SAN ANTONIO – During the last legislative session, a Texas Department of Family and Protective Services report showed over 50% of the people who appealed child removals got the ruling overturned because of investigative mistakes.
“So the question is, why are they getting it wrong so often?” said Carrie Wilcoxson, a former Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator who now consults families and attorneys on their CPS cases.
Wilcoxson believes it’s due to a serious lack of training.
“Right now, the training is two-day training around forensic and interviewing techniques,” she said.
That’s why she wrote House Bill 1289, which would require instruction on 14 subjects, including:
The training program must also provide department investigators with advanced training on forensic investigative techniques and protocols. They include the following:
The program would also require investigators to pass an exam before working on cases.
“There was one case we worked on where the mom tested negative several times, and her children were still removed from her,” said state Rep. Elizabeth Campos, who represents District 119 in Bexar County.
Campos was one of many legislators interested in the bill, but Wilcoxson chose her to sponsor it.
“Me and my staff have done ride-alongs. We’ve met with the directors. We’ve met with the commissioner. I’ve met with children. I mean, it’s heartbreaking,” Campos said.
She supports the bill because it will help weed out what future cases actually need to be pursued.
“The last thing I want to do is put a child back with a family they should not be with, but I’ve seen cases where the child was taken away because the house was not clean. So rather than taking away the children, what are we going to do to work with the families to help them?” Campos said.
She agrees with Wilcoxson that it comes down to proper training.
“Those investigators — they have a lot on their plate. If they’re inexperienced and they’re not getting the support, it’s not their fault. It’s leadership, and that’s why I’m getting involved,” Campos said.
She and Wilcoxson explained that while investigators are bogged down by what the report shows to be a lot of unnecessary cases, seriously abused children are slipping through the cracks.
“Investigators are frustrated. Frontliners want to close cases that they shouldn’t be involved in. They really are there to help, and they want to get to the child and family that really needs them,” Wilcoxson said.
She hopes her bill will help clear the backlog that plagues the current broken CPS system.
“The value of closing frivolous cases in the system — that means we get to children like Mercedes. We get to children like Colton Turner, like Josiah. These are children who had open cases, but the case worker was not able to get to those children because of the backlog,” Wilcoxson said.
Campos has already filed the bill. If it makes it through the state House, it will head to the state Senate, where Wilcoxson said there is already strong support.
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