Politics & Government
Foster Families Needed in Pickens County
SC Youth Advocate Program hopes to recruit more foster parents/families in order to avoid having to send children to other counties

More foster parents are needed in Pickens County and the Upstate.
Betsy Manning, recruiter with the South Carolina Youth Advocate Program, was at the Safety Expo held by The Parenting Place at Rock Springs Baptist Church Saturday
The South Carolina Youth Advocate Program is a non-profit, private organization contracted by the Department of Social Services to βrecruit, retain, support and license foster families,β she said.
Find out what's happening in Easleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βWeβre today trying to reach out to parents in Pickens County to become foster families,β Manning said.
Sheβs eager to answer questions and βbust any mythsβ people may mistakenly believe about becoming a foster parent.
Find out what's happening in Easleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
ββDo I have to own my home?β No. βDo I have to be married?β No,β Manning said. βWe try to tell people, βYou can do this β let us help you.ββ Our goal is to inform people and then stand beside them through the entire process and help them help children in our communities.βΒ
Those interested in becoming licensed foster parents can contact the SC YAP office at 1-803-779-5500. Theyβll then be given an information packet that includes an application, Manning said.
βOnce they complete that application and return it to our office, theyβll be assigned a license coordinator,β Manning said. βThat person will come out to their home, do a face-to-face orientation. That actually starts the process.βΒ
The process takes about 90 days, Manning said.
βWe try to get it done in 90 days, but thereβs background checks, home inspections, we have to have a release from your medical doctor to make sure youβre in physical and emotional health to take care of children,βshe said. βSo thereβs different checks that goes along with that.β
The need for foster families in this area is great.
βThereβs the need for homes to take older children, thereβs the need for homes to take sibling groups β we get a lot of sibling groups, and homes to take children from different ethnic backgrounds,β Manning said. βWeβre always looking for homes so children in Pickens can stay in their county. Thatβs our goal, to keep kids in their county.β
Currently, there are 33 licensed homes in Pickens County.
βWe have over 100 children in care here Pickens, so the need is great,β Manning said. βWe donβt want to send children to other counties, but sometimes thatβs what we have to do to meet their needs. So we really want in Pickens to take care of the children in their community.β
Children are traumatized when theyβre removed from their homes, she said.
βSo going to another county just increases that trauma,β Manning said. βGoing to a home where theyβve never been β more trauma. So if we can keep kids close to those healthy connections, in their communities, attending their schools, they can be in touch with that friend, or see that friend in school, even though their home situation is not the best, that is the healthiest way to get children to heal from these traumas.βΒ Β
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.