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Inception:
On January 11, 1867, a group of philanthropic Toledo
women met at the home of Dr. S.H. Bergen to discuss the establishment of a home
for destitute orphan children. Eight men were selected as Advisors and 14 women
as Managers. While the institution had been designated the Protestant Orphan's
Home, it was conducted on a nonsectarian basis, all creeds and nationalities
being welcome.
Facilities:
The Home was opened in January, 1867, when three
children were placed in a private residence provided by Mr. William Baker. The
Home remained there until the following November when it was moved to a location
on LaGrange Street near Bancroft Street. Within months, it was home to as many
as 80 children at a time.
Finances:
Funds were raised by the sale of annual and life
memberships and through other financial donations. Later, those seeking care for
their children without permanently surrendering them were charged a monthly fee,
typically $10.00 per month. If accounts fell into arrears by more than 30 days,
permanent surrender of the child(ren) went into effect.
Services:
The Home served large numbers of orphans,
half-orphans and destitute children needing care and education for life's work.
Most of the children were placed at the Home due to poverty or a serious illness
in the family. Emphasis was placed on providing for their physical needs and
molding them into solid, productive citizens.
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Late 1800s
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Name:
On March 12, 1890, the Home came under the auspices of the county
government and the name was changed to the Lucas County Children's
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| The Lucas County Children's Home in 1896.
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Services:
During the late 1800s a statewide movement resulted
in the construction of many orphanages, and county authorities began to take an
interest in caring for the unfortunate children of the county. During this
period of time the Home's population averaged 100-110 children. The Board of
Trustees met frequently and made all decisions regarding placements and
indentures. The Board also conducted all home visits and investigations until
1897, when Miss A. J. Brown of East Toledo was hired as the agency's first
social worker. She was also charged with placing children. As "Visiting Agent"
she was paid $25.00 per month. The belief that children fare better in family
settings than in institutionalized care was recognized even before the turn of
the century. Superintendent John Niesz, commenting on the Home's 19 children
placed in private homes in 1896, wrote the following: "A child in an institution
is homeless
There is no longer any question that the best interests of the child
demand that a home shall be found for it in a family as speedily as possible,
and on the contrary it is often demonstrated that it is a positive injury to a
child to keep it in an institution during the years of its education and
character building."
Finances:
Once the Home became the responsibility of the
county, operating funds came from the county general fund. Occasional levies
provided funds for construction of new buildings. By 1899, the budget had grown
to $11,915. However, the Home strove to be as self-sufficient as possible. The
land included a 35-acre farm, which yielded produce such as grapes, apples,
corn, potatoes and a variety of grains. What was not consumed by the children
and staff was sold at market. The staff also made many of the children's
garments. In 1896, for example, they produced 183 pair of pants, 109 waists, 81
dresses, 70 nightgowns, 38 drawers and 26 coats.
Facilities:
A tract of fifty acres located on the river near
Maumee was purchased by the Advisors, and the Protestant Orphan's Home moved to
the country. The first building, a Commissary, was constructed in
1887.
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Early 1900s
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Services:
The Trustees were discriminating
in their admissions, refusing to take children who were physically handicapped,
and hesitating to take in the feeble-minded. Referrals were often made to other
institutions such as the county infirmary, the Blind Asylum, the Home for Feeble
Minded in Columbus, and to church affiliated institutions like the Lutheran
Orphans Home, St. Anthony's Home, and the Home of the Good Shepherd. During the
early 1900s there was an increasing awareness of the problems of the
underprivileged and many child welfare organizations were founded.
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| These two girls were placed
with foster parents in New York. (circa 1914)
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A change in Ohio law in 1913 required county homes to take children one year and older.
Prior to this time, the Home had accepted only children at least two years of age.
The focus of services remained on the physical care of children and the job
of preparing them for the workplace. In addition to regular schooling, the Home
instituted "domestic science" classes for girls and carpentry instruction for
boys. Older boys were also taught the care of cattle and horses on the Home's
farm, and each child, beginning at age 9, was taught to raise a garden.
According to the Home's 1915 annual report: "A child with a sound, well kept
body, and a mind filled with wholesome employment is a pretty good child to
commence with. Add to the variety of employment already mentioned a generous
amount of recreation and amusements and the child is growing into a good citizen
before you realize it."
The trustees and superintendent of the
Children's Home continued the emphasis on placing children in family-based care,
and by 1912 there were more children in foster homes (237) than in the Home
(180). The same was true in 1915, with 237 and 160, respectively.
The school building (right) in 1915. A grass basketball
court is in the foreground.
Through the
first two decades of the 1900s, the Home would complete 30-40 adoptions
annually. Children were placed into private homes "on trial" for 60 days, after
which the adoptive parents had the choice of keeping or returning the child. For
the year ending February, 1900, 12 of 42 children (30 percent) placed in private
homes were returned by the adoptive parents; however, "disruption" rates for
this era were typically lower (15-20 percent).
