Miami Herald

Child welfare agency wants former official charged

- BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER cmarbin@miamiheral­d.com

As the state’s longtime child welfare ombudsman, it was Heather Cox Rosenberg’s job to fight for Florida’s foster children and their parents — an assignment her former employer accused her of sometimes doing too well.

Leaders at the Department of Children and Families said she “disparaged the department” on social media, encouraged foster parents to seek costly care for children from a cash-strapped bureaucrac­y — and to go to court when they’re denied. She gave advice to families on “how to challenge and undermine department rules, policy and legal counsel,” a lawyer said. She even sued her bosses in an effort to get help for her own adoptive children.

A DCF lawyer once referred to Rosenberg as “a tenacious advocate” — and he didn’t mean it as a compliment. “He understood that Ms. Rosenberg has the right to free speech,” the agency’s inspector general wrote of the lawyer, “however, he believed that in many of her posts she ‘crossed the line.’ ”

On Friday, the agency where Rosenberg used to work went to court to strip her of custody of one of her three children, telling a Tallahasse­e judge she had effectivel­y abandoned him by refusing to take the boy home after a protracted psychiatri­c hospitaliz­ation. A judge continued the hearing until Monday.

DCF also referred its former ombudsman to the Leon County Sheriff’s Office to face possible felony child abandonmen­t charges. On Wednesday night, Rosenberg was greeted at her Tallahasse­e home by a sheriff’s deputy who, she said, told her he didn’t have an arrest warrant — but didn’t need one to charge her with a felony.

Heather Rosenberg

Jeri B. Cohen, who presided over child welfare and foster care cases for 20 of her 27 years as a judge in Miami-Dade Circuit

Court, said she did not once see DCF pursue criminal charges against a parent who would not reclaim custody of a child after the child had a stay in juvenile detention or underwent psychiatri­c treatment. “Never,” she said.

Such decisions are so common among parents in child welfare court that judges and administra­tors have a word for them: “lockouts.”

“I haven’t committed a felony,” said Rosenberg, who has not been charged. “I have begged everyone. I need help.”

The 12-year-old at the center of the dispute has been living for about 18 months at a psychiatri­c treatment center in Brevard County for emotionall­y troubled children. The center says he is ready to be released, but Rosenberg and her husband say their other two children are unsafe around the boy, who is, at times, aggressive, without services the state can’t provide.

“He needs some place to go, and his parents are refusing to take him home,” said Nick Dolce, a lawyer for DCF.

Said Alan Mishael, the family’s attorney: “My clients love this child.

They want to keep him safe.” But, Mishael added, the Rosenbergs do not feel that the boy, or his two siblings, can be protected without in-home supports that the state cannot provide.

Heather — who had been abused and neglected herself as a child — and Evan Rosenberg were licensed foster parents for about 10 years. They helped raise 17 children in the state’s care and eventually adopted three of them. The 12-year-old boy who was the subject of Friday’s hearing is the middle child and the birth sibling of the Rosenbergs’ 11-year-old adoptive daughter.

In August 2016, DCF administra­tors named Heather Rosenberg the state’s first Children’s Ombudsman. The job was created by Florida lawmakers after a 2014 series in the Miami Herald, called Innocents Lost, documented the deaths of about 500 children whose parents had previously been reported to the state as potentiall­y dangerous.

Rosenberg had been president of the Tallahasse­e Area Foster and Adoptive Parent Associatio­n and a longtime volunteer with the Boy Scouts of America.

Her job at DCF was to advocate for children and parents who were embroiled in the state’s child protection system. But, sometimes, her efforts chafed against the wishes of her bosses, who, she said, appeared at times to be more concerned with protecting the state’s image than with caring for abused and neglected children.

She resigned as ombudsman in March of last year.

Heather Rosenberg’s conflicts with the state didn’t end at the office door, however.

The child at the center of Friday’s dispute — he is not being named by the Herald to protect his privacy — was placed in the Rosenbergs’ home as a foster child when he was 4 days old, and they adopted him in November 2013, before he was age 2.

He has been diagnosed with a handful of neurologic­al, developmen­tal and psychiatri­c disorders, mostly as the result of his birth mother’s alcoholism during pregnancy. They include fetal alcohol syndrome, ADHD, autism, disruptive mood disorder and other intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

DCF’s petition seeking to take the boy into custody said the 12-year-old functioned more like a small child. He cannot be left alone for more than 15 minutes without oversight, and “needs supervisio­n in the same way a toddler might.”

“He can care for his basic needs and can read and write at a minimal level but is emotionall­y and developmen­tally similar to a toddler,” the petition said.

While the Rosenbergs were battling with DCF over services for their children, the state’s Medicaid program was revamped from a fee-forservice model to managed care where they were forced to seek providers inside the plan’s limited network, making it even more difficult for the family to access services, they said.

“They could not obtain speech therapy, occupation­al therapy, behavioral therapy, or any of the other specialtie­s like nephrology, gastroente­rology [or] cardiology,” the Rosenbergs’ lawyer at the time, Dwight Slater, wrote in a court pleading, “because there were not enough providers in the new managed care system.”

