(Bloomberg) Naomi Schaefer Riley–Make Foster Care Work, Let Churches Lead

…a new program initiated five years ago in Georgia suggests, these hurdles aren’t insurmountable. The nonprofit FaithBridge was started by Bill Hancock, a director of counseling programs who had lived on the streets as a teenager, and Rick Jackson, an Atlanta businessman who had spent time in the foster-care system.

Hancock wondered why churches weren’t more involved in finding solutions. He said he noticed that in Cobb County, Georgia, there were 1,100 churches and 300 children in foster care. He liked the odds. Plenty of people he knew had an extra bedroom and understood the needs of children. He began to break down the problem.

He would find out the number of children in a particular zip code in need of a foster home, go to a church in the area to present their stories without using their names, and see what happened. He announced at one church that there were 11 kids in his own zip code, representing four sibling groups. Four dozen people showed up at a meeting to volunteer. Read it all.

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One comment on “(Bloomberg) Naomi Schaefer Riley–Make Foster Care Work, Let Churches Lead

  1. MargaretG says:

    I had always intended to offer to foster children, but my husband and I ended up having four sons and no daughters. Now there is no way we could offer foster care. We would be sitting ducks for an accusation of sexual abuse … and as christians “the system” would be only too ready to believe the accusation without any proof.