FROM THE ACL BLOG
Led by Love: ACL
Recognizes Grandfamilies on Grandparents Day 2020
By Lori Stalbaum, Alternate Designated Federal Official,
Advisory Council to Support Grandparents Raising Grandchildren
Love knows no bounds.
That is what we’ve witnessed time and again while working with
the Advisory
Council to Support Grandparents Raising Grandchildren over the
past year. The grandparents on this committee have inspired us with their
dedication to, their passion for, and their knowledge of the challenges and
joys of raising grandchildren.
And on Grandparents Day—and really, every day—we honor these
grandparents and all grandparents who give so much to their families, their
communities, and our country as a whole.
Currently an estimated 2.7 million children live in
grandfamily/kinship households without parents in the home. These families,
formed out of love and necessity, can face daunting challenges when it
comes to making sure the children in their care have the education,
healthcare, and security they need to grow and thrive. They encounter
bureaucracy, stigma, and legal contests along the way.
The Advisory Council was formed to address this. The official
charge to the council, as laid out in the Supporting Grandparents Raising
Grandchildren Act of 2018, is to identify, promote, coordinate, and
disseminate information, resources, and best practices to help grandparents
and older relative caregivers of children meet the health, educational,
nutritional, and other needs of the children in their care.
Council members express this in the vision statement they
issued earlier this year:
The Advisory Council to Support Grandparents Raising
Grandchildren (SGRG) will be a leader for identifying and sharing resources
to support, educate, empower, and advocate for Kinship Families and
Grandfamilies. The Council will increase awareness and understanding of the
needs of these families to ensure they are treated with respect and dignity.
By honoring cultures, values, and diversities, we will create a better
future so that families can flourish.
The members recognize that every family is different and faces
different challenges and impacts—but they share a common goal of a better
life for the children in their care. That’s why they have adopted the
blended term “Kinship Families and Grandfamilies” to refer to the families
they represent. This term reflects the diversity of caregivers raising
children today and includes not only grandparents raising grandchildren,
but also families in which children are being raised by other extended
family members or adults with whom they have close family-like
relationships.
The council members bring incredible expertise, compassion,
and energy to this work. They’ve been there on the frontlines, consulting
with teachers, healthcare professionals, social workers, lawyers, and
others to advocate for the children in their care. They know what others in
their position have gone through, and they treat each other with great
respect. They listen and learn from each other—and they’re eager to empower
others with what they’ve learned.
They’re already making an impact. Earlier this year, they
quickly recognized that the consequences of emergency situations, including
natural disasters and pandemics, are magnified for Kinship Families and
Grandfamilies. They responded with a resource
guide especially for these families.
The Council will meet again next week to review and discuss
the analysis of the more than 300 comments and suggestions they received in
response to their request for information from the public on issues facing
Kinship Families and Grandfamilies. They will also discuss and agree on the
key recommendations they will make in their Report to Congress. We know
they will approach these tasks with the same passion and thoughtfulness
that they have each brought to their committee work so far—and the same
care they give to their families.
And they will continue to show us again and again that love
knows no bounds.
Happy Grandparents Day from ACL
Grandparents Day is this
Sunday, September 13
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