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View Research by Author - Roseana Bess

Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/RoseanaBess


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Evaluation of the Life Skills Training Program: Los Angeles County, California (Research Report)
Mark Courtney, Andrew Zinn, Erica H. Zielewski, Roseana Bess, Karin Malm, Matthew Stagner, Mike Pergamit

This report presents final process and impact study findings from one of four programs evaluated as part of the Multi-Site Evaluation of Foster Youth Programs. Impact findings were based on a two-year follow-up of youth in foster care in Los Angeles County who participated in a random assignment evaluation of the Life Skills Training Program. Youth were 17 years old at the time of random assignment to either a treatment group that was offered access to Life Skills Training or to a control group.

Posted to Web: September 03, 2008Publication Date: July 01, 2008

Evaluation of the Early Start to Emancipation Preparation - Tutoring Program: Los Angeles County (Research Report)
Mark Courtney, Andrew Zinn, Erica H. Zielewski, Roseana Bess, Karin Malm, Matthew Stagner, Mike Pergamit

This report presents final process and impact study findings from one of four programs evaluated as part of the Multi-Site Evaluation of Foster Youth Programs. Impact findings were based on a two-year follow-up of youth who participated in a random assignment evaluation of the Early Start to Emancipation Preparation (ESTEP)Tutoring Program. The program was designed to improve reading and math skills of foster youth aged 14 and 15 who are one to three years behind grade level in reading or math. Youth who participated in the evaluation were randomly assigned to either a treatment group that was offered access to ESTEP-Tutoring or to a control group.

Posted to Web: September 03, 2008Publication Date: July 01, 2008

Families' Connections to Services in an Alternative Response System (Research Report)
Erica H. Zielewski, Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Roseana Bess, Julie Murray

This study, conducted in an urban and rural county in two states, Oklahoma and Kentucky, sought to provide a detailed description of how families do or do not connect to services in alternative response system in the two study states. Using data collected from interviews and focus groups with child welfare agency staff, community service providers, and families, the study identified six factors that affect how families connect to needed services, including service network infrastructure, relationships between providers, and service availability, and offered implications as to how these findings could be applied to policy and practice.

Posted to Web: December 18, 2006Publication Date: December 13, 2006

The Cost of Protecting Vulnerable Children V : Understanding State Variation in Child Welfare Financing (Research Report)
Cynthia Andrews Scarcella, Roseana Bess, Erica H. Zielewski, Rob Geen

This report marks the fifth time the Urban Institute has collected data from all 50 states and the District of Columbia regarding child welfare spending. States spent at least $23.3 billion on child welfare activities in state fiscal year (SFY) 2004, with the increase in total spending between SFYs 2002 and 2004 driven by increases in state and local spending. Our findings highlight why we see such variation in states' financing strategies. Reasons include the availability and use of various nondedicated funding sources, how states use various funding sources, legal or political factors, and how the child welfare agency budget fits into the "big picture" of states' overall financing strategies.

Posted to Web: May 24, 2006Publication Date: May 24, 2006

Child Welfare Spending during a Time of Fiscal Stress (Policy Briefs/Child Welfare Research Program)
Roseana Bess, Cynthia Andrews Scarcella

This brief highlights some of the findings from the Urban Institute's 2003 Child Welfare Survey. States spent at least $22 billion on child welfare activities in state fiscal year (SFY) 2002, with increases between SFY 2000 and SFY 2002 coming from all levels of government.

Posted to Web: December 31, 2004Publication Date: December 31, 2004

The Cost of Protecting Vulnerable Children IV: How Child Welfare Funding Fared during the Recession (Research Report)
Cynthia Andrews Scarcella, Roseana Bess, Erica H. Zielewski, Lindsay Warner, Rob Geen

This report marks the fourth time the Urban Institute has collected data from all 50 states and the District of Columbia regarding child welfare spending. Our findings highlight the differences in states' spending patterns and the interaction between federal, state, and local dollars in financing child welfare activities--issues that should be considered during policy and budget debates at the state and national levels. States spent at least $22 billion on child welfare activities in state fiscal year (SFY) 2002, with increases between SFY 2000 and SFY 2002 coming from all levels of government. A rise in TANF and Medicaid spending accounted for nearly all the federal growth. [View the corresponding press release]

Posted to Web: December 20, 2004Publication Date: December 20, 2004

The Disposition of Federal Dollars in Florida's Social Services: Informing a Federal Funding Maximization Strategy: Final Report to The Florida Philanthropic Network (Research Report)
Adam Carasso, Roseana Bess

In Florida, the foundering economy, mounting program costs, and a philosophy of limited government threaten the vitality of state social services. Different levels of government in Florida have begun maximizing federal dollars in earnest to make an end-run around flat state revenues. The state and the larger counties have sometimes been at odds over federal revenue maximization, however. Under a grant from the Florida Philanthropic Network, we examine Florida's efforts to maximize federal dollars in 11 federal social service programs over the past decade at the state level. These programs include Medicaid, SCHIP, Title IV-E Foster Care, TANF, SSI, and Food Stamps. Where possible, comparisons are made with Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas.

Posted to Web: June 30, 2003Publication Date: June 30, 2003

The Cost of Protecting Vulnerable Children: Changes in State Funding of Child Welfare Programs 1998 - 2000 (Series/Fast Facts on Welfare Policy)
Rob Geen, Roseana Bess

This 50-state map highlights the percent change in state spending on abused and neglected children between state fiscal years 1998 and 2000. All but six states increased spending on child welfare during that period. Five states increased spending by more than 40 percent.

Posted to Web: April 25, 2003Publication Date: April 25, 2003

Changes in State Financing of Child Welfare Services 1998 - 2000 by Funding Source (Series/Fast Facts on Welfare Policy)
Rob Geen, Roseana Bess

This 50-state table details changes in state spending on abused and neglected children between state fiscal years 1998 and 2000. It includes revenue from federal sources (Title IV-E, Title IV-B, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, Social Security Block Grant, Medicaid, and Supplemental Security Income) and state and local spending. Collectively, states spent at least $20 billion on child welfare services in SFY 2000, a 20 percent increase from SFY 1998. The largest increase was seen in spending from federal funds, primarily TANF and Title IV-E, raising the federal share of total spending to 49 percent from 45 percent in SFY 1998.

Posted to Web: April 25, 2003Publication Date: April 25, 2003

The Continuing Evolution of State Kinship Care Policies (Discussion Papers)
Amy Jantz, Rob Geen, Roseana Bess, Cynthia Andrews Scarcella, Victoria Russell

This study presents the findings of a 2001 survey of state kinship foster care policies, a follow-up to those conducted in 1997 and 1999. The results show that many states are continuing to offer kin leeway in, or alternatives to, the traditional foster care licensing process, yet simultaneously striving to meet the safety requirements of the Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA). Almost all states give preference to kin over non-kin foster parents, although states differ in how they assess and support kinship care families. Many states have instituted a stricter policy since the implementation of the ASFA final rule, and there are many kin caring for children in foster care who are not eligible to receive foster care payments.

Posted to Web: December 20, 2002Publication Date: December 20, 2002

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