By CHRIS POWELL
Connecticut doesn’t seem to have been bothered much by last week’s especially horrible fatality, that of a 3-year-old girl who was struck by a car and killed while crossing a street in Manchester, apparently unaccompanied, at 4:30 in the morning, 45 minutes before sunrise. The state Department of Children and Families quickly acknowledged that it had been investigating two complaints made a week earlier about a lack of supervision in the child’s home.
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Some people in Manchester felt punched in the stomach by the incident, since a doorbell camera showed the child trying to open a neighbor’s door, presumably for help, without awakening the occupants, and then hurrying back toward the street.
At least the state Senate’s minority Republican caucus noticed with a statement, citing two other recent deaths of children in households that had been under DCF review.
The incident, the Republicans said, “underscores how DCF is a train wreck. DCF cannot handle the cases they are already monitoring, and they are making catastrophic mistakes.”
That criticism may have been hasty, since the details of the Manchester fatality remain unclear. Very young children sometimes manage to leave their homes without their ordinarily attentive parents noticing. Were this child’s parent or parents awake, sleeping, intoxicated, or drugged? Was the child hungry and seeking food? What exactly did those complaints say about lack of supervision? They were only days old, so how much could DCF have resolved by then?
Presumably the police and DCF itself will answer soon.
But what Connecticut does or should know is more compelling, and goes far beyond DCF.
If, as it seems, DCF is understaffed and suffers debilitating turnover, it is not so much because the agency is badly managed as because child neglect is an overwhelming problem, probably the worst facing both the state and the country. Millions of children have only one parent, if that, receive much less parenting than they need, and live in poverty — largely because welfare policy presumes that fathers are no longer needed in their children’s homes and that childbearing outside marriage is so good that it should be subsidized heavily.
Inflation and drug and alcohol abuse keep handicapping such households even more, and 17% of Connecticut’s public school students are chronically absent, the rate reaching 25% or more in the cities, where poverty is concentrated.
A third or more of the state’s high school students graduate without proficiency in English or math. Some even are graduated illiterate. These young people are sent into adulthood qualified only for menial jobs and primed for demoralization in which a life of childbearing outside marriage and welfare dependence can seem like their most practical option.
Even the best-managed child protection agency could not keep up with child neglect on this scale. Indeed, it would be no surprise if child protection employees are so appalled and themselves demoralized by the worsening social disintegration they see on the job that they soon look for other work.
Most children who come to DCF’s attention might do much better in another household, but the agency is damned if it leaves the children in place and damned if it tries to remove them. Since foster parents are in short supply, there will never be as many removals as might be justified. As a result many child-protection cases will always have bad outcomes.
Democrats and Republican legislators alike probably will join Governor Lamont and respond to the child protection problem by throwing more money at it — including by increasing welfare benefits. That is, more of the same. But the iron rule of economics will continue to operate: Whatever you subsidize you’ll get more of.
What is needed is policy change that compels people to take more responsibility for themselves: to pursue education seriously, go to work, learn skills, advance on the job, and not have children before marriage and gaining the capacity to support a family.
All this used to be obvious. Then government began paying people not to be responsible.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)