Foster Care Programs
One of the hallmarks of LIRS's mission has been our
commitment to the needs of refugee and immigrant children who come
to the U.S. alone. For more than 25 years, LIRS has been one of
only two refugee resettlement agencies authorized by the U.S. Department
of State to arrange foster care placements for "unaccompanied refugee
minors." These are children and youth who come to the U.S. through
the U.S. Refugee Program, but lack a parent or caregiver due to
death of family members, abandonment, or separation due to war or
civil unrest. Unaccompanied minors make up roughly 3 to 5 percent
of any refugee flow. While a small proportion of the world's refugee
population, unaccompanied children are some of the most vulnerable
of all uprooted people.
Over the years, LIRS has placed more than 5,000 unaccompanied refugee
minors with licensed and trained foster families through 25 affiliated
child welfare programs across the country. These programs have provided
foster care and related services to youths from all around the globe,
including: Afghanistan, Albania, Bosnia, Burma, Burundi, Cambodia, China,
Colombia, Cuba, Djibouti, El Salvador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guatemala,
Haiti, Honduras, Iran, Iraq, Kosovo, Kurdistan, Laos, Liberia, Mexico, Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Viet Nam. These youths
come from many ethnic and religious backgrounds, with the common
characteristic that they have all fled various forms of war and
civil unrest. Despite such tragedies, these youths are survivors
who are eager for a second chance at childhood and a peaceful, productive
life.
These youths can remain in foster care until they have completed
high school or reach 20 to 21 years of age (depending on particular
state foster care regulations). In addition to foster care, these
youths receive support services such as: on-going assistance of
a social worker, ESL/tutoring, health/mental health services, independent
living and job skills training, counseling and support groups, legal
assistance, recreation, etc. Special attention is paid to the cultural
needs and adjustments of these children. Because these youths have
no resources of their own and no immediate relatives to care for
them, their basic needs are funded through a federal program of
the Office of Refugee Resettlement that follows domestic foster
care guidelines.
In addition to unaccompanied children who have entered through the
U.S. Refugee Program, these foster care programs have been a resource
for youths who have entered the country alone and been placed in
the custody of the federal government pending
a determination of their legal status. The program also serves asylees, Cuban/Haitian entrants, Amerasians, trafficking victims, and others. As an alternative to detaining
such children, some youths have been referred for foster care and
community-based services through the LIRS network of culturally
sensitive foster care providers. Examples of such youths include
minors who are applying for, or have been granted, asylum in the
United States; minors with special needs; and youths potentially
at risk from smugglers or traffickers.
Page updated June 17, 2005.
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