Nevada
Drug and alcohol abuse, housing instability keeps foster care system in ‘critical need’ – The Nevada Independent
Clark County’s foster care system is seeing improvements in recruitment after accelerating the licensing process, but officials say they are still short an estimated 300 foster homes.
Jill Marano, director of Clark County Department of Family Services, told county commissioners on Tuesday that the foster care system is in “critical need” after five years of stagnation. She said the county added 15 new foster care homes for the highest-need populations this year and intends to bring 40 more online this year.
This summer, the county also started beefing up social media campaigns and created a one-stop-shop website to increase the number of foster homes.
“What we’ve seen since we started this in May is anywhere from 90 to 100 percent of the people that are going to the [information sessions] are actually choosing to do fingerprints and sign up for training,” Marano said.
Marano said several recent changes to the foster process removed barriers to licensing and grew the number of providers. She credited the growth to in-person meetings, which boosted the percentage of information session attendees conversions to students from the year prior, a more streamlined process and funding to cover the cost of fingerprinting, tuberculosis tests and physicals.
Other factors she credited included integrating car seat and CPR training into the general caregiver licensing classes, which were previously taught separately, and shortening the session from nine to seven weeks. The department also offered additional support to walk applicants through the documentation necessary to become licensed.
“It shouldn’t have to cost you hundreds of hours to be able to sign up to do this,” Marano said.
Officials also increased foster care reimbursements for relative and family foster care:
- From $682 to $858 a month per child up to age 12 and from $773 to $971 a month per child 13 and older
- Advanced foster care rose from $1,233 to $1,549 a month per children up to age 12 and from $1,323 to $1,663 a month per child 13 and older
- Specialized foster care went from $3,497 to $4,394 per month regardless of the child’s age, “to align Clark County funding with the current statewide legislatively approved rate,” department officials said.
Fox 5 reported in July that new rates will roll out starting in August. County residents can learn more about foster care and sign up for information sessions at the county’s website.
Family services identified the highest-needs populations as children from 0 to 6 years old, groups of siblings and teens. Their main plan to increase capacity for these populations is recruitment, with new expedited caregiver classes available that can be completed in two weekends.
When children are removed from their homes they are placed in Child Haven, a county-operated shelter for kids, until they are transferred to a foster home. Children remain in foster homes before they are reunited with family, adopted or emancipated. She said the average time a child is on the campus is nine days.
“Children can be there anywhere from one day to six months,” Marano said. “We have one child that’s unfortunately been there about a year … A lot of the kids that are on campus for a long time are kids with significant behavioral or mental health needs or developmental delays.”
According to Mental Health America (MHA), a national organization that tracks mental health services gaps across the nation, Nevada is ranked ninth in the group’s rating for prevalence of mental illness among youth and access to care. That’s up from last year’s low ranking of 51.
Nevada’s ranking changed significantly in 2023 after 1- to 15-point drops in the percentages of youth reporting a substance abuse disorder, youth who did not receive major depression services and children who reported a major depression episode.
The rankings, which change based on the outcome of other states, include the number of youth who experienced at least one major depressive episode, substance abuse disorder, severe depression, children who did not receive services for depression or severe depression and youth with emotional disturbances.
Despite higher rankings, Nevada’s mental health care gaps severely affect children, which has even caught the attention of federal investigators.
Nevada child welfare system scrutinized by DOJ
In 2022, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) found Nevada in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act for “failing to provide adequate community-based services to children with behavioral health disabilities, relying instead on segregated, institutional settings like hospitals and residential treatment facilities.”
“[What] they found in [the DOJ] report is that you had kids, inappropriately, sitting longer in county-level facilities like Child Haven and detention because of a lack of state resources,” Marano said.
According to the DOJ’s report, between July 2019 and February 2021, “Nevada financed 779 residential treatment stays for 667 children; 37 percent of these residential treatment stays were in out-of-state facilities.” The justice department said Nevada’s child welfare agencies contribute to children’s institutionalization or a dependency on hospitals or carceral systems for their behavioral needs, rather than therapeutic health centers.
