Child welfare
Colorado's child welfare system is state supervised and administered by Colorado's 64 counties. CDHS's Division of Child Welfare oversees child welfare practice, provides policy direction and provides 80 percent of the funding for services. Counties contribute approximately 20 percent of the funding through local revenues.
The Division of Child Welfare is composed of a specialized set of services that strengthen the ability of the family to protect and care for their own children, minimize harm to children and youth, and ensure timely permanency planning. Services stabilize the family situation and strengthen the family's capacity to care for their children. When safety is not possible within the family, services focus on the child's need for a stable, permanent home as quickly as possible.
Child welfare services include:
- prevention and intervention services for children, youth and families at risk of involvement with child welfare.
- youth in conflict services reduce or eliminate conflicts between youth and their family members or the community when conflicts affect the youth's well-being, the normal functioning of the family, or the well-being of the community.
- child protection services are provided to protect children whose physical, mental or emotional well-being is threatened by the actions or omissions of parents, legal guardians, custodians, or persons responsible for providing out-of-home care.
- children or youth who have been adopted through foster care, children and youth with Medicaid-only services, and youth whose permanency goal is no longer reunification.
The Division of Child Welfare also directly licenses and monitors contracts for 24-hour out-of-home service providers.
- Annual Parent Letter
- The Annual Parent Letter describes immunization requirements (K-12 and child care) for the State of Colorado. By law, all schools and child care facilities are required to distribute the Annual Parent Letter to the parents or legal guardians of all enrolled student. - Translations of the Annual Parent Letter can be found on the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment's school resources (K-12) and child care resources (pre-K) pages. Email cdphe.dcdimmunization@state.co.us with any questions. 
- Child trafficking in Colorado
- Child trafficking is child abuse. The two forms of child trafficking are sex trafficking and labor trafficking. Learn more about child trafficking in Colorado. 
- Child Welfare Complaints
- If you have a child welfare complaint, we will do our best to assist you. Read more about the complaint process and submit a complaint on the Contact the Colorado Department of Human Services page. - If you are concerned about a child or youth's safety and well-being, please call the Colorado Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline at 844-CO-4-Kids. Call 9-1-1 if there is an immediate threat. 
- Child Welfare Training
- CDHS Child Welfare Training System- The CDHS Child Welfare Training System provides strength-based, family-centered, competency-based training programs for child welfare professionals and para-professionals by delivering specialized courses for caseworkers, supervisors, case services aides, foster parents, and other child and family serving personnel. - Developmental Screening and Children Involved in Colorado's Child Welfare System — CAPTA and Beyond- Research has shown that toxic stress, including abuse and/or neglect that occurs when a child is young, can have negative impacts on brain/cognitive development, attachment and academic achievement. While a young child's development may be more susceptible to toxic stress, early intervention during this critical period can be most effective in mitigating the detrimental effects of that stress. It is known that the provision of early services and intervention to support the healthy development of young children can have positive effects that last throughout childhood and into adulthood (Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 2010). - Developmental screening can be an effective way to identify developmental concerns early in a child’s life and connect the child and family to services. Learn more on the Developmental screening educational tool for children in Colorado's child welfare system page. - Educational Stability of Youth in Foster Care- Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 requires county departments of human or social services (child welfare agencies) to promote and work towards school stability for children and youth in foster care, in collaboration with schools and school districts. The law stresses the importance of remaining in the same school unless it is not in the best interests of the child or youth. This video was funded by the Administration for Children and Families as part of Colorado’s Education in Foster Care Demonstration Grant. This video highlights how child welfare agencies and schools/school districts can engage in a collaborative process to make the best interest determination, who should be involved in the decision-making, and factors to consider. - Training for Foster, Kin and Adoptive Families- The Child Welfare Training System offers training, classes and resources for kinship caregivers and foster and adoptive parents. Training is available to help these dedicated adults meet certification requirements, understand the child welfare system and to enhance their parenting skills. - Child Abuse and Neglect Mandatory Reporter Training- The Colorado Online Mandatory Reporter training is for individuals who are required by law to make reports of child abuse and/or neglect. - The training is designed to be flexible, so the amount of time it takes you to complete it may vary. Please count on spending approximately two hours. Access the training on the CO4Kids website. 
- Colorado Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline Reporting System
- In 2012, a new child welfare plan — "Keeping Kids Safe and Families Healthy" — detailed a common practice approach for Colorado's 64 counties and two Tribal nations designed to strengthen the State's child welfare system. The second phase of that plan included the development of a statewide hotline providing one number to report suspected child abuse or neglect, and a corresponding public awareness and prevention campaign. Visit the Colorado Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline Reporting System page to learn more. 