Finances:
The Home was blessed with fertile ground, and
during the early 1900s the farm brought $45-$50 in annual income from excess
produce. Still, the Home struggled against the high cost of living -- the
trustees were forced to pay 7½¢ per pound for beef -- and the uncertainty of
support from the county general fund. Attempts were constantly made to collect
support for the children. According to minutes from July, 1914, the
Superintendent was instructed "to call to the attention of some parents of the
children in the Home the fact that they are keeping their children here longer
than appears necessary to straighten out their tangled domestic affairs. It is
the hope of the Board that a little judicious pushing of some fathers will move
them to re-establish their own homes with their children about them." The Home's
budget for 1915 was $44,720.63, with an average daily population of 185
children. About 30 employees worked at the Home at this time.
Facilities:
In spite of financial difficulties the Home
continued to expand. The new Riverside School building was completed in 1908,
and a tax levy approved in November, 1915, resulted in the construction of a new
administration building.
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1920s - Great Depression
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Services:
By 1934, with the
country in the throes of the Great Depression, 356 children, ranging in age
from 2 to 21 years, were living at the Home and another 155 were in foster care.
Ten adoptions were completed.
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| Children and staff celebrate the 4th of July in 1920.
the Maumee River is in the background.
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Unsurprisingly, the population of the Home was
greater during the Depression than during any other time in its history.Despite the economic ills gripping
the country, the children at the Home were well looked after. A story from the
February 17, 1935 edition of the Toledo Times notes that in the previous nine
years, only one child had died while residing at the Home, "and that of an
incurable disease contracted elsewhere." The Times cited a survey listing
children in the Lucas County home as having the best teeth among children in
similar institutions across the country. The story also referred to the daily
regimen of 27 square feet of coffee cake and 200 loaves of bread made in the
kitchen.
Among the approximately 70
employees were a physician, six nurses who ran the Home's hospital, and a
visiting dentist. At this time, children of grade-school age were educated at
the Home. Those of junior-high age attended school at Ft. Miami, and high school
students went to Maumee High.
Residents of the Home enjoy a cookout in 1922.
The photo is labeled "at the reservation"
indicating these boys were likely participating
in a day away from the Home.
Finances:
By 1934, the Home's operating
budget had grown to nearly $125,000. The federal Social Security Act of 1935
established, among many other programs, significant federal aid for child
welfare. Federal grants were contingent upon states developing organized,
comprehensive methods for caring for their dependent children.
Facilities:
In August 1920, a new recreation
building was completed at a cost of $100,000. Twelve years later, three
additional cottages were constructed as replacements for dormitories that had
existed since the 1880s. The new cottages had living space for 24 children each.
Several special tax levies were passed to finance these
improvements.
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Post-War Era
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Services:
Through the late 1940s and into
the 1950s, the agency grew steadily and gradually increased services to include
the innovative pre-school program, a migrant day care center, expansion
of foster care and adoption programs, homemaker services, crippled children's
services, and the concentrated effort to expand the facilities to care for
retarded children.
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| Young residents tend to the Home's crops under the watchful eye of an
instructor. Revenue from the sale of crops and livestock helped fund the
Home. (date unknown)
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By 1945, the Ohio legislature had
passed a law (H. B. 418) requiring counties to establish child welfare boards or
provide for children's services in the county department of welfare. The Home
became part of the new county Child Welfare Board (CWB), which was authorized
and obligated to provide a much wider range of services to children. One of
those services was the protection of children who had been abused and neglected.
The agency had a long-established practice of assisting children who had been
mistreated, but the new law (which took effect in January, 1946) codified the
CWB's authority (and responsibility) to intervene and provide protective
services to these children. The CWB staff grew from two members to seven, and on
June 1, 1947, Miss Jane Cartwright was appointed Executive Secretary. Part of
her job was to present to the public the agency's policy not to duplicate any
services already being rendered. Nonetheless, many existing agencies serving
children felt threatened by the new Child Welfare Board. Through the 1940s and
into the early 1950s, the Children's Home population remained fairly steady with
a daily resident average of 225-250. Eventually, the responsibility of the CWB
was broadened to include the care of crippled children. These services, which
had been available in Ohio since the early 1920s, were put under the supervision
of the CWB in 1953. By 1959, the board was providing services to nearly 500
crippled children annually. In 1958, Lucas County voters passed a special levy
for the care of mentally retarded children. This program was administered by the
CWB until 1968, when the state of Ohio created county mental retardation boards.
