Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
Life

More Grandparents Taking On Parental Role For Grandchildren

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2016 11:07 AM
    CHICAGO — When Debra Aldridge became her grandson's primary caregiver, she was making $7.50 per hour as a cook. The alternative for the newborn, she was told, was to put him up for adoption.
     
    "I took one look at the little fella, and that was it," said Aldridge, now 62. "I couldn't let go."
     
    For more than 11 years, Aldridge, who is divorced and lives in Chicago, has struggled to feed, house and clothe her "baby," Mario. As she ages, Aldridge sinks deeper into poverty.
     
    Nationwide, 2.7 million grandparents are raising grandchildren, and about one-fifth of those have incomes that fall below the poverty line, according to census figures.
     
    Their ranks are increasing. The number of grandparents raising grandchildren is up 7 per cent from 2009. Experts say the trend is likely to continue as the nation responds to the opiate epidemic. Military deployment and a growth in the number of women incarcerated are other factors forcing grandparents to step into parental roles.
     
    Already, child welfare agencies are reporting an increase in the number of children, especially infants, taken from parents battling drug addictions and mental health issues. After years of declines, children in foster care rose by nearly 1 per cent in 2013 and by 3.5 per cent in 2014 to more than 415,000.
     
    The increase comes as states are placing more foster children with relatives in response to research showing that children fare better with family rather than in foster care.
     
    There is an economic incentive, too. Generations United, a non-profit that advocates for "kinship families," says taxpayers would see significant savings by keeping children out of foster care and placing them with relatives.
     
    But at the same time, the group says there is no comprehensive framework to keep these kinship families stable. Crucial programs, such as legal services and support groups, "exist only in small pockets of the country," it said.
     
     
    Those support services are something many grandparents raising grandchildren need. Many are living on fixed incomes and managing chronic illnesses. About a quarter of grandparents raising grandchildren have a disability.
     
    "People who step forward, step forward because there is a crisis in their family and apparently don't take into account their own limitations," said Esme Fuller-Thomson, a professor of social work at the University of Toronto, who has researched grandparent caregiving in the United States.
     
    Maria Nanos, executive director of the Center for Law and Social Work in Chicago, said that when the state is involved, grandparents receive free legal help from the centre, but informal caregivers navigate guardianship on their own. The centre usually receives funds from the state's Department of Aging to help those grandparents. But Illinois has operated without a budget since July, so the centre has not received the money this fiscal year.
     
    "We have to turn people down," Nanos said.
     
    Some states offer financial aid for informal kinship families.
     
    In Georgia, grandparents older than 55 can get a $100 monthly subsidy per grandchild. They also have access to grants and could qualify for subsidies similar to those of foster parents (between $14.60 and $18.80 per day). But access to the assistance, which is often housed in different agencies, can be tricky, if not impossible.
     
    To help relatives navigate the complex web of services, some states have created kinship navigators.
     
    Lynn Urvina, is one of about a dozen kinship navigators in Washington state. She said grandparents call her seeking information about support groups, obtaining guardianship and financial help to pay bills. Every year, her case files grow.
     
    "In our area, methamphetamines have had a huge impact," said Urvina, who is raising, along with her husband, a 12-year-old granddaughter.
     
    Navigators in Washington serve 30 of 39 counties, with multiple counties overseen by one person. Some counties include rural communities where grandparents have little access to services, Urvina said.
     
    "If all grandparents walked away and say, 'we can't do it,' there would be no homes for these kids," Urvina said.
     
    To boost assistance to kinship families, Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., are working on a bipartisan bill that would reimburse states for a portion of money spent on such services as substance abuse prevention and kinship navigators.
     
    As her grandson enters his teens, Aldridge, the Chicago grandmother, said she knows she'll need more resources to clothe, feed and keep him out of trouble.
     
    To help make ends meet, she stands in food lines, taking two buses to reach the food depository. But she won't give up on Mario.
     
    "He needs me," Aldridge said.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl
      Sharing a few good giggles and chuckles makes people more willing to tell others something personal about themselves, without even necessarily being aware that they are doing so, finds a new study.

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males
    Researchers have discovered a dramatic decline in genetic diversity in male lineages four to eight thousand years ago -- likely the result of the accumulation of material wealth.

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure
    David Kalmbach from the University of Michigan Medical School has found that each additional hour of sleep increased the likelihood of sexual activity with a partner by 14 percent. 

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives
    Have you been feeling dissatisfied with your sex life of late? Your smartphone may be to blame, suggests a study.

    How Smartphones Are Ruining Sex Lives

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids
    Not just mothers but new fathers who are depressed do not make as much eye contact or smile at their toddlers, leading them to develop troubling behaviour such as hitting, lying, anxiety and sadness as they grow, new research has found.

    Depressed Dads Turn Toddlers Into Troubled Kids

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins
    As Canadians prepare to set their clocks ahead an hour this weekend for the start of daylight time, chronically sleep-deprived people could be hit hard by the change."If you're getting five to six hours of sleep regularly as an adult instead of what's recommended — the seven to eight hours — then you're going to suffer a bit more when you have one less hour of sleep than you would if someone who has more regular sleep scheduling," 

    Ready to spring forward? Good sleep patterns key as daylight time begins