- Core Services Program
- The Core Services Program was established within CDHS in 1994 and is statutorily required to provide strength-based resources and support to families when children/youth are at imminent risk of out-of-home placement, in need of services to return home, or to maintain a placement in the least restrictive setting possible. Responding to the complexity and variability in the needs of children, youth, and families across the diverse regions of Colorado, the Core Services Program combines the consistency of centralized state administrative oversight with the flexibility and accountability of a county-run system. This approach allows for individualized services to meet the needs of children, youth, and families across diverse Colorado communities. Visit the Child Welfare Core Services Program page to learn more. 
- Differential Response
- Differential response (DR) is the overarching paradigm shift in counties to assess children for safety through partnering with families, community partners, and facilitate sustainable behavioral change within a family. Visit the Differential Response Program page to learn more. 
- Facilitated Family Engagement
- Facilitated family engagement meetings provide families that have an open child welfare case with case planning meetings aimed at resolving identified safety concerns as effectively and efficiently as possible. Meetings are designed to value live decision making and the importance of the family's voice as the best way to promote safety and permanency. Visit the Facilitated family engagement page to learn more. 
- Permanency Roundtable Program
- The goal of the Permanency Roundtable is to expedite legal permanency for the child, stimulate thinking and learning about new ways to accelerate permanency and identify and address systemic barriers to timely permanency. - A Permanency Roundtable is a professional consultation on a youth's case who has been in out of home placement for over a year or who has been assigned a permanency goal of Other Planned Permanency Living Arrangement. Visit the Permanency Roundtable Program page to learn more. 
- Placement Services
- The Division of Child Welfare provides regulatory oversight, processes licensing applications, enforces rules, and provides technical assistance to ensure the safety and well-being of children in out of home placement in 24-hour licensed child care facilities. 
- Prevention and Intervention Services
- More commonly known to human services professionals as Program Area 3, child welfare services include prevention and intervention services for children, youth, and families at risk of involvement with child welfare. Services are provided to families to safely care for their children prior to involvement or referral to child welfare. This program area was added in 2013. 
- Relative Guardianship Assistance Program
- The purpose of the Relative Guardianship Assistance Program is to reduce barriers for eligible children and youth in foster care so they can achieve legal permanency when reunification and adoption are not appropriate goals. Visit the Relative Guardianship Assistance Program page to learn more. 
- Tony Grampsas Youth Services Program
- The Tony Grampsas Youth Services (TGYS) Program is a statutory program providing funding to local organizations for prevention, intervention, and education programs for children, youth, and their families designed to prevent youth crime and violence, youth marijuana use, and child abuse and neglect. Visit the Tony Grampsas Youth Services Program page to learn more. 
- Unaccompanied Refugee Minors Program
- The Unaccompanied Refugee Minors (URM) program provides culturally- and linguistically-appropriate child welfare, foster care, and independent living services to minors who enter the United States (U.S.) unaccompanied by a parent or guardian. Visit the Unaccompanied Refugee Minors Program page to learn more. 
- Glossary of Acronyms
- The Division of Child Welfare often relies on acronyms that require explanation for the material to be useful. This glossary of acronyms is organized in alphabetical order. 
