“CYFD head says agency has slashed backlog of child protective services cases”
3.0 Analysis of the intended and unintended consequences of implementing the proposed topic or framework--who would benefit and who would be harmed by implementation?
The agency also faced lawsuits earlier this year over how it handled of a case involving four children who were returned to parents accused of being abusive, and was sued over the death of a boy who had been referred to the agency’s protective services division numerous times.[1] Children would benefit from having this agency completely restructured. There would be less children ending up murdered.
CYFD has a high turnover rate for specific positions. While it has filled vacancies, the number of caseloads for each worker and turnover rates for protective services staff have increased during the pandemic. According to a report, workers average 15.9 cases, nearly six more cases than the target. The turnover rate for protective services staff has averaged 27 percent so far in 2021, which is lower than the rate of 40 percent in 2019 but well above the target goal of 20 percent.[1]
Sources:
Traxlervtraxler@sfnewmexican.com, V. (2021, July 22). CYFD head says agency has slashed backlog of child protective services cases. Santa Fe New Mexican. Retrieved July 20, 2022, from [ Ссылка ]
Daniels Fund ethics initiative. Daniels Fund Ethics Initiative Overview. (n.d.). Retrieved June 18, 2022, from [ Ссылка ]
Carroll, A. B., Brown, J. A., & Buchholtz, A. K. (2022). Business & Society: Ethics, Sustainability, & Stakeholder Management. South-Western.
Business & Society: Ethics, Sustainability & Stakeholder Management: 10th edition |. Cengage. (n.d.). Retrieved June 13, 2022, from [ Ссылка ]
L. Earle Birdsell, “Business and Government: The Walls Between,” in Neil H. Jacoby (ed.), The Business— Government Relationship: A Reassessment (Santa Monica, CA: Goodyear, 1975), 32–34.
Neil H. Jacoby, Corporate Power and Social Responsibility (New York: Macmillan, 1973), 167.
Robert J. Holloway and Robert S. Hancock, Marketing in a Changing Environment, 2d ed. (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1973), 558–565.
Ibid., 565–566.
Robert O. Herrmann, “Consumerism: Its Goals, Organizations, and Future,” Journal of Marketing (October 1970), 55–60.
Ruth Simon, “You’re Losing Your Consumer Rights,” Money (Vol. 25, No. 3, 1996), 100–111.
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