Halting Evictions Is Good Child Welfare Policy
2 Articles
2 Articles
Halting Evictions Is Good Child Welfare Policy
Evictions are uniquely destructive to children, undermining the social and institutional connections that provide kids with stability. A new study quantifies their extensive damage, from increasing child homelessness to decreasing high-school graduation rates. Angel Medrano, age eight, gets help with distance learning math from his sister Cassandra, sixteen, on October 9, 2020, in Phoenix, Arizona. The Medrano family had narrowly avoided evicti…
Again and again, our local youth services have to deal with the question of whether children and young people are doing well in their families. Last year, they reviewed more than 2,100 suspected cases of child welfare risks, more than 500 more than the year before.
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