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Foster Advocates Call For Per Diem Increase

By Brandon Smith, IPB News | Published on in Family Issues, Government, Politics, Statewide News
Gov. Eric Holcomb acknowledges the state needs to help foster parents more. (Brandon Smith/IPB News)
Gov. Eric Holcomb acknowledges the state needs to help foster parents more. (Brandon Smith/IPB News)

As the new year’s legislative session begins January 3, negotiations over the next two-year state budget will dominate lawmakers’ attention.  The biggest request so far is for the state Department of Child Services.

Indiana foster parent advocates say the state needs to increase its per diem – the amount parents get each day from the state to help care for the kids in their care.

But the Department of Child Services’ proposed budget doesn’t include any significant increase.

Gov. Eric Holcomb acknowledges the state needs to help foster parents more.

“Now that doesn’t mean there’s an endless amount of money, unfortunately,” Holcomb says. “I’m trying to be compassionate about this but we have to be good stewards of the finite resources that we have.”

But Indiana Foster and Adoptive Parents CEO Kristi Cundiff says the current per diem doesn’t pay the bills.

“When you ask someone to, for instance, take a baby home from the hospital and you give that foster parent $25 a day, many foster parents are paying more than that in child care because they’re all still expected to work and hold down jobs,” Cundiff says.

The governor will unveil his full proposed budget in January.