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Staff

  • Milia Islam-Majeed,
    Executive Director
  • Patty Lance,
    Secretary
  • Rev. Dale Whitney,
    Farmers' Markets Manager
  • Amelia Nieto,
    Centro Shalom Coordinator
  • Rev. William Scar, D.Min,
    Good Samaritan Counseling
    Center, Therapist
  • Lyle Rapp, MFT,
    Good Samaritan Counseling
    Center, Therapist

Contacts

Telephone
562-983-1665

Fax
562-983-8812

Address
759 Linden Avenue
Long Beach, CA 90813- 4501

Electronic mail
General Information:
SouthCoastInterfaith@gmail.com

At-Risk Children and Youth

Due to parental abuse neglected children can be taken from their homes and placed in foster care.  Older children can be at risk of being drawn into gangs, becoming addicted to drugs or alcohol, being drawn into violent or predatory crime or causing pregnancy and/or becoming pregnant.  Their being "at risk" arises most often from their situations present at home.

In February of 2009, there were 3,629 children who had been placed in foster care in Los Angeles County’s Service Planning Area 8 by the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS).  DCFS has two offices in SPA 8: (1) the Torrance office which serves El Segundo, Inglewood, Hawthorne, Gardena, and Harbor City and cities generally to the west and south of them and (2) the Lakewood office which serves Long Beach, Carson, Wilmington, San Pedro and Catalina Island.  The Torrance office was in charge of 1,443 children in February and receives an average of 60 new children per month for whom it must find foster homes.  The Lakewood office had 2,186 children in February and receives an average of 50 new children per month.  Each month some children are returned to the homes of their parent/ other relatives or are otherwise discharged.

Action Plan

The Social Concerns Committee plans to help increase awareness of and support for at-risk children and youth.  This work will involve (1) recruitment of foster and adoptive parents and mentors for foster children and children who have an incarcerated parent, (2) disseminating information about services for foster children, and (3) working with congregations and neighborhoods to provide alternatives to gangs, to reduce racism and to create respect for the dignity of every human being.  The committee will form three teams: one focusing on foster care, another on gangs and the third on creating respect across racial and cultural lines.

The plan is to continue our support of the faith-based groups of the Torrance and Lakewood offices of DCFS and take whatever collateral actions seem appropriate.

The Torrance DCFS office has created a Faith-Based Committee. The purpose of this committee is to address how congregations and faith-based organizations can assist in supporting the most vulnerable children in our community – those that have experienced abuse/neglect and living in foster care as well as those who are at risk of entering the foster care system.  The goals of this committee are listed as follows:

  • » To create awareness of the needs of foster children and their caregivers within the South Bay;
  • » To create partnerships with congregations and faith-based organizations in order to improve child abuse prevention efforts and assure that the children who do enter foster care are able to obtain permanency;
  • » To link needy families to the resources provided by congregations and faith-based organizations in order to: help reduce the number of families that enter the child welfare system, reduce recidivism rates, and to increase the number of children that are reunified with their families;
  • » Finding, supporting, and maintaining foster/adoptive homes that are located in communities in which children live so that when children must be removed from their home for safety reasons, they are able to remain in their own neighborhoods;
  • » To provide support and services to foster youth and their caregivers;
  • » To find mentors for foster youth who do not have any permanent connections to a caring adult.

The Lakewood office has also been involved in outreach to religious congregations and faith-based organizations for purposes similar to those listed above.   

The committee will also undertake to help congregations and neighborhoods to create positive relationships between parents and children, provide alternatives to gangs, combat racism, and engender respect for persons of other racial, ethnic or cultural groups.

List of Resources

Foster Care

Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services

Children Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Education of Children in Foster Care

Annie E. Casey Foundation

United Friends of the Children

 

Gangs & Racism

Gangs: Awareness, Prevention, Intervantion

Street Gangs

 

For More Information: Contact Victoria McKinney or Call 310-631-8458

 

 
Donation