Survey Overview and Summary of Findings

Table of Contents
Professional workers in child welfare agencies across the country assume an enormous responsibility. For too many of our nation’s children, child welfare workers represent their greatest, and perhaps last, chance to be safe -- safe from their own parents. Why parents neglect and physically or emotionally abuse their children is a complex question, beyond the scope of this survey. But whatever the cause, by the time these workers enter the life of a child at risk, the child’s health and safety is severely in jeopardy.

The workers who are the subject of this survey have an incredibly daunting job. They investigate allegations of abuse and neglect and make determinations regarding whether or not children should be removed from their families’ homes. They provide ongoing protective services to families whose children are at risk of being removed from their homes due to abuse or neglect -- helping to arrange for services ranging from substance abuse and mental health counseling to homemaker services and respite care to after school programs and physical exams, or whatever else a family may need. They work with families and children who have been placed in foster care, in an effort to reunify the family, if possible, or to terminate parental rights and find an adoptive home for the child, if not. They recruit and train foster and adoptive parents. They develop case plans, fill out myriad forms and appear regularly in court. In the course of their work, they often must travel in unsafe neighborhoods and deal with angry parents and troubled children. . . The list goes on.

In order to learn more about the conditions under which child welfare workers must accomplish such tasks, the Public Policy Department at AFSCME has surveyed AFSCME affiliates which represent professional child welfare workers. Not only does this survey represent the first time any organization has undertaken to detail workers’ perspectives on the child welfare system, it also represents the first national survey of any kind for many of the issues addressed. In addition to painting a clearer picture of the roughly 13,380 child welfare workers represented by 29 AFSCME affiliates in 10 states which responded to the survey and the systemic problems they face, the survey also highlights some of the creative solutions developed by AFSCME affiliates.

The survey covers such issues as salaries and qualifications, caseloads, training, and violence in the workplace. The results are alarming. Confirming the reports which workers have been making informally for years, the survey found:

A discussion of the survey results is presented below. The appendix contains tables and charts which break down the results presented in more detail.

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