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Murders of Wenatchee girls sparks outcry over WA child welfare laws
Murders of Wenatchee girls sparks outcry over WA child welfare laws

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Murders of Wenatchee girls sparks outcry over WA child welfare laws

The Brief The murders of three young sisters in Wenatchee have sparked debate over Washington's Keeping Families Together Act, which aims to reduce foster care placements. Critics argue the law may compromise child safety by allowing unsupervised visits for risky parents, while DCYF attributes child fatalities to factors like fentanyl availability. The incident underscores tensions between family preservation and child safety, prompting calls to reassess visitation rights practices. WENATCHEE, Wash. - The recent deaths of three young sisters—Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5—have resurfaced a fierce debate over child welfare policies in Washington state. The girls were found near a campground in Wenatchee after a scheduled visit with their father, Travis Decker, who is now a fugitive wanted on charges of kidnapping and first-degree murder. The tragedy has drawn attention to the state's child welfare laws, particularly the Keeping Families Together Act (HB 1227), which was enacted in 2021 to reduce the number of children placed into foster care and support family preservation. However, some lawmakers argue that the law's provisions may have inadvertently compromised child safety. What they're saying Rep. Travis Couture, a Republican representing the 35th Legislative District, has been vocal in his criticism of the law. He emphasized that while he supports parental rights, the safety of children must be the paramount concern. "We've got to start using common sense and find out that if a parent is homeless and/or mentally ill and dangerous that they shouldn't be having unsupervised access to three young children," Couture said. "I think that's a recipe for disaster and just because nothing may have happened in previous visits, it's really a ticking time bomb for some of these folks." Couture also criticized what he perceives as judicial leniency in granting unsupervised visitation rights to parents with known risks. "Oftentimes, what we're seeing here in Washington, is the courts kind of doing some gymnastics and bending over backwards to make sure dangerous parents still have access, unsupervised, to their kids," said Couture. "Just speaking generally about child welfare, we've had a stunning skyrocketing amount of needless deaths of small children in our state over the last handful of years because of the Keeping Families Together Act." The other side The Washington State Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) has defended the law, stating that data does not support claims that it has led to an increase in child fatalities. According to DCYF, the rise in child deaths is primarily due to the increased availability of fentanyl and a lack of substance-use disorder treatment in communities, rather than changes in removal standards. The Source Information in this story comes from original reporting from FOX 13 Seattle reporter Lauren Donovan. Wenatchee dad, 3 young girls unreachable, missing person alert activated 'Shut your legs' comment, rating female staff: Snoqualmie Police Chief fired after probe DOJ to announce drug trafficking arrests in Seattle Washington state named 'sanctuary jurisdiction' by Trump admin, 35 of 39 counties listed Motorcyclist speaks out after arrest made in Auburn, WA hit-and-run nearly 2 years ago WA beekeeper working to save millions of bees involved in crash in Whatcom County FBI scrutiny puts pressure on Seattle mayor after protest clash To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter. Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.

House OKs Medicaid presumptive eligibility for people with disabilities
House OKs Medicaid presumptive eligibility for people with disabilities

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

House OKs Medicaid presumptive eligibility for people with disabilities

Florida House members gathering before the opening of a special legislative session on Jan. 27, 2025. (Photo by Mitch Perry/Florida Phoenix) Florida legislators are poised to pass a law that makes it clear that state government can't kick out Medicaid beneficiaries with physical or intellectual disabilities absent a material change in the individual's disability or economic status that affects eligibility. The bill stems from the recent Medicaid unwinding from the Covid-19 pandemic. A House staff analysis of the bill shows that between April 2023 and February 2025, 'approximately 534 disabled individuals lost Medicaid coverage because they failed to provide information requested by the DCF [Department of Children and Families] to make an eligibility determination.' The analysis continues: 'The number of individuals who may have remained eligible for had they submitted the requested information to the DCF is unknown. During the same period, approximately 3,357 disabled individuals lost Medicaid coverage due to not meeting income and asset eligibility requirements.' The House passed HB 1227 unanimously Wednesday. The identical Senate companion bill SB 7032, is on the Senate calendar which means it can be taken up for consideration during session. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

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