Adoption

Calling foster and future foster mommies!

So my DH and I decided we want to go the foster care route first.  How did you prepare your house for foster care? Did you get rooms all ready with bedding, etc? Did you keep things like toiletries on the ready in case you have short notice on a foster child?

What is generally covered for foster care? Day care? clothes? 

How many foster children do you generally have your house open for?

How long did you wait after getting all approved before getting your first placement?

 

TIA :)

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Re: Calling foster and future foster mommies!

  • We have 2 more classes left and then our profile to complete before we start taking kids.  

    They want us to prepare the house for the ages we want to take. For us that is 0-8 years. We want to get bunk beds and then the basic baby gear. We think we will just start off with a PNP and carseat for an infant, because they said they don't get many. If we happen to get one, they give us a day or two to get the crib, etc.

    I have some basic toiletries for kids because my brothers and sister are younger and come over a bit.

    I know we get a daily amount per child for all of their needs. The state will pay for daycare if we both work/go to school full time (I am in school).

    They will tell us how many kids we can have when we do our homestudy. I don't think we can have more than 3 since we have a smaller house and cars. I don't think I could handle more than 3 for a long period of time, either.

    We haven't gotten approved yet, but I hope its not a long wait.

    Good luck!

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  • How did you prepare your house for foster care?We prepared for the ages we specified (0-18 months). We had a crib, a few clothing items in gender neutral colors and in a range of sizes. They will most likely ALWAYS come with only the clothes on their back. Did you get rooms all ready with bedding, etc?We started out with 1 crib, then got a twin bed, then we had 2 cribs and finally got a queen size loft bed that we pushed the twin under for the 2 older girls, 2 cribs for the 2 year olds and the infant slept in our room in the bassinet part of the pack-n-play so that he didn't wake the whole house. Did you keep things like toiletries on the ready in case you have short notice on a foster child?You *must* always have at least 1 towel for each child. I would just keep random soaps, lotions, etc. on hand because it will ALWAYS be short notice. What is generally covered for foster care? Day care? clothes? You will be get a stipened for the month - it varies by state/agency/county and it also varies on the level of care the child is (at least here in Texas). Day care can be paid for by DFPS, but I believe it takes paperwork and an ok by a supervisor. Clothes - you should be using the stipened you get for the month (you'll get paid at the end of the month for the number of days they were in you care. normally its a daily rate) and using it for the children's needs. Some DFPS give clothing vouchers, some do not. Our county gives us $100 per quarter for children 0-9 and $125 for children 10-18, but the next county over doesn't.  How many foster children do you generally have your house open for?It all depends on your house and what is legal in your state. Ours is done by the sq footage of the room the children will be staying in. We are licensed for 5 children. How long did you wait after getting all approved before getting your first placement? We were licensed and had a child in our home within an hour. They had already planned to license us that day, but they had a call come in that would fit our home, so technically we already had a placement lined up before we were even licensed. 
  • imagecome*on*baby:
    We prepared for the ages we specified (0-18 months). We had a crib, a few clothing items in gender neutral colors and in a range of sizes. They will most likely ALWAYS come with only the clothes on their back. Did you completely decorate a room or two and get them completely ready?  If you specified children only 0 - 18 months does that mean you don't have any children over that age group?
    We started out with 1 crib, then got a twin bed, then we had 2 cribs and finally got a queen size loft bed that we pushed the twin under for the 2 older girls, 2 cribs for the 2 year olds and the infant slept in our room in the bassinet part of the pack-n-play so that he didn't wake the whole house. Would you suggest things like convertable cribs that can be made into a toddler bed? Or would you think that was a waste and start with just a basic crib and maybe a twin bed?
    You will be get a stipened for the month - it varies by state/agency/county and it also varies on the level of care the child is (at least here in Texas). I looked up some info for the state we'll be in and I'm a little overwhelmed an confused.  What is a per diem rate?
    It all depends on your house and what is legal in your state. Ours is done by the sq footage of the room the children will be staying in. We are licensed for 5 children.Even if you're approved for 5 can you choose to only take in two or three?

