FACT SHEET: Biden- ⁠ Harris Administration Actions to Keep Children and Families Safely Together and Supported

The President and Vice President believe every child should have the opportunity to reach their full potential and grow up in a safe and loving home with their families. Over four million families are referred to child protective services each year, and around 200,000 children enter foster care. Child welfare systems are prepared to step in when a child’s safety is at risk, but they are frequently tasked with intervening when families are simply impoverished and could be best helped in the long run by helping meet their economic and service needs. Since Day One, the Biden-Harris Administration has been committed to improving child and family well-being by keeping families together safely, including through helping connect them to community and economic supports, increasing the use of kinship care, and improving foster care so that when it is needed, it preserves and strengthens lasting emotional bonds.

Today, the White House hosted a convening on transforming child welfare to announce new policies that focus on preventing family separation and supporting and creating opportunities for families and youth. The convening brought together policymakers across federal, state, local, and tribal governments, philanthropy, child welfare and family support organizations, and young people and families who have personal experiences, to encourage further innovation, build new partnerships, and exchange best practices. The new announcements focus on four key areas:

Separating Poverty and Neglect

Children should not be separated from their families due to financial hardship alone. Several states, like Kentucky, Indiana, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Kansas have already clarified that poverty alone should not cause child removal. And there is emerging evidence connecting these actions to improvements in family outcomes. The Biden-Harris Administration is encouraging states to follow their lead and make clear the distinctions between child maltreatment and financial hardship. Today, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is:

Prevention Services

Prevention services, including services to help families economically and provide parenting and behavioral health treatment, need to be well resourced, tailored to best meet the needs of families and grounded in evidence. New Biden-Harris actions will expand how states and Tribes can use federal funding for prevention activities to provide greater assistance to children and families before a crisis point. These actions include new policies to:

Prioritizing Kin and Youth Needs

Children who cannot be with their parents but live with relatives and other kin have better outcomes than those who are not, including in stability, behavioral health, and education. New Biden-Harris actions will incentivize jurisdictions to do more to ensure children can live with kin, and meet youth needs by:

Innovations and Research

The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to further developing actionable research on the intersection between prevention, family support and child well-being outcomes. HHS announced several projects that:

THE BIDEN-HARRIS RECORD ON CHILD WELFARE

The Biden-Harris Administration has a long record of actions consistent with its commitment to keeping families together safely, providing supports as an alternative to child removals, and increasing the use of kinship care and other foster care best practices: