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When grandparents or other relatives (often called kinship caregivers) raise children, it
is for various reasons. It may be because there was the
death of a parent or a parent is away in the military; this
is happening more than we like right now with devastating
effects. It
may simply be because a child was having problems with
his/her social environment and needed a change, but
more often than not, there is a correlation between alcohol
and drug abuse and neglect on the part of the parents. The parent/s may be mentally
ill, incarcerated, or simply and unfortunately incapable of
caring for their children.
According to the U.S. 2000
Census, there were close to 2 1/2 million households with
grandparents raising their grandchildren. No doubt, that
number has increased substantially in the past seven years.
Plus, the figure does
not even count other relative caregivers such as people raising
their brother or sister's children or, even yet, raising
their niece or nephew's children. Fifty-seven percent of
grandparents raising their grandchildren are still in the
work force and 17% are living in poverty.
As grandparents
or other relative (kinship) caregivers, we may
have had no mental, emotional, or financial preparation when
we began raising these children. It can be more than
overwhelming. Everything, from needing diapers and formula,
an appropriate car seat for the toddler, to dealing with a
drug-addicted teenager, may need to be immediately
addressed.
This
website is designed to help guide grandparents and other
relatives (kinship
caregivers) in their efforts to raise and educate these children and to
find needed resources for the children as well as themselves.
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