The state Social Services Administration may have approved guardianship homes for children who are in state care where registered sex offenders lived, and failed to identify a convicted sex offender who worked in a group foster home and later faced criminal charges involving children under his care.
Those are just some of the findings of a 70-page audit released Wednesday by the Office of Legislative Audits that includes a slate of concerning findings dating back to 2008 and new findings that include nearly $700,000 in penalties for failing to meet federal foster care service requirements.
Legislative Auditor Brian Tanen, in a letter with the audit, said the administration “did not have comprehensive procedures to ensure individuals with disqualifying criminal backgrounds did not have access to children in the State’s care.”
The letter also noted that the administration “was not aware of the 7 registered sex offenders we identified that had the same address as an approved guardianship home housing 10 children as of August 2024 and had not identified that an individual employed by a group foster care home had been convicted of sexual assault of a minor. This individual was subsequently charged with crimes involving children under his care.”..
Accountability and compliance ‘remains unsatisfactory’
ReplyDeleteThat's an understatement! Sounds like a dog chasing its tail. . .
All those protocols and procedures
ReplyDeleteAnd all the new recommendations
Will not result in any risk reduction
Nor make a difference in the situation.
"State may have put children in homes where registered sex offenders lived" The State, this is preposterous!
ReplyDeleteWelcome to our free state of Maryland
ReplyDeleteA land of blue crabs and white oak trees
With all those dreaded draconian laws
So registered sex offenders can act free.
"Finding 9: SSA did not meet federal foster care service performance requirements resulting in penalties totaling $698,296 being assessed on the State" Thus, the State increased the car registration fees!
ReplyDelete