CAI’s Amy Harfeld, National Policy Advocate Quoted in The Imprint on NYC Keeping SSI Benefits of Foster Youth to Offset Costs

CAI’s Amy Harfeld, National Policy Advocate Quoted in The Imprint on NYC Keeping SSI Benefits of Foster Youth to Offset Costs

Amy HarfeldAmy Harfeld, National Policy Advocate and Senior Staff Attorney, Children's Advocacy Institute

SAN DIEGO (April 25, 2024) – University of San Diego (USD) School of Law Children’s Advocacy Institute’s (CAI) Amy Harfeld, National Policy Advocate and Senior Staff Attorney was quoted by The Imprint in an article entitled, “Are Disabled Kids in NYC Foster Care Receiving the Social Security Benefits They Deserve?” 

According to the article, years after promised reforms, advocates complain New York City still unfairly keeps the cash to “offset” the costs of foster care.

“Our foster care agencies and SSA are violating their legal and moral duty to do right by these most vulnerable children and center the child’s best interests at all times,” Amy Harfeld, the institute’s national policy director, said in a press release. “These funds amount to nothing but a rounding error for most state budgets, but would be life-changing for impacted youth.”

CAI, with support from funders, has been leading a multidimensional campaign to eradicate this practice nationwide. A well-established leader on this issue, CAI is leading reform efforts at the federal, state, and local levels to protect the rights and preserve the benefits of foster youth. CAI issued a 50 state report card entitled, “Foster Care or Foster Con? Preserving the Federal Benefits of America’s Most Vulnerable Children.” According to the report, New York received an F for its effort to protect foster youth’s benefits.

To read the full article, visit The Imprint.

To learn more about CAI’s campaign to stop this practice, please visit our Preserving Federal Benefits of Foster Youth website.

About the Children’s Advocacy Institute

The Children's Advocacy Institute (CAI), founded at the nonprofit University of San Diego School of Law in 1989, is one of the nation's premiere academic, research, and advocacy organizations working to improve the lives of children and youth, with special emphasis on improving the child protection and foster care systems and enhancing resources that are available to youth aging out of foster care.

In its academic component, CAI trains law students and attorneys to be effective child advocates throughout their legal careers. Its Child Advocacy Clinic gives USD Law students three distinct clinical opportunities to advocate on behalf of children and youth, and its Dependency Counsel Training Program provides comprehensive training to licensed attorneys engaged in or contemplating Dependency Court practice.

CAI's research and advocacy component, conducted through its offices in San Diego, Sacramento, and Washington, D.C., seeks to leverage change for children and youth through impact litigation, regulatory and legislative advocacy, and public education. Active primarily at the federal and state levels, CAI's efforts are multi-faceted—comprehensively and successfully embracing all tools of public interest advocacy to improve the lives of children and youth. To support CAI’s work, please visit law.sandiego.edu/caigift.

About the University of San Diego School of Law

Each year, USD educates approximately 800 Juris Doctor and graduate law students from throughout the United States and around the world. The law school is best known for its offerings in the areas of business and corporate law, constitutional law, intellectual property, international and comparative law, public interest law and taxation. 

USD School of Law is one of the 84 law schools elected to the Order of the Coif, a national honor society for law school graduates. The law school’s faculty is a strong group of outstanding scholars and teachers with national and international reputations and currently ranks 30th nationally among U.S. law faculties in scholarly impact and 41st nationally in past-year faculty downloads on the Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN). The school is accredited by the American Bar Association and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools. Founded in 1954, the law school is part of the University of San Diego, a private, independent, Roman Catholic university chartered in 1949.

Contact:

Katie Gonzalez
katiegonzalez@sandiego.edu
(619) 260-4806