 ABCD Assuring Better Child Health and Development
 ACC Accountable Care Collaborative
 ACF Administration for Children and Families
 ACHY Advisory Committee on Homeless Youth
 AECF Annie E. Casey Foundation
 AI/AN American Indian/Alaska Native
 APSR Annual Progress and Services Report
 ARC American Red Cross
 ARD Administrative Review Division
 BHO Behavioral Health Organization
 BPCT Best Practice Court Teams
 C.R.S. Colorado Revised Statutes
 CAPTA Child Abuse Prevention Treatment Act
 CASA Court Appointed Special Advocate
 CBSM Community-Based Social Marketing
 CCIA Colorado Commission of Indian Affairs
 CCR Code of Colorado Regulations
 CCR Colorado Community Response
 CCYIS Colorado Children and Youth Information Sharing
 CDHS Colorado Department of Human Services
 CFCIP Chafee Foster Care Independence Program
 CFP Casey Family Programs
 CFR Code of Federal Regulations
 CFSP Child and Family Services Plan
 CFSR Child and Family Services Review
 CHSDA Colorado Human Services Directors Association
 CHRP Children’s Habilitation Residential Program
 CIP Court Improvement Program
 CMHC Community Mental Health Center
 CMO Central Management Organization
 CMP Collaborative Management Program
 COEM Colorado Office of Emergency Management
 COG Continuity of Government
 COVOAD Colorado Voluntary Organizations Active in Disasters
 CPA Certified Public Accountant
 CPA Child Placement Agency
 CPM Colorado Practice Model
 CPR Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
 CPS Child Protective Services
 CQI Continuous Quality Improvement
 CSFPA Colorado State Foster Parent Association
 CSU Colorado State University
 CTUG Colorado Trails Users Group
 CWELC Child Welfare Executive Leadership Council
 CWTA Child Welfare Training Academy
 CWTS Child Welfare Training System
 CY Calendar Year
 CYLN Colorado Youth Leadership Network
 D&,N Dependency and Neglect
 DCW Division of Child Welfare
 DHS Department of Human Services
 DIFRC Denver Indian Family Resource Center
 DOH Division of Housing
 DPHE Department of Public Health and Environment
 DR Differential Response
 DSS Department of Social Services
 DVP Domestic Violence Program
 DYC Division of Youth Corrections
 EOC Emergency Operations Center
 EOP Emergency Operations Plan
 EPSDT Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Testing
 ETV Education and Training Vouchers
 FAMJIS Family Justice Information System
 FAR Family Assessment Response
 FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency
 FFY Federal Fiscal Year
 FSP Family Service Plan
 FTE Full-Time Equivalent
 FUP Family Unification Program
 GAL Guardian ad Litem
 GED General Education Development
 HB House Bill
 HCBS Home and Community-Based Services
 HCPF Health Care Policy and Financing
 HCV Housing Choice Voucher
 HSC Hotline Steering Committee
 HSRI Human Services Research Institute
 ICPC Interstate Compact for Placement of Children
 ICWA Indian Child Welfare Act
 IDEA Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
 IFGP Individual and Family Grant Program
 IGA Inter-Governmental Agreement
 IH In-Home
 LGBT Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
 LGBTQ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Questioning
 LINKS Listening to the Needs of Kids
 LMS Learning Management System
 MCV Monthly Caseworker Visit
 MOU Memorandum of Understanding
 NCANDS National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System
 NCFAS North Carolina Family Assessment Scales
 NFP Nurse–Family Partnership
 NGA National Governors Association
 NTTL No Time to Lose
 NYTD National Youth in Transition Database
 OBH Office of Behavioral Health
 OCR Office of the Child’s Representative
 OCYF Office of Children, Youth and Families
 OEC Office of Early Childhood
 OITS Office of Information Technology Services
 OJT On-the-Job
 OOH Out-of-Home
 OPPLA Other Planned Permanent Living Arrangement
 OYLC Older Youth Learning Collaborative
 P.L. Public Law
 PAC Policy Advisory Committee
 PBL Project-Based Learning
 PIO Public Information Officer
 PIP Performance Improvement Plan
 PMD Performance Management Division
 PSSF Promoting Safe and Stable Families
 Q&,A Question and Answer
 QA Quality Assurance
 QPT Quality Practice Team
 R&,R Recruitment and Retention
 RCCF Regional Child Care Facility
 RCCO Regional Care Collaborative Organization
 RED Review, Evaluate, Direct
 ROM Results Oriented Management
 RTAC Regional Training Advisory Committee
 RTC Regional Training Center
 SACWIS Statewide Automatic Child Welfare Information System
 SAMHSA Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
 SB Senate Bill
 SCORM Sharable Content Object Reference Model
 SEF State Emergency Function
 SEOC State Emergency Operations Center
 SEOP State Emergency Operations Plan
 SFBT Solution-Focused Brief Therapy
 SFY State Fiscal Year
 SME Subject Matter Expert
 SNAP Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
 SSC State Steering Committee
 START State and Regional Team for Crimes Against Children
 SUDSS Southern Ute Department of Social Services
 T&,TA Training and Technical Assistance
 TA Technical Assistance
 TAE The Adoption Exchange
 TBD To Be Determined
 TEV Travel Expense Voucher
 TGYS Tony Grampsas Youth Services
 TPR Termination of Parental Rights
 TISOC Trauma-Informed System of Care
 TSC Training Steering Committee
 TTY Tele-Typewriter
 U.S.C. United States Code
 USDA United States Department of Agriculture
 VOICES Value of Individual and Community Engagement Services
 WBT Web-Based Training
 WIA Workforce Investment Act
