Texas Mist
Retired WS Staff
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2008
- Messages
- 9,218
- Reaction score
- 146
I'm watching Prime News on HLN...Michelle Sigona said pretty much what's posted on her site:
Around 3:30 p.m. this afternoon, I spoke with Robin Haldiman, CEO of the Child Health Investment Partnership (CHIPS) of Roanoke Valley. She told me their agency was involved with Aveion and his family from an early age. CHIPS makes monthly visits to families to help teach them parenting skills, coordinate health care, and to make sure the child is developing appropriately for their age. They currently have a waiting list, and are helping about 1,100 children per year. The agency is filled with mandated reporters who are required to report abuse and child neglect to Child Protective Services (CPS) if they see issues in the home. If a report is made, CPS will conduct a separate investigation, and if it is necessary they will remove the child. Sadly, this is exactly what the agency had to do with Aveion. Robin says the child was taken out of his home with his mother and placed with a loving foster family from May 2008 April 2009. Child Protective Services put Aveion back with his mother and when CHIPS came back to the home to do monthly visits, Robin says they were turned away. This service is voluntary, not mandatory. Robin confirms that when Aveion was 15-months-old he was underweight, and when he was placed with his foster family, he began to become healthy again. Robin and the members of her staff who worked with Aveion from early on are heart broken about the loss of this child, and as you can imagine, they grew close with the toddler since he was born.
http://www.michellesigona.com/2010/01/cops-aveion-lewis-still-missing-step-father-charged/
Around 3:30 p.m. this afternoon, I spoke with Robin Haldiman, CEO of the Child Health Investment Partnership (CHIPS) of Roanoke Valley. She told me their agency was involved with Aveion and his family from an early age. CHIPS makes monthly visits to families to help teach them parenting skills, coordinate health care, and to make sure the child is developing appropriately for their age. They currently have a waiting list, and are helping about 1,100 children per year. The agency is filled with mandated reporters who are required to report abuse and child neglect to Child Protective Services (CPS) if they see issues in the home. If a report is made, CPS will conduct a separate investigation, and if it is necessary they will remove the child. Sadly, this is exactly what the agency had to do with Aveion. Robin says the child was taken out of his home with his mother and placed with a loving foster family from May 2008 April 2009. Child Protective Services put Aveion back with his mother and when CHIPS came back to the home to do monthly visits, Robin says they were turned away. This service is voluntary, not mandatory. Robin confirms that when Aveion was 15-months-old he was underweight, and when he was placed with his foster family, he began to become healthy again. Robin and the members of her staff who worked with Aveion from early on are heart broken about the loss of this child, and as you can imagine, they grew close with the toddler since he was born.
http://www.michellesigona.com/2010/01/cops-aveion-lewis-still-missing-step-father-charged/