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Audit: NYC Child Welfare Agency Didn't Properly Monitor Troubled Minors

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) -- New York City's child welfare agency failed to properly oversee a citywide juvenile justice program when its workers didn't make required visits to group homes or routinely check on the condition of children who were sent to the homes, the city's comptroller said in an audit released Thursday.

The audit alleges that workers for the city's Administration for Children's Service, which oversees a program known as Close to Home, routinely failed to meet with children in the program and their families, or ensure that they were getting help from the providers who were contracted by the city. The program tries to house minors between 7 and 15 years old in residences near their relatives and schools instead of in far-off detention centers.

"When it started four years ago, Close to Home showed great promise but we found ACS has abdicated its responsibility to provide real oversight of this program, robbing hundreds of children of the opportunity to get back on the right track," Stringer told 1010 WINS. "It is outrageous that ACS has no idea if windows are locked, if children are receiving care or providers are doing their jobs.''

Stringer said two-thirds of Close to Home group homes didn't receive a single unannounced visit in 2014, even though workers were required to make both announced and unannounced visits to every site.

"This program costs taxpayers $94 million dollars, $170,000 dollars per child, but ACS has not monitored the finances or whether the services provided are actually making a difference for the kids," he told WCBS 880's Rich Lamb.

Stringer also alleged that workers often failed to make required phone calls and didn't show up for required visits to check on the children.

"The actions of this agency are sending a loud and clear message that the kids don't matter," Stringer said.

"The safety of our young people -- and communities -- is paramount,'' ACS Deputy Commissioner Jill Krauss said in a statement. "Over the past year, ACS has added experienced staff to monitor the safety of programs, enlisted the NYPD to assess security at all Close to Home sites, and, since 2013, we have shut down three programs that were unable to adhere to our standards.''

Last year, authorities arrested a worker at a now-closed Close to Home program group home after three teenage boys escaped on his watch and raped a woman. Prosecutors said the worker had made false entries in a group home logbook indicating he checked on the boys every half hour and that they were in their beds. Three additional group home staffers were arrested in April. They have all pleaded not guilty. The boys were charged as adults with raping a 33-year-old woman in Manhattan.

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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