Fostering Advocates Arizona

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Aging Out of Care: The Beauty

June 12, 2019 by FAAZWebAdmin Leave a Comment

Lori, Mentor and Sora, Young Adult Leadership Board Member

I entered foster care at the age of 15. Like most youth who enter care as a teenager, I bounced around to many placements. As a trans-youth, it was especially hard for me to build connections and find a placement where I would be accepted. DCS struggled to continue to find me new placements. It got so bad that I had to spend my 17th birthday sleeping in an office building because they couldn’t find a placement for me. Fortunately, around this time I entered the THRIVE program and was paired with my mentor, Lori, who provided me with much-needed support to help me as I transitioned out of care.

THRIVE is a mentorship program offered through Arizona’s Children Association. It is designed to provide support to youth ages 16 to 21 who have or will be transitioning out of foster care. THRIVE works with young adults to match them with a mentor based off on their interests.

Lori was not my first mentor in this program. Before her, I was paired with a man who ended up being removed from the THRIVE program because he was not helping the youth who he mentored. When I was told they had a new mentor for me, I was very apprehensive. Like many teens in care, I had trouble trusting that someone was there for me. THRIVE thankfully has a trial period to make it easy for youth to decide that a mentor is or is not a good fit, so I took a leap of faith and met Lori, who has since changed my life.

Lori and I were not the perfect pair when we first met. I thought Lori was loud and obnoxious, and she didn’t understand what it meant to be trans. We disagreed on a lot of things, but we both stuck it out and got through the adjustment period, and she since has become a significant support in my life.

I disrupted from a placement at 17, just a couple months before my 18th birthday. Lori took legal custody over me to make sure I could get back on my feet and has continued to be there for me ever since then. She helps me when I need guidance on things like housing or education, and even if we disagree, I know I always have someone I can reach out to and that Lori will set any disputes aside to be there for me. We celebrate holidays together, Lori and her partner take me out for my birthdays, something I never celebrated while in care, and they treat me like family. Young adults in care may have a lot of support from DCS workers, and other program staff, but we all want that personal relationship that a mentor provides. I am will always be grateful for having Lori in my life to provide just that.

This blog was written by Sora, Young Adult Leadership Board Member for FAAZ. You can read more about Sora here.

Filed Under: Advocacy, Aging Out Tagged With: aging out, Foster Care Mentors, Foster Care Young Adults, Fostering Advocates Arizona, grateful, I Speak Change, Mentors, THRIVE, Thrive Mentor Program, trans, transgender, Young Adult Leadership Board, young adults, youth in foster care

Youth Engagement Conference

June 15, 2018 by FAAZWebII Leave a Comment

FAAZ Young Adult Leadership Board Members Andy, Ashley and Jesus headed to the Youth Engagement Conference in San Antonio, Texas.

Last month, three FAAZ Young Adult Board Members traveled to San Antonio, Texas for the Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Youth Engagement Conference. This two-day long event focused on youth voice as the driver behind race, ethnicity, equity and inclusion conversations. FAAZ Board Member, Ashley Pacheco, spoke at the conference and shared her experience.

Ashley believes that engaging young people in these conversations is extremely important. In her opinion, we all come from different backgrounds and while many adults can deliver a moving speech, when it comes from another young person it can help youth feel more connected. In her own words, “authentically engaging youth is really important because it is the foundation on how to talk to youth and how to connect to youth.” Ashley feels that when organizations engage youth directly it demonstrates that they are “not talking for you, but with you.”

Ashley enjoyed several of the guest speakers at the conference. One speaker in particular, Jerry Tello of National Compadres Network, brought Ashley comfort when she found out they were from the same hometown. Even though Jerry didn’t experience foster care, he understood and shared similar experiences growing up a young person of color. In this way, it validated her own personal experiences.

The trip also served as an opportunity for Ashley to connect with her fellow Board Members. They shared their stories and reflected on the commonalities and differences between them. Ashley brings home a greater sense of connection as well as the tools to engage in potentially uncomfortable conversations regarding race equity.

Filed Under: Advocacy Tagged With: Advocacy, conference, equity, race, Young Adult Leadership Board, youth engagement

2018 Policy Recommendations Announcement

March 18, 2018 by FAAZWebII Leave a Comment

As young people who have experienced foster care, our challenges, strengths and life experiences are the driving force behind our advocacy efforts. Having lived through the obstacles that brought us into care, managing life while in care, and surviving life after care, we understand the hurdles and struggles current and former foster youth face each day.

Over the last several months, we have worked diligently to identify four key priority areas along with recommendations to improve foster care in Arizona. We are excited to announce the publication of our 2018 Policy Recommendations. We urge you to read our personal testimonies on how these priority areas have challenged and affected our lives and join us in taking action to make these changes. We are asking for a seat at the leadership table, and so should you! As experts on foster care, in the coming weeks, months and years ahead we need to provide meaningful ideas and solutions for ALL youth to truly thrive in Arizona.