Many other changes were taking place at the Children's Home during the late
1950s. The need for a multiple service program was recognized instead of a
"home" tending only to children's physical needs. During 1960, the CWB changed
the name of the Home to Miami Children's Center, implying a new approach to
residential care, that of providing training, treatment, and education in
addition to physical care. Children were allowed to have their own clothing
rather than "institutional clothes" distributed by house parents from a common
wardrobe. The recreation program was accelerated and reorganized, the school
program revised and strengthened, and all aspects of the program were focused on
the individualization of the child.
Name:
The Lucas County Children's Home
became the Lucas County Child Welfare Board on January 1, 1946, following the
enactment of the new state child welfare law.
Facilities:
In early 1946, the new CWB moved
into an office in the Humane Society Building in downtown Toledo. In June the
agency moved to offices in the Huron Building. During this time the CWB
continued to operate the Home in Maumee. In April, 1948 the offices were moved
to 338 Erie Street, and in September, 1954 the agency moved again to more
spacious quarters at 416 N. Erie Street. In 1954, voters approved a tax levy to
provide funds for the construction of seven new cottages and a receiving unit at
the Children's Home. These new buildings were completed and occupied by early
1957.
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The 1960s
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Finances:
In November, 1965, a 1.4 mill
county operating levy was defeated resulting in a drastic 42% reduction of
budget. For reasons of economy the agency moved its administrative offices to
the Miami Children's Center. The Lucas County Welfare Board had been receiving
its funds from the county general fund, but in 1967 the Board asked for a direct
1.3 mill tax levy to be used exclusively for child welfare purposes. Despite a
vigorous campaign, the levy was defeated.
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| The Miami Children's Home in 1961
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The following November the board again
asked for a 1.5 mill levy. The CWB's 1968 budget of $1.1 million was deemed
"grossly inadequate" in a Toledo Blade editorial supporting the levy. Championed
by the United Toledo Committee, a group of philanthropic citizens, the campaign
resulted in success on November 5, 1968. The five-year operating levy, the first
in agency history, produced an estimated $2.4 million a year and more than
doubled the board's annual budget.
Services:
In January, 1966, the agency's
board of trustees voted to eliminate the position of Superintendent of the Miami
Children's Center and consolidate those responsibilities with that of the
Executive Secretary. This move was intended to not only save money but also to
bring all of the agency's services under the direction of one administrator.
This decision proved quite controversial, as the superintendent was well-liked
by staff and considered a parental figure to the children living at the home.
Following the defeat of the 1967 levy, the agency could provide only minimal
services, and the social work staff was reduced from 44 to 19. Passage of the
1968 levy, however, provided funds to bring the casework staff up to 80 persons.
Name:
With the expansion of services
also came a name change, in 1968, from the Lucas County Child Welfare Board to
Lucas County Children Services Board (LCCSB).
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Services:
The success of the 1968 levy and
the availability of federal funds in the 1970s hastened a period of growth for
the agency. The agency was decentralized in the early 1970s, in an effort to
move social workers closer to clients and also to relieve the overcrowding of
employees at the main administration building. Satellite units were deployed in
the central city and the north, west and south ends of town. Two day care
centers were established, a unit of school social workers and a status offender
unit were added to the agency, and three group homes, two for toddlers and one
for teenagers, were opened. The agency also had caseworkers assigned to the
Toledo Mental Health Center, the Medical College of Ohio and the Boys Club. In
1970, the former hospital building at MCC was converted into an Extended Care
Unit (ECU) to provide long-term care for severely retarded children. At the
time, LCCSB was the only child protection agency in the state to operate such a
facility. In 1971, the county commissioners voted to consolidate social services
for children into a single agency, the children services board. Until that time,
family counseling, day care, homemaker and home management services, and child
development had been provided by both LCCSB and the welfare department. The
commissioners made the change because LCCSB stood a better chance of attracting
federal matching funds. In 1973, the agency began to offer income-based subsidy
for families adopting children. The subsidy plan, authorized by state law, was
intended to encourage more adoptions by low-income families. After nearly 100
years of providing formal education at its Maumee campus, the agency closed its
Riverside School following the 1977-78 school year. The 25 students were
transferred to other schools within the county system. Through most of the
decade, an average of 250 children lived at the Miami Children's Center. By
1978, however, the population had declined to about 170 children. The LCCSB's
deliberate attempts to move as many children as possible out of
institutionalized care led to the eventual closing of the MCC in 1986. That left
the ECU, which served 32 children, as the lone remaining residential facility on
campus. In 1981 the Board of Trustees was enlarged from nine to 14 members and
assumed its current role as an oversight body and policy developer. Eight board
committees were formed to help the board fulfill its new role. These changes
followed a comprehensive study of the agency by the Toledo Area Government
Research Association (TAGRA), which made several recommendations for improving
the efficiency and effectiveness of the agency. With the closing of the MCC, the
agency's board opted to redirect those resources toward new programs, and in
1986 the agency began to provide additional services for children with special
needs. Foster families were trained to provide day care for blind and
hyperactive children and those requiring medical monitors, an effort intended to
move these children out of institutions and into family settings. Also in 1986,
the agency established its independent living program, designed to help young
adult clients who are soon to be emancipated from agency care. Recognizing the
critical need for staff training, the state government and child advocacy groups
formed the Ohio Child Welfare Training Program in 1985. LCCSB became one of
eight agencies in the state to continuously host a regional training center for
child welfare workers.
