Research-To-Practice Brief

What Are Some Strategies for Finding and Keeping Resource Families?

Research shows that separating children from their families causes lasting trauma. Child protection agencies should exhaust all means to ensure children and families receive essential support to safely remain together. In instances when temporary out-of-home placement is necessary, finding the best possible family-based setting helps to mitigate trauma. Placement preferably should be with kin, but when kinship care is not possible, placing children in a safe family setting with a resource caregiver in their community is essential.

To ensure family-based placements meet the differing needs of children in the child welfare system, child protection agencies should actively recruit and retain resource caregivers from varied backgrounds. This Casey Family Programs brief highlights a menu of strategies for recruitment and retention of resource families, as well as a selection of tools and resources to help develop comprehensive, integrated recruitment and retention plans.

Source
Partner Resources
OFA Initiatives
A Home for Every Child
Topics/Subtopics
Supportive Services
Child Welfare
Special Populations
Child Only Cases
Youth in Transition
TANF Program Administration
Collaborations and Partnerships
Tribal TANF
Family Strengthening
Program Administration
Supportive Services
Tribal TANF/Child Welfare Collaboration
Publication Date
2025-09-10
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)
TANF Regulatory Codes
45 CFR Part 260.20 – (a)
45 CFR Part 260.20 – (d)