In this issue:

1. Open Position—HEY is looking for a full-time Project Manager

2. FREE HPP Family Health & Wellness Fair on August 10

3. Lawsuit Filed on Behalf of California Foster Children with Disabilities

4. JVS Workshop: Employment Opportunities at Safeway on Thursday, August 2, 2-3:30pm

5. Yoga Classes for Young Women at The Women’s Building

6. San Francisco’s Chronicle’s coverage of Foster Care

 

July 31, 2007

SPECIAL NOTE: There will not be an e-Bulletin next week, instead please look for our monthly e-Newsletter on Friday, August 10th.  Additionally HEY e-Bulletin will be on vacation on Tuesday, August 14th. Watch for the next e-Bulletin on Tuesday, August 21st.


1.Open Position—HEY is looking for a full-time Project Manager

HEY is accepting applications for the new Project Manager position. This position will mainly focus on the management of specific projects including:

  • Youth Leadership and Political Participation (Multi-year project)
  • Bay Area Expanded Benefits Demonstration Project (One-year project)
  • Foster Youth Housing Toolkit (Multi-year project)
  • Development of and expansion of Foster Youth Emancipation Binders (One-year project)

Other projects and work are described in detail in the job description.  Please forward to interested parties.

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2.FREE HPP Family Health & Wellness Fair on August 10

Homeless Prenatal Program is celebrating Family Health & Wellness

Free event—tell families & clients!
When: Friday, August 10th, 1 - 3 pm
Where: HPP 2500 18th St @ Potrero Ave
What: Health screening, food, prenatal resources, art, yoga, massage, acupuncture, giveaways, & more!

Click here for flyer in English & Spanish.

For more information, call (415) 546-6756, ext. 316.

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3.Lawsuit Filed on Behalf of California Foster Children with Disabilities

Lawsuit Filed on Behalf of California Foster Children with Disabilities
Seeks an End to the State’s Practice of Forcing Them out of Foster Care at age 18

Legal action taken against the California Department of Social Services by three nonprofit advocacy groups.

(San Francisco, CA – July 25, 2007) – A lawsuit filed in state court today in San Francisco charges state officials  with violating the Americans with Disabilities Act and state anti-disability laws by refusing to allow foster children with disabilities to stay in foster care past their 18th birthday. 

In California, foster youth are permitted to remain in foster care up until the age of 19, but only if the youth’s school or education program certifies that he or she is expected to graduate by his or her 19th birthday.  This is known as the “completion rule.”  Any youth who is not expected to graduate by the age of 19 loses his or her foster care funding at the age of 18.  These youth are often turned out of foster care with no place to live, and thus are denied the opportunity to continue to pursue their educations.

The suit, Leonard v. Wagner, charges that the state’s policy of cutting off foster care funding to children with disabilities under the completion rule violates state and federal disability laws.  The case was filed by the Public Interest Law Project of Oakland, the Youth Law Center in San Francisco, and the Western Center on Law and Poverty in Los Angeles. 

“The completion rule deprives foster children with disabilities, who often are behind in school because of their disabilities, the same opportunity that their non-disabled peers in foster care have to stay in care one more year,” said Angie Schwartz, lead attorney in the case and Staff Attorney at the Public Interest Law Project.  “Study after study demonstrates the problems children face when they age out of foster care, and the results are even worse for youth with disabilities.”

“The cruel result of the completion rule is that the youth with disabilities – who are the most vulnerable of all kids in foster care, and arguably the most in need of an extra year of stability and services – have to leave their foster homes and group homes on their 18th birthdays and are effectively made homeless,” said Corene Kendrick, Staff Attorney at the Youth Law Center.  “At least seven other states, including New York, Illinois, and Vermont, extend foster care benefits past the age of 18 for this group of youth.”

In 2002, the Western Center on Law and Poverty and other legal services programs won the case of Fry v. Saenz, when the state Court of Appeal held that the identical completion rule in the CalWORKs program violated federal disability laws, said Nu Usaha, Staff Attorney at WCLP. “Yet the State of California refuses to apply the Fry protections to children in foster care, despite repeated requests from advocates.”

- # # # -
The complaint can be downloaded at:
http://www.ylc.org/case_info?id=jj_jlvjw
http://ylc.org/LeonardvWagner.pdf

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4.JVS Workshop: Employment Opportunities at Safeway on Thursday, August 2, 2-3:30pm

JVS will be hosting a workshop this Thursday, August 2 from 2:00-3:30pm entitled, ‘Employment Opportunities at Safeway’featuring Angie Brown, District 3 Employment Coordinator and Lynnette Ledesma, District 9 Employment Coordinator

Interested participants can register online at: http://www.jvs.org/Calendar.html

Click here for a flyer with more information.

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5.Yoga Classes for Young Women at The Women’s Building

Currently The Women's Building has two free yoga classes for women each week.  No experience needed.  Just take a mat or towel and wear comfortable clothes.

Classes are Tuesdays from 3-4pm. Childcare is available with advance registration for Tuesdays only. 
Call Sophia to register (415) 793-4107.

Classes are Thursdays 2:30-3:30.  Call Christy to register at (415) 431-1180, ext. 10.

San Francisco Feldenkrais Community Clinic
The Women’s Building partners with the SFFCC to provide individual hands-on sessions to low or no-income women and girls every Friday afternoon by appointment. $5-$20 Donations are accepted, but no one is turned away for lack of funds.  Call (415) 431-1180, ext. 10, or stop by the reception desk to make an appointment.  For general information on the Feldenkrais Method, visit www.feldenkrais.com.


11. San Francisco’s Chronicle’s coverage of Foster Care

Please see the links below for the most recent coverage and as always you may contact me if you need links to previous articles from the past month.

July 29
Therapy dog heels, drools—and heals—in kids’ shelter

July 21
Foster Program for Immigrants Criticized

July 18
Caille Millener: Help Sade Daniels go to college!


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About Honoring Emancipated Youth

Honoring Emancipated Youth (HEY), a community project of United Way of the Bay Area, is a San Francisco-based intermediary providing leadership to the Bay Area foster care community by convening and informing stakeholders of trends and best practices in order to raise public awareness and promote successful policies that affect emancipated foster youth.  At the core of its philosophy, HEY is committed to the inclusion of current and former foster youth, service providers, and supporters in identifying and promoting strategies and best practices that ensure there are effective and holistic systems to serve foster care youth in achieving a healthy transition into adulthood.

For more information or if you would like to subscribe others, please contact Sara Razavi, HEY Interim Director, at srazavi@uwba.org.

Honoring Emancipated Youth
A Community Project of United Way of the Bay Area
221 Main Street, Suite 300
San Francisco, CA 94105
415.808.4435
www.heysf.org

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