Kinsley urges federal court to kill suit targeting foster children’s mental health | Eastern North Carolina Now

The head of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services is urging a federal court to dismiss a lawsuit dealing with mental health services for foster children.

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is CJ Staff.

    The head of North Carolina's Department of Health and Human Services is urging a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit targeting mental health services for foster children. DHHS Secretary Kody Kinsley filed paperwork Monday supporting dismissal.

    Plaintiffs who filed a class-action suit in December complain about the state's psychiatric residential treatment facilities. Critics compare the facilities to solitary prison confinement. They want the state to shift its focus away from the centers to provide more support services in the children's home communities.

    Kinsley, the named defendant in the suit, took over DHHS' top job in January 2022.

    "Within a month of his appointment, Secretary Kinsley reorganized the Department to create a new Division of Child and Family Well-Being, bringing together programs and staff operating across multiple department divisions to support the physical, behavioral and social needs of children," according to a memorandum filed Monday in U.S. District Court. "In March 2022, the Child Welfare and Family Well-Being Transformation Team released a 'Coordinated Action Plan for Better Outcomes' focused on what it recognized as an 'urgent crisis of the growing number of children with complex behavioral health needs who come into the care of child welfare services.'"

    Kinsley cited "improving services for children with behavioral health needs in the foster care system" as one of his top priorities during a confirmation hearing in June 2022.

    "It is a long-term, herculean effort, in which DHHS plays an important, but not solitary, role," according to Kinsley's lawyers.

    "Before any of these efforts could bear fruit - indeed, before Secretary Kinsley had been in his position for even a year - Plaintiffs brought suit," the memo continued. "Plaintiffs claim that DHHS has a 'policy or practice' of discriminating against foster children with mental health impairments; of 'prioritizing or permitting' placement of foster youth with severe behavioral and mental health needs in psychiatric residential treatment facilities; of 'permitting shortages' of community-based placements and services; and of failing to make 'reasonable modifications' to those policies and practices that would enable more foster children with behavioral health needs to be served in the community."

    "In other words, the Complaint alleges that the DHHS is failing to address the issues on which Secretary Kinsley, DHHS, and other stakeholders across the State have been working tirelessly over the last 14 months," the secretary's lawyers wrote.

    Kinsley argued that the plaintiffs' allegations under the Americans with Disabilities Act and Rehabilitation Act fail "to state a claim upon which relief can be granted." He also argued that state courts already have ruled on whether it was necessary to place the named plaintiffs in the psychiatric treatment facilities.

    "Finally, the only relief sought in the Complaint is systemic change: an increase in placement options and treatment services that will likely take years to fully fund and develop," according to the memorandum. "The individual Named Plaintiffs have not asked for individual relief, and cannot demonstrate that the injury they have purportedly suffered would likely be redressed were the Court to grant that systemic relief. Accordingly, under fundamental precepts of federal court jurisdiction, they do not have standing."

    Kinsley's lawyers also question the legal standing of two groups acting as plaintiffs: Disability Rights North Carolina and the N.C. State Conference of NAACP.

    Plaintiffs will have an opportunity to respond to Kinsley's motion before a federal court takes action.
Go Back

HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

"This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our counter narco-terror operations."
Charlie Kirk, 31 years of age, who was renowned as one of the most important and influential college speakers /Leaders in many decades; founder of Turning Point USA, has been shot dead at Utah Valley University.
The Trump administration took actions against Harvard related to the anti-Israel protests that roiled its campus.
In addition, Sheikha Al-Thani has "taken to promoting Mamdani’s mayoral candidacy on social media, boosting news of favorable polling on Instagram"
Raleigh, N.C. — The State Board of Elections has reached a legal settlement with the United States Department of Justice in United States of America v. North Carolina State Board of Elections.
For this particular Hollywood love story, there was no girl bossing, no modern twists, no glorification of living in sin forever.
National attention is intensifying after the gruesome murder of a Ukrainian refugee on a Charlotte light rail on Aug. 22.

HbAD1

Trump is different from most politicians. He doesn’t feel he owes these corporations anything.
In Australia, Canada, and Europe, free speech on asylum, migration, and national identity is increasingly being curtailed by law.
The first three episodes of the current season of "South Park" have hammered President Donald Trump and other GOP targets.
16 days after Hamas October 7 massacre, Turkish President Erdogan said Hamas was “not a terrorist organization … [but rather] a liberation group"
"I’m ready to help defend President Trump’s America First agenda, Texas families, and individual liberty."
The Democrats turned our own census into a weapon against us. It's time to disarm them permanently.

HbAD2

 
Back to Top