… Including the legacy the Miami Herald wants you to forget
George Sheldon |
When former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, then a Republican,
named one of the state’s most prominent Democrats, Bob Butterworth, to run the
state Department of Children and Families, a joke made the rounds: “Nobody can
fix DCF,” the joke went. “Now a Democrat will be blamed for the failures.”
Butterworth brought in another prominent Democrat, George
Sheldon, to be his deputy. But if the joke was right about Crist’s secret plan,
the joke was on him. Together, Butterworth and Sheldon engineered one of the
largest transformations of any child welfare system in America. What was once
the nation’s most prominent example of child welfare failure, became,
relatively speaking, a remarkable success.
When Butterworth left, there was speculation that Crist
would never name Sheldon to the top job – after all, Crist had defeated Sheldon
in two statewide election campaigns. But
he did. And Sheldon expanded on the
reforms begun under Butterworth.
During the Obama Administration, Sheldon became the nation’s
highest-ranking official in child welfare, running the Administration for
Children and Families at the Department of Health and Human Services. While
there, he championed real child welfare finance reform.
The term “hero” is overused.
So is the term “champion for children.” But they both apply to George
Sheldon, who died last week at the age of 71.
Reading the tributes to Sheldon it is striking how many of
them come
from former foster children. They
knew that, finally, they had a real friend in a position of power.
Sheldon’s greatest accomplishment
Sheldon moved aggressively to curb the use of psychiatric
medication on foster children, and he prohibited the use of foster children in
drug trials. He championed “normalcy,” working
to clear away the bureaucratic barriers that made it hard for foster children
to enjoy the smallest pleasures in life, such as a sleepover at a friend’s
house. And Sheldon and Butterworth took
DCF out of the bunker, opening records and speaking candidly about the agency’s
failures.
But their single greatest accomplishment was this: Sheldon
and Butterworth dramatically reduced the number of children torn needlessly
from their families – and independent monitors found they did it without
compromising child safety. The dramatic
transformation was featured in The New York Times.
The obit is filled with warm reminiscences and wonderful
stories, like this one, from former journalist Martin Dyckman, about Sheldon’s
time in the Florida Legislature:
In the 1970s, when the Legislature passed financial disclosure laws, Sheldon often ranked dead last among his colleagues in the House. One newspaper led a story about the financial worth of lawmakers by noting that then-Miami-Dade Rep. Elaine Bloom disclosed ownership of a pure-breed dog whose declared worth was greater than Sheldon’s, Dyckman recalls.
But the obituary profanes Sheldon’s memory by leaving out
entirely his single greatest accomplishment in Florida. In 2,000 words, reporter
Carol Marbin Miller found no room to even mention his work to safely and
successfully keep more children out of the chaos of Florida foster care. But, of course, Miller has led
a crusade against those changes. Now, she wants to pretend they never
happened.
But they did happen.
And the best way to honor George Sheldon would be for the people of
Florida to turn their backs on the Miami
Herald’s fearmongering and demand that DCF return to George Sheldon’s
vision of child welfare reform.