FRANKFORT, KY (January 28, 2025) – Auditor Allison Ball has received alarming information from the Commonwealth Office of the Ombudsman on foster children housed in Cabinet for Health and Family Services (CHFS) office buildings. She has now asked the Ombudsman to take a deeper dive into the issue.
“The data discovered by the Ombudsman revealed deeply concerning issues impacting foster children across Kentucky - not just in Jefferson County," said Auditor Ball. “The data reveals children, as young as one-year-old, are spending extended periods of time in CHFS offices. The systemic failures need urgent action; therefore, I advise launching a more thorough investigation to find innovative solutions to build a brighter future for foster children across the Commonwealth."
The Ombudsman's preliminary investigation analyzed a sample of the 49 most recent cases involving children spending the night in a state office building over a four-month period from June 10, 2024, to October 29, 2024. The preliminary report exclusively reviewed children staying overnight in CHFS offices and did not include children housed in other locations such as state parks or hotels.
The investigation uncovered many critical facts including:
- The 49 children spent a combined 198 days in a CHFS building.
- The average stay was 4.04 days.
- The longest stay spent by a child in a CHFS building was 35 days during the examination period.
- Six children spent ten or more days in a CHFS building.
- The average age was 13.
- Six children were under ten; the youngest was one.
- Three service regions accounted for 70% of children in CHFS office buildings.
- The Two Rivers Service Region had the highest number of children housed during the examined period, accounting for 13 children (26% of cases) across counties such as Daviess, Warren, and Henderson.
- Kenton County and Hardin County housed six children each, the highest number of children across all 120 counties.
- Jefferson County housed two children.
There is a clear need for continued investigation by the Ombudsman's Office to uncover the root causes and far-reaching effects of this critical problem in Kentucky. Since the preliminary assessment was announced in October 2024, the Auditor's Office has continued to receive reports from constituents revealing that children are also being housed in hotels and state parks throughout the Commonwealth. These additional locations will be included in the full investigation.
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