 

Breanna Carpenter
Fostering Advocates Arizona
Young Adult Leadership Board Member 

Filed Under: Advocacy, Aging Out, News

Living Foster Care

May 30, 2017 by FAAZWebII Leave a Comment

FAAZ Young Adult Board Member, Frank Smith, challenged Joe Jacober to “live foster care” through the FAAZ Day in the Life challenge. Joe’s challenge was to be patted down for an entire week every time he entered his home. This challenge reflected one of Frank’s own experiences while in foster care.

Frankly, it was humiliating.  Walking into my own house and being patted down seemed sad.  For what reason was I being patted down?  What are you looking for?  What do you think I am hiding?  Don’t you trust me?  These were the thoughts going through my head each time I came home,” Joe shared.

When asked how this challenge enhanced Joe’s understanding of the experiences some youth in foster care could face, he responded, “Having been a foster parent for more than 15 years, I thought I had a grasp of the issues faced by youth in foster care, but this challenged surprised me.  It is amazing to think that any child or young person would have to experience something like this. If there is such a lack of trust between me (or the youth in foster care), how would we ever have a growing and nurturing relationship if every time you greeted me you were saying … ” I don’t trust you”.  Not exactly a welcoming feeling.”

The Day in the Life blog series, is an effort spearheaded by the FAAZ Young Adult Leadership Board, to raise community awareness of the need for normalcy within foster care, supported under the Federal Strengthening Families Act (SFA). Moreover, with SFA, foster families have the support and trust they need to create “normal” living environments and experiences for youth in their care. This helps develop open and compassionate relationships between caregivers and youth to create trusting and stable relationships.

“I am often approached with questions about being a foster parent, but rarely about what it is like to be in foster care.  I learned that I need to be much more open and mindful of the experiences youth in foster care, especially older youth, may be going through, if I truly expect to be a good advocate for them,” Jacober.

A special thank you to Joe Jacober and Frank Smith for sharing their “Day in the Life” experiences!

Filed Under: Advocacy, Day in the Life, News

Meghan’s Day In The Life Challenge

March 23, 2017 by FAAZWebII Leave a Comment


Mission accepted! This month’s Day in the Life challenge is particularly special, as one of our very own advocates, Meghan Arrigo, was nominated to take part in raising greater awareness to the everyday experiences of Arizona youth in foster care. Young Adult Board Member, Desaray Klimenko, challenged Meghan to do all her grocery shopping for the week using the bus as her primary mode of transportation. This is a challenge often experienced by many youth in foster care.

Eating healthy is an important part of my family’s lifestyle. Once a week, we pull out our cookbooks and methodically plan our menu and grocery list for the week. We also hit at least two to three stores a trip so we can get the best sale prices. I knew grocery shopping for the week, on the bus, was not going to be easy, so I enlisted the support of my husband. We coordinated our schedules and choose a Sunday afternoon to ensure we had enough time. We planned our meals accordingly, making sure to only buy exactly what we needed. After researching where to purchase bus tickets and the bus routes, we decided to visit only one grocery store, even if this meant missing out on sale items.

As we set out to walk through our neighborhood to the nearest bus stop, it started to rain. Once we boarded and made it to the store, we worked together as quickly as possible hoping to catch the next hourly bus. Once we finished shopping, we headed out on foot towards the nearest bus stop. Just as we approached the intersection to cross the street, we saw the bus parked loading passengers.  We attempted to run, grocery bags in hand, but we couldn’t cross in time and the bus left without us. While waiting the 30 minutes until the next bus arrived, it started to rain, so we sought shelter under a car wash awning. It took us 2.5 hours to complete our shopping trip; double what it typically takes us in our car and going to multiple stores. I ended up riding my bike to another store midweek to purchase some additional items.

My Day In The Life Challenge underscored how essential a driver’s license and vehicle are in a state like Arizona, and the privileges I have with both. Not just because having a car makes grocery shopping easier, it makes everything easier. It allows me flexibility in employment, assurance I can attend doctors’ appointments and important meetings, connections with friends and family, additional safety in my commute, and a whole host of other advantages and conveniences. Having to ride a bike or rely on the bus as my only form of transportation means something entirely different when it is a choice vs. out of necessity. For young people in foster care, it is critical they have this choice. Prior to leaving care, all young adults 16 and older should be provided driver’s training courses and the opportunity to secure a driving permit or license. It is a critical step in the ability to be self-sufficient. We can’t hold young people to expectations of independence if we don’t provide them the tools and support to do so.”

Now it’s your turn to take the challenge and raise awareness of what “living foster care” is like. Do you accept this mission?

Filed Under: Advocacy, Day in the Life Tagged With: Advocacy, Children's Action Alliance, Foster Care, foster youth, Fostering Advocates Arizona

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Copyright by Fostering Advocates Arizona at Children's Action Alliance (CAA). The information included on this website is gathered by CAA. The organizations included on the website are not endorsed by CAA or Fostering Advocates Arizona. We welcome suggestions to improve this website. Please email fosteringadvocatesaz@gmail.com.