive a small gift from FAM and a certificate of appreciation from the nominating agency. 
This month features our partner, Community Residences, Inc.



Dear Ms. Alvarado,
     We'd like to congratulate you on serving as a CRI Therapeutic Foster Parent for the past three years. In the last three years you've had three successful placements and we are pleased to hear that you are adopting your current two placements.  It's been an honor working with such a confident, loving, consistent, nurturing, supportive foster parent.  You have proven yourself to be an exceptional provider who consistently meets all of our agencies requests and suggestions.  Your communication with all of the children's providers has been exceptional and you keep all of your documentation professionally and reliably. You have always met your children's needs, and have always been available and welcoming to anyone who comes into your home.  You have a special ability to work with and relate to children from other cultures.   You have consistently gone over and beyond the expectations of a therapeutic foster parent.
     It is remarkable to observe the positive impact that such strong advocacy for children has on the children in your care.   You have been very understanding and sensitive to their unique experiences and needs. It is amazing how far you have gone to ensure that your children have contact with their birth families, to the point of traveling with your seven-year-old foster daughter to Puerto Rico to visit with her grandmother in preparation for reunification.  I'm sure it means the world to that child to know that you continually provide your love and support by visiting her and sending her gifts on her birthday and holidays.   With your future adoptive daughters, we are impressed with your efforts to locate their other sibling who was adopted and now lives in a different state.  It is a credit to you that all three children that have been in your care have done extremely well and have successfully been reunified or prepared for adoption.  It is parents like you that make our jobs here at CRI much easier and much more rewarding.
     It is with great pleasure that we at CRI recognize your work and dedication as the Therapeutic Foster Parent of the month.  Congratulations and I look forward to continuing to work with you in the future.

Sincerely,
Yamali Luciani, BS
Community Residences, Inc.
 

 Integrated Aesthetics
Star of the Month Gift Certificates are made possible by the generosity of our partner, Integrated Aesthetics, a skin care studio in Woodbridge, CT.
 
Please visit their
website to check out the range of organic & clinical facials as well as therapeutic massage & body treatments, makeup lessons & application.   The studio serves all ages, including teens. 
In This Issue
Bells of Hope
Justin's Story
Star of the Month
Children Awaiting Adoption
Wednesday's Child
Join the Bells of Hope Cause 
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Waiting Children

Please click on the AdoptUSKids link to view CT's children and youth waiting to be adopted.
Upcoming Events
Please visit our events calendar on our website for a complete and up-to-date listing of ALL events that we will be appearing at.  The events listed in this area are those we are hosting or play a significant role in.
 
 
Bells Of Hope
Statewide Faith Communities and Schools
November 7

American Girl Fashion Show
Avon Old Farms Inn
November 6-7
American Girl Fashion Show
Hosted by our partners at CAFAP on November 6 and 7 at Avon Old Farms Inn.

Celebrate being a girl, whether yesterday or today, through a colorful presentation of historical and contemporary fashions. Enjoy elegant refreshments, enter to win door prizes, and learn how clothing has changed over the years to reflect history, culture, and girls' individual styles.  Click on the link below for more information or to register for the event.


Open House  schedule available on our website
Prospective foster and adoptive parents are welcome at any Open House listed on our website.  Please call Deb Kelleher or one of the other coordinators listed at the bottom of this newsletter or email us for more information or to schedule an individual appointment.  Click here for the most current listing of open houses around the state.
Wednesday's Child
WTNH logo
 
WTNH Channel 8 airs a weekly segment featuring CT children available for adoption and families formed through adoption.  Click on the logo  above to see recent video segments hosted by Ted Koppy. 

Words of Inspiration for Foster and Adoptive Parents

To have a purpose that is worthwhile,
And that is steadily being accomplished,
That is one of the secrets of a life that is worth living.

~ Herbert Casson

Quick Links
 
Crayola Stain Tips
 
 Disney Family Fun
 
 
 
Kids.Gov - 
 official kids' portal for the US government
Contact Information
 
Northwest CT Regional Coordinator:        Deb Kelleher  203.706.0101   Email 
 
Meriden/Greater New Haven Area Regional Coordinator:  
                                                                   Ashley Minihan 203.394.8506  Email 
 
Greater Fairfield County Coordinator:       Lori Boersma  203.583.9374  Email 
 
Central/Southeastern CT Coordinator:   Alana Jones 860.710.1593   Email