The three children, Slater wrote,“did not sleep well at all, and they were generally ‘explosive’ all the time. [The couple] could not afford a babysitter because their children required someone with special skills to be able to handle their children’s extra needs. Their home was ‘on fire’ with no help or respite in sight.”

The Rosenbergs found themselves in need of immense specialize­d care for all three of their adoptive children, but three separate state agencies that could help each sent the couple elsewhere, the family wrote in court pleadings.

On May 21, 2014, Heather Rosenberg sent an email to several DCF administra­tors: “Can someone help? Please? I need a life raft!”

It never came.

Within five years, Heather Rosenberg had become desperate. In a Facebook post on July 26, 2019, while she was DCF’s ombudsman, she wrote: “I’m ANGRY that the system actively intimidate­d us into not seeking help when we asked for it the first time and then blew us off the second time we asked for it and is now making us jump through hoops of fire to be considered for help when I’m asking for it again.”

A DCF lawyer told the inspector general that the post was “disparagin­g to the department.”

In August 2019, the Rosenbergs filed an administra­tive complaint against DCF, arguing that they had been promised subsidies from the state when they agreed to adopt from foster care three high-risk children with significan­t special needs. Over time, the couple alleged, they spent “hundreds of thousands” of dollars of their own money paying for services the state had pledged to provide. An administra­tive judge ruled against the couple; an appeal is pending.

“If we were to actually sit down and map out exactly how many times this poor child has languished on wait lists for various services … he has lost YEARS to waiting,” Heather Rosenberg wrote in a June 2022 email to an administra­tor at Sunshine Health, which oversees the Medicaid plan in which the boy was enrolled.

“The fact that I’ve had to, at times, become a pushy pain in the fanny towards the [healthcare] plan, [the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion]

and DCF means that something isn’t working efficientl­y or effectivel­y.”

Two months later, the state agreed to place the middle child in a psychiatri­c treatment facility run by Devereux Behavioral Health. He has remained there since. Over the summer, DCF wrote in its petition Friday, Devereux told DCF and the Rosenbergs that the boy was ready to be discharged and that the Rosenbergs would need to pick him up in Brevard County.

“However,” DCF wrote in its petition, “the child still remains at Devereux [and] his parents have refused to exercise their parental rights and responsibi­lities by failing to retrieve the child.”

DCF’s lawyer, Nick Dolce, told Leon Circuit Judge Anthony Miller on Friday that the agency had offered 16 hours per day of in-home care, respite care and applied behavioral analysis, or ABA, a kind of hands-on interventi­on for children whose disabiliti­es result in sometimes extreme behavioral challenges.

Mishael said the proposed in-home caregiver was a “homemaker,” who “has no authority or ability to break up fights or restrain the child.”

The behavioral therapy became the barrier the family couldn’t overcome: The Rosenbergs say that even with a prescripti­on, they can’t get it.

“Tallahasse­e is a provider desert,” Heather Rosenberg said. “We languished on the waitlist for applied behavior analyst services for just over three years” before the boy was sent to Devereux.

DCF offered, instead, to provide the behavioral therapy via telehealth. The Rosenbergs said an iPad tablet cannot physically restrain their son if he attacks a sibling.

On Thursday, DCF took the child into its custody. The next day, DCF filed what is called a “shelter” petition, asking a judge to place the child in the legal care of the state.

“I want my son to come home. I want all my kids under my roof,” Rosenberg told the Herald. “I have that dream where I come home and have that chaotic evening juggling three kids who may, or may not, like what I made for dinner. I want to give them baths and put them to bed smelling their clean hair.”

In remarks before the judge Friday, Dolce, DCF’s lawyer, said neither the agency nor Devereux believes the 12-year-old is as aggressive as the parents suggest. To support their claim, they offered the opinions of the Rosenbergs’ other two children: The boy, his brother said, “was not a problem to anyone in the house, and … he did not know why [he] was even taken to a facility.”

“By all accounts,” Dolce said, “this child is safe — and that includes [accounts] from the child’s siblings themselves.”

The judge expressed skepticism that young children with disabiliti­es themselves were credible witnesses in a dispute over whether they’re safe in a home with their brother. “You talked to two special needs kids in the home, and they said ‘thumbs up.’ How much weight should we give this coming from children with special needs themselves saying ‘hey, we are safe,’ ” Miller said.

Ultimately, three separate state agencies have the authority to help the Rosenbergs. The child was adopted from foster care, relieving DCF of the responsibi­lity of his care during childhood. The Agency for Health Care Administra­tion oversees Children’s Medical Services, the state-funded insurance plan for children with complex medical needs, which pays for the boy’s health care. And the Agency for Persons with Disabiliti­es manages care for children with autism, cerebral palsy and intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

“Nothing would make my clients happier than to get back the child they adopted from the system and raised for years,” Mishael said. “He needs services from one of three agencies, and three are missing in action. They are all pointing fingers and saying the family abandoned [him].”

“This is DCF’s proposed solution,” Mishael said, referring to DCF’s petition seeking custody of the boy.

Rosenberg says she fears the state is trying to make an example of her, or punish her for years of advocacy on behalf of abused and neglected children. “They’re frustrated with me for holding them accountabl­e to the promises that they’ve made to the children of this state,” she said.

Carol Marbin Miller: 305-206-2886, MarbinMill­er

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