Centred Content

Foster Caregivers Needed

Please join us for an upcoming info session to learn how you can get involved.

For more information or to register for one of the virtual sessions, contact foster@durhamcas.ca.

Thursday, January 16, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – virtual

Thursday, January 23, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – Ajax Public Library (Main branch)

Thursday, January 30, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – Pickering Public Library (Central branch)

Thursday, February 6, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.  – Durham CAS office, 1320 Airport Blvd., Oshawa

Thursday, February 13, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. –  Clarington Library, Museums & Archives (Bowmanville branch)

Thursday, February 20, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – virtual

Centred Content

We need foster caregivers. Please contact us to learn how you can help.

When a family becomes involved with a Children’s Aid Society, every effort is made to support the family to ensure children live safely with their family. If a child cannot live safely at home, their parents are supported to seek help from extended family, kin, friends, and their community to ensure a child lives safely with people they know and trust. When this is not available, children may be brought into the temporary care of Durham Children’s Aid Society where foster caregiver provide children and youth with safe, family-based care until children return home to their parents.

Foster care provides children and youth with a safe family setting during a time of crisis. In many situations, foster care can provide vital support that enables parents to address issues that are putting their children’s safety and well-being at risk. In most situations children placed in foster care are reunified with their families once the issues that led to the child needing to be in care have been resolved with the support form CASs and community partners.

Children may need foster care for just a few days, a week, several months, or possibly longer. Foster caregivers work with our staff as part of a team to develop and support a plan of care for each child or youth in their care. The preferred plan is to reunite a child or youth with their family. Sometimes the plan may include exploring alternative permanency options such as kinship care, legal custody by a family member or foster caregiver, an independent living situation, or adoption.

Foster caregivers provide stability and a caring home that encourages a child or youth’s growth and well-being. While the legal responsibility for the child or youth remains with Durham Children’s Aid Society, foster caregivers play an important role in a child or youth’s daily life.

News

Call Us