You really have to be committed to what you might get yourself into. I worked in our children services dept and can say those kids come with a lot of problems.
We had a kid who was a pyromaniac yep loved fire and set his foster home on fire. A girl bet up her foster mother. The kid who would not use the toilet. These are just a few examples. A lot of our kids were in our custody because they had parents who did drugs therefore the kid was born with the addiction. And 99% of them have mental health issues so you will be the one to take them to their weekly counseling sessions. The state will pay for the medical/mental health care.
So think hard about wanting to foster.
You must also take a certain number of foster parenting classes before you a child can be placed in your care along with the home inspections, back ground checks for your family. If you plan on having a family member or friend that will be babysitting they to have to go thru the a background check and home inspection. You must also take a certain number of refresher courses to keep you foster care license.[\QUOTE]
I cannot let this poster be the lone voice of dissent on this subject, as we are former foster parents that ultimately adopted from the system. EVERY single thing Shellie addressed is true to our experience. The 99% with mental health issues ..... yep ..... real. The volume of parenting/informational classes that you are required to take as a FP is simply mind-numbing. When you factor in that you have to have someone qualified watch your foster child while you are attending all these classes, it becomes increasingly difficult to parent. Your "good friend" is no longer your good friend after they watch your child a few times. The list goes on.
While I applaud your incentive to good for the world (I was once on the same page), there are no guarantees. If you have other children in the house, I would run as quickly in the opposite direction as possible. Our little darlin' has tried to kill our pets, tried to kill other children, stabbed teachers, tried to burn our house down ..... and that is the short list. She is now 20 yo and all of 4'9", so size is irrelevant.
Here is my reality .......... we adopted our daughter at the age of 7 after fostering for almost two years. To say that she came with issues is an understatement, but all these kids do ..... otherwise, they'd be with their real parents. After 8 years of heavy-duty parenting/therapy and 10 trips to WDW, we eventually got a caregiver for her while we vacationed without her, as she was doing her darndest to ruin the family. She is now 20 and my day today will be spent acquiring the proper psychiatric doctor in my quest to get her set up on the government dole. She has no intention of ever working, doesn't do anything for herself or others, and is simply a drain on our family after MANY missed opportunities. According to all the standardized tests and teachers, she in the top 25% of everything and reads at a college level. I am simply out of options, she must go, and I will do whatever it takes to make that happen. I could go on and on and on, but will spare you all the ugly details. Shellie summed it all up quite nicely.