With the legislative session just around the corner, one state senator is proposing to take the Children, Youth and Families Department out from under the governor. The bill is meant to address controversy around the department.
CYFD has drawn criticism in recent years over transparency issues, housing children in its offices and most recently, for kids with a history of mental illness and violence over Thanksgiving.
Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino (D-Albuquerque) said the first step to addressing these issues is to make changes to the leadership.
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing now is [that] the department is in what I refer to as a death spiral, a downward spiral in which public confidence is so eroded that people don鈥檛 want to work for them,鈥 he said.
He is proposing a constitutional amendment to make CYFD no longer a part of the governor鈥檚 cabinet. Instead, it would answer to a commission of three people with relevant training and experience, who would also appoint the executive director.
CYFD has a . Ortiz y Pino said low staffing at the department means the workers there now can鈥檛 do all of what鈥檚 mandated to them. He also says it鈥檚 struggling to hire because of CYFD鈥檚 well-publicized failings.
鈥淭his is meant to restore that confidence. To professionalize it, depoliticize it,鈥 he said.
If the legislature passes the bill, it will go straight to the voters on November鈥檚 ballot.
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