Facilities:
In the fall of 1977, the majority
of the casework staff moved to the Collingwood Center, the former Flower
Hospital building in Toledo. About 83 employees worked in this building until
November of 1982, when they were relocated to Miami Children's Center. The
agency's emphasis on foster care instead of group home care had resulted in a
decrease in the Center's resident population. In turn, MCC's receiving center
was converted to an office building to accommodate the return of the agency
staff.
Finances:
The 1.5 mill levy was renewed by
large margins in 1972 and 1977. By the beginning of 1981, however, the agency
faced a serious financial crisis. The agency's carryover funds had become
depleted, caused in part by a reduction in federal funds. As a result, 15
percent of the agency's staff was laid off, and the agency announced that it
might have to close the ECU for lack of funds. Also, one month after the
layoffs, LCCSB employees went on a 16-day strike, the first in the agency's
history. All if this occurred during the TAGRA study. The ECU was kept open
after the Ohio Department of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities
agreed to provide funding until the ECU could become certified under the federal
Medicaid program. After making many improvements in the building's structure and
in the program offered its residents, the ECU became certified in 1983 as an
intermediate care facility. In order to be able to meet the needs of the
children of Lucas County, LCCSB went to the voters in November of 1981 to seek
passage of a new 1.0 mill levy. Passage of that levy made it possible for LCCSB
to restore some of the services that had been cut or reduced during 1981. In
1982, the agency's 1.5 mill levy was renewed for the third time. Voters also
approved agency levy requests in 1986 (1.5 mill) and 1988 (1.25 mill).
Name:
In 1988, "Board" was dropped from
the agency's name, making "Lucas County Children Services" the official
title
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The 1990s
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Facilities:
The ECU closed its doors in 1993,
and the following year Children Services moved to its present downtown Toledo
location at 705 Adams Street. The 15-building, 71-acre Maumee campus, which for
108 years had housed orphans, abused and neglected children and child welfare
staff, closed for good.
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| LCCS executive director Dean Sparks (right), with the help of the county
commissioner Harry Barlos, unveils the agency's memorial flag. The flag is flown
in memory of children in Lucas County who have died because of abuse or neglect.
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Services:
Through the 1990s, County Children Services continued to emphasize the need for children to live in a family environment with their birth families if possible as opposed to institutional or group home placement. In 1997, the White House presented LCCS with the federal Adoption Excellence Award for reducing the amount of time children wait for permanent homes.
Throughout the decade, LCCS served an average of 11,250 children and 4,500 families annually, and conducted an average of 3,663 investigations per year.
In 1999, LCCS developed a strategic plan that included a new mission statement and a commitment to family-centered, neighborhood-based (FCNB) services. The FCNB approach to services recognizes that clients are best served in their own neighborhoods, as opposed to having to travel to LCCS offices or to service providers not located close to their homes.
In the late 1990s, LCCS developed a parenting program that has since gained national recognition. The agency also created a quality improvement division, post-adoption services and post-emancipation services.
Finances:
Taxpayers continued their commitment to child welfare in Lucas County, as the agencys two tax levies enjoyed wide support. LCCS was also very aggressive in its pursuit of federal and state funds, and as a result was in a very strong financial position by the late 1990s.
The decade ended with the agency employing 334 staff and annual revenues exceeding $37 million.
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Services:
At the start of the new millennium, Lucas County Children Services was conducting more investigations and serving more children than at any time in its history. In 2002, the agency received 4,471 referrals, the most on record. The number of reports that year was a 33 percent increase from the 3,371 referrals received just four years prior, in 1998. Today, LCCS serves more than 12,000 children and 5,000 families and conducts more than 4,500 investigations annually.
Children in foster care are generally a grade or more behind in school, perform poorly on proficiency tests and graduate or attain a GED at a rate much lower than their peers. In 2004, the LCCS Board of Trustees created an education services program to assist children in foster care with their educational progress.
Finances:
The economic slump that followed the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks put many government agencies in a financial pinch. Thankfully, LCCS was not among them. Because of its solid financial status and the continuous passage of its levies, Children Services has not had to lay off staff or reduce services. In fact, the agency has expanded services and staff. As of 2006, LCCS has 400 employees and revenue exceeding $44 million annually.