Lawmakers have since increased the foster care budget by more than 25 percent, raising it from $650 million to $774 million for 2024 to 2025.
In Clark County, nearly 3,000 youth move in and out of the child welfare system each year. According to Marano, the top reasons children are removed from their biological families is neglect, drug and alcohol abuse and housing instability.
“We have also seen an increase in the homelessness and inadequate housing and parental alcohol and drug abuse [category],” she said. “And those still fit in that neglect category where there’s some sort of condition going on with a parent so they’re unable to meet the needs of their children.”
Marano said there is often a misconception that children come into foster care because they’ve been physically or sexually abused, but that happens less frequently than many people think.
She cited a lack of housing infrastructure, child care assistance, earned income tax credits and Medicaid assistance as contributors to the “growing child welfare crisis” in the state.
“There’s a bulk of research that shows that when state spending is lower on public benefits, you see higher instances of child maltreatment and, of course, … more kids coming into foster care,” she said.
Nevada
Nevada governor to deliver address ahead of legislative session
CARSON CITY — Gov. Joe Lombardo will give his 2025 State of the State Address at 6 p.m. today in Nevada’s capital, where he will share his goals and priorities ahead of the upcoming legislative session.
“I look forward to sharing the progress my administration has made since my inaugural address, and I’m excited to outline my common-sense vision for our state ahead of the upcoming legislative session,” Lombardo said in a statement, highlighting efforts to keep taxes low, balance the state budget and bring investments to education and the workforce.
“As we look ahead, I’m eager to build on our progress in education, economic development, healthcare, housing, and public safety,” he said.
Every biennium, two weeks ahead of the legislative session, the governor delivers a State of the State Address that outlines his agenda and provides a framework for what lawmakers can expect over the course of the 120-day session.
In last November’s election, Lombardo successfully fended off a possible Democratic supermajority in both chambers that would have allowed Democrats to override any of his vetoes, greatly reducing his power. While Democrats still hold majorities in both the Assembly and Senate and can set their own agenda, any bill they pass must ultimately be signed into law by Lombardo, who is accustomed to wielding his veto power — having vetoed a record 75 bills in the 2023 session.
Ahead of the governor’s address, the Nevada State Democratic Party launched an ad titled “Expensive,” accusing Lombardo of raising costs for families due to his 2023 vetoes. The party pointed to housing bills that would have capped rent increases for seniors and would have established a new summary eviction procedure for tenants, as well as bills that would have guaranteed school meals to public school students and lowered the price of Medicare-negotiated prescription drugs.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Contact Jessica Hill at jehill@reviewjournal.com and McKenna Ross at mross@reviewjournal.com. Follow @jess_hillyeah and @mckenna_ross_ on X.
Nevada
Nevada gets past Air Force, 68-62, for second straight conference win; San Jose State is up next
None of the Mountain West Conference games are going to be easy and Air Force proved that to Nevada on Tuesday night.
The Falcons took Nevada to the wire before the Pack recovered and came away with a 68-62 win in front of 7,430 fans at Lawlor Events Center on Tuesday.
Tre Coleman led Nevada with 18 points and nine rebounds and Kobe Sanders had 11 points as the Wolf Pack improved to 2-0 in the Mountain West, 10-7 overall. Coleman also had four assists and Sanders had five.
The six-point margin at the end was Nevada’s largest lead of the game.
Next, Nevada hosts San Jose State, at 3 p.m. Saturday. The Spartans upset New Mexico, 71-70, on Tuesday.
There were 10 lead changes and seven ties. Air Force led, 60-59, with 3 minutes, 21 seconds left.
Kobe Sanders hit a bucket to give Nevada a 61-60 lead with 2:36 remaining, then Daniel Foster hit a 3-pointer to give the Pack some breathing room.
Ethan Taylor led the Falcons (3-14, 0-6) with 22 points and Kyle Marshall added 12.
