I couldnt keep shoes on my daughter (or a diaper for that matter, unless duct taped on) one time I looked out of the kitchen window too see her actively involved in a snowball fight with family and neighbors barefoot. I am amazed no one ever called DSS on me with that girl!!!I don't know, it's hard enough to think that this 4 yr. old was walking in the cold barefoot, I think it would be unlikely another small child would be out in the cold barefoot. JMO
Thank you for this post! I was a social worker for 6 years before throwing in the towel and going to nursing school. Being a social worker left me bitter, exhausted and cynical at 28 years old. I was not given nearly enough training and was given sometimes up to 40 cases to supervise. I was constantly drowning in paperwork and would lay awake at night constantly feeling like I was making mistakes or not doing enough. And I was trying to pay student loans and make ends meet while making $12 an hour. All of my coworkers were doing everything they could and cared about kids first and foremost too. Sadly not one of them is still in that line of work for the same reasons I'm not.Believe it or not, sometimes it is out of CPS's hands as well. Remember, some fools made laws that parents have rights and if they pass their silly courses of learning how to be a "proper mommy and daddy" again, and they behave themselves by not getting into trouble with the law during that time, and their drug tests come back clean- back the kids go to their abusive home. Blame the lawmakers that allow abusive parents rights like this. I knew of a social worker who at times, pulled her hair out from not only being overworked (and very underpaid, I might add), but she was also stressed out because no matter what she felt was the right thing to do with children like this, she had to follow the rules and guidelines and give the kids back, even if in her heart, she knew that the children shouldn't return home.
These social workers work around the clock- many of them don't get days off, and they are called out all hours of the day or night for these poor children. Believe it or not, some kids go from an abusive home with their parents to another abusive home at a foster parents. These children have psychological issues, and many times when a foster parent can't handle it at 2 am in the morning, the social worker gets called out to take the child to either a hospital for psychiatric treatment or to bring them to another foster home in the middle of the night until they can re-home them.
I was considering becoming a social worker when I was younger, until our social worker friend told me to find something else. It wasn't the lack of pay that she was leading me away from this type of work- it was the long and exhausting hours, the pain and heartache of seeing these abusive children in person, the angry parents who want to see their kid at the drop of a dime but can't because it isn't their day to see them, so the social worker gets the anger from the parents, they're put in hostile situations constantly. That doesn't include them going to the home when abuse is suspected and they have to determine whether or not the child needs to be removed- sometimes, they have to visit the child at school to find out what is really happening at home.
I feel so bad for social workers- many times, they do agree with us. Many times, their hands are tied behind their backs because of the law.
Is it wrong to hope that he is not in the pond?
At this point LE is focused on the pond, determined to discover whether a crime has been committed. The visit to the cookie neighbor is yesterday's news as well tracking Raul to a barn three miles away. They won't admit that; it's still a missing person case, but it's moved beyond that to a suspected crime scene at the pond. It's likely Raul would have succumbed to hypothermia by now if he were out there somewhere.
A local news source actually stated the following. Might explain some of the discussion. I haven't commented on the owner of the pond, I just wanted to point out that is was published by news source article.
http://www.laurinburgexchange.com/news/13780/search-for-child-turns-to-nearby-bodies-of-water
This article has more information I haven't read before with detail.
Thank you for this post! I was a social worker for 6 years before throwing in the towel and going to nursing school. Being a social worker left me bitter, exhausted and cynical at 28 years old. I was not given nearly enough training and was given sometimes up to 40 cases to supervise. I was constantly drowning in paperwork and would lay awake at night constantly feeling like I was making mistakes or not doing enough. And I was trying to pay student loans and make ends meet while making $12 an hour. All of my coworkers were doing everything they could and cared about kids first and foremost too. Sadly not one of them is still in that line of work for the same reasons I'm not.
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Believe it or not, sometimes it is out of CPS's hands as well. Remember, some fools made laws that parents have rights and if they pass their silly courses of learning how to be a "proper mommy and daddy" again, and they behave themselves by not getting into trouble with the law during that time, and their drug tests come back clean- back the kids go to their abusive home. Blame the lawmakers that allow abusive parents rights like this. I knew of a social worker who at times, pulled her hair out from not only being overworked (and very underpaid, I might add), but she was also stressed out because no matter what she felt was the right thing to do with children like this, she had to follow the rules and guidelines and give the kids back, even if in her heart, she knew that the children shouldn't return home.
These social workers work around the clock- many of them don't get days off, and they are called out all hours of the day or night for these poor children. Believe it or not, some kids go from an abusive home with their parents to another abusive home at a foster parents. These children have psychological issues, and many times when a foster parent can't handle it at 2 am in the morning, the social worker gets called out to take the child to either a hospital for psychiatric treatment or to bring them to another foster home in the middle of the night until they can re-home them.
I was considering becoming a social worker when I was younger, until our social worker friend told me to find something else. It wasn't the lack of pay that she was leading me away from this type of work- it was the long and exhausting hours, the pain and heartache of seeing these abusive children in person, the angry parents who want to see their kid at the drop of a dime but can't because it isn't their day to see them, so the social worker gets the anger from the parents, they're put in hostile situations constantly. That doesn't include them going to the home when abuse is suspected and they have to determine whether or not the child needs to be removed- sometimes, they have to visit the child at school to find out what is really happening at home.
I feel so bad for social workers- many times, they do agree with us. Many times, their hands are tied behind their backs because of the law.
I couldnt keep shoes on my daughter (or a diaper for that matter, unless duct taped on) one time I looked out of the kitchen window too see her actively involved in a snowball fight with family and neighbors barefoot. I am amazed no one ever called DSS on me with that girl!!!
Thank you for this post! I was a social worker for 6 years before throwing in the towel and going to nursing school. Being a social worker left me bitter, exhausted and cynical at 28 years old. I was not given nearly enough training and was given sometimes up to 40 cases to supervise. I was constantly drowning in paperwork and would lay awake at night constantly feeling like I was making mistakes or not doing enough. And I was trying to pay student loans and make ends meet while making $12 an hour. All of my coworkers were doing everything they could and cared about kids first and foremost too. Sadly not one of them is still in that line of work for the same reasons I'm not.
Sent from my SM-G930P using Tapatalk
Yeah, I’m a no shoes person myself! The stripping, I'm, gonna go ahead and blame her fathers side of the family!Oh I had two females strippers living in my home, and all three kids hated shoes. My two adult kids go out to their cars barefoot in the freezing cold to get something, and they're in their 20's! They take after their Mom, for the shoes part, that is- I promise, I wasn't a stripper, nor did I influence mine to be strippers, haha!
Also from the article:
“‘We’re thankful that the family has allowed us on the property for this extended period of time,’ said Detective Sgt. Jessica Sadovnikov. ‘We hope that in the pursuit of justice and safety and what is right for the little boy, the family will continue to allow access to the farm. If they don’t we will take the next step.’” (BBM)
She is the same officer who “has dealt with the family multiple times” and “said Raul has been known to wonder the family’s property, which has several trailers, sheds and a chicken coop on it but emphasized he has never left the property before.”
http://www.laurinburgexchange.com/t...rities-search-for-missing-scotland-county-boy
So perhaps she is especially familiar with the family dynamics?
Yeah, I’m a no shoes person myself! The stripping, I'm, gonna go ahead and blame her fathers side of the family!
How can he have never left the property before if he wanders over to Cookie & Candy Lady's house every day or did I miss the part where Cookie lady is a renter on Raul's family property?