County blames meth for foster care jump
By Crystal Owens| Morris News Service
Sunday, June 15, 2008

DANIELSVILLE, Ga. --- Twice as many Madison County children could land in foster care this year, a trend social workers say is driven by the scourge of methamphetamine addiction.

The county already has placed 23 children in foster care this year compared with 24 children in all of last year, said Lisa Plank, the director of the Department of Family and Children Services for Madison and Oglethorpe counties. Those numbers don't include children who were placed with a relative.

"It's something we're seeing all over Georgia," Ms. Plank said. "Meth is such a difficult habit to kick that parents are getting to the point that they're losing their child and everything else as well."

Last year, Madison County DFACS investigated 434 reports of child abuse and neglect, Ms. Plank said, and most were about parents' drug addictions or domestic violence.

In the past few years, more than two-thirds of Georgia's family and children service agencies have had to provide additional training to employees to deal with the effects of meth use, according to the Georgia Alliance for Drug Endangered Children.

The Madison County Sheriff's Office breaks up a lot fewer meth labs today than it did two years ago, but meth addiction still is a problem in the rural county, Sheriff Clayton Lowe said.

On average, deputies make two to three arrests each week for possession of meth and in many cases, children are involved, Sheriff Lowe said.

"A lot of times, the parents don't give the children the attention they deserve because they have other things on their minds," he said. "We've seen times when the parents just put the kid outside to play and never check on them again. Or the homes have been found in disarray."

Prescription medication is becoming the drug of choice in Madison County, Sheriff Lowe said. He worries deputies will soon start to see more children taken from their homes because their parents are too addicted to painkillers to take care of them.

Children of addicts must travel for court appointments and counseling, said Gary Locke, a Madison County DFACS board member, which leaves foster parents to deal with high gasoline costs. Mr. Locke recently asked county commissioners for an extra $6,000 to offset fuel costs, a request they approved.

Ms. Plank said the county is seeing more siblings put in foster care together, meaning more children to take to appointments. Foster parents will be allowed a fuel budget of $50 per month per child, she said.

Reader Comments
Note: Comments are not edited and don't represent the views of The Augusta Chronicle. Please read our full comments policy. To report a post that may be inappropriate, click the icon.
Your comment will be attributed to
YOUR MESSAGE:
You have 1200 characters left.


advertisement

advertisement

TopJobs


Augusta-area Top Jobs
CROTHALL FACILITIES Stationary Engineer Must have prior experience in the operation and maintenance of water tube boilers, pumps, steam and condensate systems. Must be willing to work rotating shift... (more)
Dock Work Material Handler & Permanent Call (706)868-6800 Sort, handle and load freight and unload the over the road equipment. Permanent Pos. Pro Emp Svcs $185 J#2544 Well Established Aiken Count... (more)
General Labor Local West Augusta company looking for LABORER >$-12hr< Full Time Permanent Position Call (706)868-6800 Full Benefits Package Pro Emp Svs $185 J#371PERM Well Established Aug. Co (more)


© 2009 The Augusta Chronicle|Terms of service|About our ads|Help|Contact us|Subscribe|Local business listings


advertisement
advertisement