Nevada coach Steve Alford said he liked his team’s fight. saying they won the last four minutes of the first half, 12-4 and the last four minutes of the second half, 12-2.
Key Stats
Nevada was dismal from the free throw line, connecting on 10-of-23. including four straight in the final minute.
The Pack missed the front end of four free throws, which Alford said actually made them 10-of-27 from the stripe.
“If we make our foul shots, then this game is a different look,” Alford said. “It’s really an odd deal because we started out the year so well (on free throws) and now we’ve got to be one of the worst fouls shooting teams in the league. It was an ugly game because of our foul shooting.”
Nevada had 30 points in the paint, to 18 for the Falcons.
Nick Davidson was 0-for-5 from the free throw line and he stayed well after the game Tuesday night shooting free throw after free throw. He had nine points and four assists in the game.
Air Force hit 10-of-27 from 3-point rahge and Nevad awas 6-of-014 from the arc.
Daniel Foster
Foster started and played 29 minutes, scoring five points on 2-of-4 from the field.
Alford said Foster does what the coaches want him to do.
“Daniel has a incredibly competitive mind. He wants to win and he knows he can influence wins without scoring. He guards like crazy. He rebounds. He gets loose balls,” Alford said. “And now we’re asking him to play some point (guard) to help Kobe out.”
First Half
Air Force led 35-33 at the break after the Wolf Pack tied it at 33 . The Pack trailed by 11 (31-20) with 5:06 left in the half.
Nevada made just 2-of-8 free throws in the first half, including three misses on front ends of one-and-ones. The Pack was 3-of-9 from the arc. Air Force made 5-of-6 free throws and 6-of-12 from 3-pont range.
The Series
Nevada leads the overall series with Air Force 18-3 and has won five straight in the series.
Up Next
San Jose State plays Nevada at Lawlor Events Center at 3 p.m. Saturday.
The Spartans (9-10, 2-5) beat New Mexico 71-70 on Tuesday night.
Nevada’s Remaining Schedule
- Jan. 18, San José State at Nevada, 3 p.m. (TV: KNSN, Radio: 95.5 FM)
- Jan. 22, Nevada at Utah State, 6 p.m. (TV: FS1, Radio: 95.5 FM)
- Jan. 25, Nevada at San Diego State, 7 p.m. (TV: CBS SN, Radio: 95.5 FM)
- Jan. 29, Nevada at Boise State, 7 p.m.
- Feb. 1, UNLV at Nevada, 8 p.m.
- Feb. 4, Nevada at Air Force, 6 p.m.
- Feb. 10, Fresno State at Nevada, 8 p.m.
- Feb. 14, Nevada at San Jose State, 7 p.m.
- Feb. 18, Nevada at Colorado State, 6 p.m.
- Feb. 22, Boise State at Nevada, 3 p.m.
- Feb. 25, Wyoming at Nevada, 7 p.m.
- Feb. 28, Nevada at UNLV, 8 p.m.
- March 4, New Mexico at Nevada, 6 p.m.
- March 8, Nevada at San Diego State, 7:30 p.m.
Nevada
Las Vegas man reported missing in Nevada County found safe
NEVADA COUNTY – Search crews were out in the Hoyt’s Crossing area of Nevada County, looking for a missing Las Vegas man who was reportedly last seen in that area over the weekend.
The Nevada County Sheriff’s Office said 29-year-old Michael McIntosh was last seen at Hoyt’s Crossing on Sunday.
As of Tuesday, search crews with the sheriff’s office along with California Highway Patrol were looking for him. A helicopter and crews on foot were involved in the search effort.
McIntosh was last seen wearing a blue flannel shirt, tan, pants, and no shoes. He was voluntarily missing, the sheriff’s office noted.
Late Tuesday morning, the sheriff’s office announced that McIntosh had been found safe. No other details have been released.
Hoyt’s Crossing is along the South Yuba River, about a half mile upstream of the South Yuba River Bridge.
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