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  • Bold isn't working for me, so bear with me! :) 

    imageHopefulHalley10:

    imagecome*on*baby:

    Did you completely decorate a room or two and get them completely ready? 

    Our original room is completely decorated like a nursery. The second room was our office, but we just put a queen bed in there when we decided to separate our girls and then we let her decorate with her art, Hannah Montana curtains, etc.

    If you specified children only 0 - 18 months does that mean you don't have any children over that age group?

    Not necessarily, but we work with an agency and they know what we're willing to work with and won't ask us for anything out of our range. We've been called to do respite for teenagers and I'm not ready to take them on. 10 is as old as I'll go right now. 

    Would you suggest things like convertable cribs that can be made into a toddler bed? Or would you think that was a waste and start with just a basic crib and maybe a twin bed?

    A convertible crib would be best. Our 2 yo didn't get moved to his twin bed until he was 2 1/2, but we had another child older than him, that I preferred to keep in a crib because we tried her in the toddler bed and it just didn't work. I highly suggestion stalking Craigslist for cribs!  


    I looked up some info for the state we'll be in and I'm a little overwhelmed an confused.  What is a per diem rate?

    per diem rate, stipened, subsidy - it's all the same thing. I know that with our agency it's $22/day for basic and goes up from there. Some places its as little $5/day. We use it for food, clothes, bows, diapers, extra cirriculum activities when we had a 10 yo, MDO when we had a 2 yo and 3 yo girls, etc.  

    Even if you're approved for 5 can you choose to only take in two or three?

    YES! We are licensed for 5 children in our home - we have one child adopted so we can technically have 4 foster children. However, we only have one foster child and he's going to be adopted by us this month. We are licensed for that many because we did have 5 until June of this year, and we do respite for other foster homes. 

     

  •   How did you prepare your house for foster care? Our agency gave us a copy of the home inspection sheet that the SW's use and we followed that for the basics to pass the inspection.  We also found second hand dresser and refinished it so there would be enough clothing storage. Did you get rooms all ready with bedding, etc? Yes, we bought a brand new crib and bedding for our room and a new bunkbed and bedding for the kids room.  I refinished a few pieces of furniture to make the kids room more neutral, it was done to my DD's tastes before. Did you keep things like toiletries on the ready in case you have short notice on a foster child? Yes, we have toothbrushes, toothpaste, bodywash, poofs to wash with, shampoo, lotion, baby care items. What is generally covered for foster care? Day care? clothes?  Our agency allots $50/month for clothes (this has to be bought every month and we have to show receipts).  Starting at age 3 the children get half their age in allowance each week ~ 3 year old = $1.50 per week.  They don't give money for daycare but we can use the rest of the money towards daycare, school, etc.  They have a formula for what percentage of the money goes towards what but they only ask for proof of allowance and proof of clothing. How many foster children do you generally have your house open for? We are being licensed for 2, an infant and a child 2-6. How long did you wait after getting all approved before getting your first placement?  We aren't licensed yet, we have an inspection tomorrow to check corrections and then we have our adoption homestudy.  We should be ready to go in about 2 weeks.  We are being told that we can expect a placement almost immediately.
  • We've been licensed for almost two years now.

    Our CW came and did an initial walk thru towards the beginning of our process and let us know before she came that she didn't expect our house to be ready then, but that she would give us a list of things (fire extinguisher, knives up, meds locked up, etc.) and that is what she did....we weren't expected to have anything done before her first visit. We were accepting ages 0-6 so we needed a crib/toddler bed and a regular bed---basically the main think you need for the kiddos is the place to sleep. Because our ages were so open we didn't get anything else besides furniture and bedding  and decorations at first--we decorated the room in a gender age neutral theme (under the sea). We didn't keep any toiletries again, b/c we didn't know what age to have them for and figured we could get basics at the 24 hour grocery store.

     From everything I've read what the subsidy pays for varies by state, but ours in MD gives a monthly amount for all expenses (but we are told we should be spending a certain amount on clothes). Our caseworker made it clear that it is also to pay for indirect costs such as electric, water, etc. We also have daycare paid for as well as mileage to visits and other mandatory places we need to take the kids. Our children who meet the age requirement (under 5) are also eligible for WIC. All in all I think our state is very generous and I am able to get whatever FD needs and fun stuff too with the subsidy. Others who children have more needs may disagree.

