Home Community Attention Foster Families recruiting new foster parents in Central Virginia
Local News

Community Attention Foster Families recruiting new foster parents in Central Virginia

Contributors
teaching school education
(© SolisImages – stock.adobe.com)

Community Attention Foster Families is recruiting new foster parents in Charlottesville, Albemarle County and Greene County to add to their pool of compassionate caretakers who are committed to supporting vulnerable children.

CAFF has provided foster care services since 1976. Training is the foundation to providing high quality services to children and families. With an extensive knowledge of trauma-supportive practices, CAFF engages prospective foster parents in 27 hours of training.

This summer, CAFF shifted their training curriculum virtually and topics include cultural humility, understanding the foster care system, attachment, and effective discipline.

CAFF aspires to cultivate a diverse pool of foster families that support the racial and ethnic identities of the children they serve. Those that are open to fostering teens and keep sibling groups together are a priority.

“One of the children in my Head Start classroom was going to be placed into the foster care system and be separated from all of her siblings. I could not, not do something,” kinship foster parent Tracy Holliday said.

“Becoming a foster parent is an incredible way to give back to our local community,” said Nicole Hawker, a CAFF recruitment specialist. “You have the opportunity to empower children and youth as well as their biological families towards hope, healing and family restoration.”

Children thrive in local, family-like environments that allows the child to access support in a community that is familiar to them and promotes successful outcomes. Ideal foster parents have the ability to provide stability and possess an openness to support the needs of children.

“We saw fostering as a way to provide a safe, loving home to children in need for as long as they needed,” current foster parent Christina Parker said. “Over time our reasons to continue fostering now include not only loving on and caring for the children but also showing love and support to the families of the children that are in our home.”

“Through CAFF we are able to step into some difficult situations, knowing they will stand beside us and support us along the way. We have felt blessed to have a listening ear and an understanding voice on the other side when working through the ins and outs of foster care,” Parker said.

If you or someone you know is interested in exploring foster parenting or want to learn more, connect with Nicole Hawker through email at be [email protected]

Prospective foster parents are also welcomed to contact Nicole to attend an initial information session. The next informational session is scheduled for Sept. 21.

Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.