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Oregon Kids' Rights in Congregate Care - with Senator Gelser Blouin

Tuesday, 7/19 @ Noon

Online via Zoom

Oregon Kids' Rights in Congregate Care - with Senator Gelser Blouin

Tuesday, 7/19 @ Noon

Online via Zoom
Oregon Kids' Rights in Congregate Care: Leveraging Little Known Tools, Records and Reports Available through State Licensing Statutes

To view this program for no charge, members click here. Email Jennifer Root for a link if not an OCDLA member.

Date: Tuesday, July 19, 2022
Time: 12:00–1:00 p.m.
Cost: Free and open to all. Register at right or email Jennifer Root for the Zoom link. Or call OCDLA: 541.686.8716.




Senator Sara Gelser Blouin, District 8, Oregon
 
Senator Gelser Blouin spoke about “What is the Troubled Teen Industry & What is the Accountability for Congregate Care Act?” at the Annual Juvenile Law Conference in Newport on May 7 at Agate Beach Inn in Newport.
 
In this one-hour free webinar, Senator Gelser Blouin will address:
  • An attorney’s right to 24/7 access to a youth and to all areas of a facility
  • Codification of abuse allegations, copies of restraint incident reports
  • New physical restraint and seclusion laws
  • Right of a child to have their attorney with them when interviewed as an alleged victim, alleged perpetrator or witness in an OTIS investigation
  • Right of child to be interviewed outside presence of program staff
  • New disclosures required to be given to youth at placement and yearly, related to restraint, seclusion and youth rights
  • Accessing quarterly reports of substantiated allegations of abuse for congregate care, foster care and ID/DD programs
 
 
 
Sara Gelser was sworn into the Oregon House in 2005, and was elected to the Oregon State Senate in 2014. She is Chair of the Senate Human Services Committee and also serves on the Judiciary Committee, the Education Committee, the Mental Health Committee and the Joint Transportation Committee. Prior to joining the Senate, she chaired the House Education Committee for 6 years and served as the National Education Policy Chair for the Council of State Governments. In 2010, President Barack Obama appointed Sara to the National Council on Disability. The nomination was confirmed by a unanimous vote of the US Senate.​

Sara's legislative accomplishments include strengthening Oregon's rape statute, the creation of a charitable pharmacy program, expansion of Oregon's mandatory child abuse reporting law, the establishment of statewide standards for modified and extended diplomas, strengthening protections for seniors and people with disabilities who are victims of abuse and neglect, strong anti-tobacco initiatives, establishing transparent child welfare fatality reviews known as CIRTs and reducing barriers for access to medical and support services for children with disabilities. In 2007, Sara spearheaded Karly's Law which improves child abuse investigations across the state.  She is currently leading Oregon's workgroup to implement the national Family First Prevention Services Act.  Sara also played a key role in making Oregon one of the very first states in the nation to achieve recognition for full rape kit reform by the Joyful Heart Foundation.

Sara served on the Corvallis School Board from 2001 until 2006. She is past president of The Arc of Benton County, was named Corvallis Junior First Citizen by the Corvallis Chamber of Commerce in 2004, and was a National Council on State Legislators Child Welfare Fellow.  Sara was featured as one of Time Magazine's "Person of the Year" Silence Breakers in 2017, was honored by the Portland City Club with the Oregon Courage Award in 2019, received the Oregon Center for Women's Leadership Transforming Policy Award in 2018, and was given the Voice for Justice Award by the National Crime Victim Law Institute in 2017.

Before serving in the Legislature, Sara was the Children with Disabilities and Family Support Coordinator for the Oregon Department of Human Services. She also worked as an instructor at Linn-Benton Community College and as a regional coordinator for the Oregon Parent Training and Information Center, where she provided training to parents, educators and administrators about special education law and practice.
Sara earned her BA in history and education from Earlham College and an MAIS degree from Oregon State University. She was a Council on State Governments Henry Toll Fellow,  a Marshall Memorial Fellow, and a participant in an American Council of Young Political Leaders international exchange program facilitated by the US Department of State.

Sara lives in Corvallis with her partner, Dr. Michael Blouin, and is the proud mother of five children.








 

Agenda


 
 

Investigation track

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