    We are licensed for 2 children b/c that is how many beds we have--we originally said we'd take one, but would consider a sibling set.

    We were officially approved in December 08 and got our first call in Feb 09, but she ended up going to a relative instead. In May 09 we turned down a placement of a sibling group and got the call for our DD (who we are adopting in two weeks!) in June 09 (ironically she is the call we received that didn't work out in Feb--her relative placement didn't work out--so we think it was just meant to be).

  • How did you prepare your house for foster care? -- I called around and got information from the different foster options in our area- (there are 3 here- county, Path(Treatment), and specifically for Unaccompinaned Minnors). We decided who we wanted to work with and then started the process with them. As our worker was getting ready to submit our home study she told us that she would recommend we go with 10-14 yr olds... that gave us an age range. As we were doing the home study we found out what things (like fire exstingushers on every level- smoke alarms, locking meds up) we needed to do and did those at that point.

    Did you get rooms all ready with bedding, etc?-- We had already been given bunk beds from a friend that heard we were going to do foster care and wanted to give them to us.  We got the matterases, sheets and blankets- got all these things from family or the thrift store- gender nutural. then we just got a laundry basket and an alarm clock.

    Did you keep things like toiletries on the ready in case you have short notice on a foster child? -- Because we do PATH fc we don't get short notice placements- we get to review the childs file and meet them a couple times before they are placed with us. We also aren't the childs first placement after being removed from the home, so they come with more than just the clothes on their back. (in fact both of the foster placements we've had, had almost a whole van load of stuff.)

    What is generally covered for foster care? Day care? clothes?-- We get $300 to be spent in the first 6months of placement for clothing. if there is a big growth spurt in a short amount of time (like your going to have to replace EVERYTHING) you can petition to get another allowence.  Daycare is covered 100%- there is a form the daycare fills out and submits to PATH- its nice when the daycare is willing to wait to get paid from PATH rather than us having to pay and wait to be reimburst.   We get a daily rate of pay per child that is in our house. That is expected to cover all day to day expenses for the child- your suppose to spend at least $50 a month on the child directly- they don't ask for proof or anything just a guide line- Which isn't hard to do.

    There is also another fund to pay for activities-lessons, yr books, prom, senior photos ect- which the child gets every year.  

    How many foster children do you generally have your house open for?-- in the state of ND PATH homes can be liscensed for 2 kids. if there is a sibling set you can sometimes get a varience specific for that/those kid(s).  This ONLY counts the children placed in your home as foster children that you are getting paid to have.  you can have as many children in your house as you want- as long as you have beds specifically for the fc that meet the requirements (6 ft away from another bed) and can care for them all.

    When we got our first placement we waited about 2 months before we started talking about getting another placement- it was about another month before our 2nd placement moved in.

    How long did you wait after getting all approved before getting your first placement? --we got our license in January 2009 did a few respit placements for the next month. Went to meet our fs Valentines weekend- he moved in a month later.

    Things vary soo much state to state and county to county. I'd say decide which route you want to (county, TFC ect) and then get their info packet.

    Also if your looking for more info check out Tim and Wendy at https://fosterpodcast.com/  Good luck- as T&W say Fostering is the most heart wrenching,frusterating, all consuming thing you'll ever do- (my own words)BUT it is also the most rewarding thing I've ever done!

     

  • I agree with most of the other ladies here. It completely depends on your agency (or state), what ages of the children and your individual homestudy.

     

    We just completed the PRIDE classes in our state, and we are waiting for our homestudy inspection. We had to prepare our home in advance, including setting up the crib and changing station, childproofing the home and storing medications and chemicals. Nothing too durastic, although the list adds up when you look around and realize what you need to do. How many children you choose is up to you, although your state will impose a limit; usually between 4-6 at a time. It also depends on how much room (ie beds/cribs) you have available, as each child will need their own one. In washington, the state pays for daycare and we receive a small clothing stipend. After the intial stipend, clothing, food and activites are on us. Let me know if you have other questions, I'd love to help! :) xoxoxox 

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