Policy Regarding the Proper Use of Photos & Information Regarding Children in Foster Care

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 12:49 pm on July 20, 2010

ATTENTION: This notice is taken directly from the Administrative or Practice Guidelines provided by Utah’s Division of Child and Family Services regarding foster parents and out-of-home caregivers and was provided to Utah Foster Care Foundation via email.

The text of the below is not from Utah Foster Care Foundation. If you have questions regarding this matter, please contact your RFC or the child’s caseworker.

———

Summary of Change or New Process:

Section 305.4 is being added to give guidance to caseworkers and foster parents regarding the proper use of images and information regarding foster children. Information regarding a child in foster care MAY BE USED in social networking and public forums if the confidentiality of the child is protected and the protocol is followed. This section outlines the protocol that must be used in order for foster parents and other out-of-home caregivers to obtain permission to use images and information about a child in the custody of Child and Family Services in blogs, social networks (such as Facebook, Twitter, etc.), newsletters, etc.

The following is a summary of the protocol. Please refer to the Practice Guidelines for the full content:

1) If the parent retains parental rights, their permission must be obtained prior to any information or images being used. If the parent’s whereabouts are unknown, contact with the parent cannot be made, or if the parent does not retain parental rights, approval will be sought from the caseworker and also discussed with the members of the Child and Family Team.

2) If the child is over 8 years old and has the capacity to understand and agree, the child must also give permission prior to the information / images being used.

3) Permission from the parent, child, and/or caseworker and team will be documented in the SAFE activity logs and/or Child and Family Team Meeting minutes.

4) Information will only use the client’s first name and will NOT identify the child as a DHS client or foster child.




The Friday Trivia Answer

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 10:47 am on July 6, 2010

In what year did the Utah Foster Care Foundation assume statewide responsibility for recruiting and training foster/adoptive families in Utah?

The answer: 2000.

Explanation: Although Utah Foster Care Foundation was created in 1999, it was not until the year 2000 that the Foundation assumed statewide responsibility for recruiting and training foster/adoptive families in Utah.

WINNERS: Shelly and Tamara both got the right answer so both get the prize! Thanks for playing ladies!




Play Trivia & Win a Coupon Book to The Gateway!

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 2:22 pm on July 2, 2010

In what year did the Utah Foster Care Foundation assume statewide responsibility for recruiting and training foster/adoptive families in Utah?

How to win:

Enter your answer as a comment on THIS blog post.
Answers received elsewhere will not be entered to win.
Comments will be disabled Tuesday, July 6th at 10am and a winner will be announced on FaceBook. Don’t follow us on FaceBook? Like us on FaceBook today.
Two winners will be chosen at random from correct answers.

About the Prize:
Includes coupons like…
“Clark Planetarium: Free theatre ticket when you purchase one ticket a regular price.”
“Costa Vida: Free premium dessert with purchase of an entree.”
“Thaifoon: complimentary appetize (up to $10) with entree purchase.”
and much, much more!




“One Mile Per Child” Breaks the 100 Mile Mark!


contributed by Kobi M.
Eastern Region Area Representative
Chair, Fun Run/Walk for Kids
Utah Foster Care Foundation

The Utah Foster Care Foundation held the second annual Fun Run/Walk for Kids on May 15th.

The goal of this event was to raise awareness about foster care in the community. We wanted one person to represent every child in foster care in Eastern region. We had over 100 people gather to walk one mile per child from Price Main Street to the city park.

Some people ran the entire way and others arrived at a little slower pace.

Some of the more than 100 participants from the 2010 Fun Run/Walk for Kids in Price, UT!

Once at the park, we played games, jumped in the bouncer, made crafts, had face painting, and ate lunch. Children of all ages enjoyed the event.

It was a wonderful time to gather as a community to demonstrate support and understanding for foster care. We appreciate the community support in this event and all those who came out to participate and also those who donated items and time to make this a successful event.




Skin Cancer Screening Clinic

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 8:19 am on May 14, 2010

Let’s face it. It’s summer. And that means one thing: fun in the sun. And that should mean lots and lots of sunscreen. But it doesn’t always. Especially for adults. So while the kids get a sunburn or two (and you drop them in a tub filled with lukewarm water and Apple Cider Vinegar and then lob on the Agave or Aloe), you may find yourself getting more than you bargained for.

First things first: Put that sunscreen on the kids. And then put it on you. And don’t forget your past transgressions…years of sunburns build up against you and can cause skin cancer. But don’t forget…if you’re a skier or you take your kids sledding in the winter, you’re still exposing yourself to major UVA and UVB rays.

What does this have to do with foster care and the kids you care for?

When this blogger was little she used to get sunburned ALL THE TIME, even WITH sunscreen on. And my Dad was exactly the same. I figured it was just the way things were for us redheads. But let me tell you something…the day my Dad found out he had skin cancer was a terrible day for our family. And while he’s pulled through and made every attempt to keep himself healthy he still has regular checks and gets newly formed skin cancers burned off every 3-4 months.

Not everyone is so lucky. Skin cancer has the potential to kill. And while you’re doing the best you can to provide for the children in your care, do you really want to have to worry about how many skin cancers the doctor will burn off “this time”??? And do you want to have to explain that to the kids in your care? Skin cancer is a 100% controllable and treatable ailment that doesn’t have to get worse–if you get checked, wear sunscreen and do whatever you can to keep yourself healthy (including removal), if you do happen to have it.

So why not get checked?

Even if you don’t have insurance, there are ways to get checked for skin cancer for little cost or for FREE.

In fact, there’s a FREE skin cancer screening clinic coming up on May 22, 2010 at the Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah. While anyone can go, it is targeted for those who don’t already have insurance–the Huntsman Institute is trying to make screenings more affordable so everyone can get checked.

Call 1-888-424-2100 to make an appointment for a FREE skin cancer  screening in Salt Lake City, UT on May 22, 2010

HIGH RISK GROUPS FOR SKIN CANCER include:

  • People who work or play outdoors. For example, construction workers, mail carriers, lifeguards, golfers, skiers, hikers, cyclists and many more…
  • Tanning bed users
  • Men in their fifties and sixties
  • Fair-skinned people who freckle or burn easily
  • People with skin “spots” that have recently appeared, grown or changed

So, if you love yourself and your family and the kids in your care, and you fit into one of the above categories, go ahead and slap on some extra sunscreen before you go outside this weekend and don’t forget to call the Huntsman Cancer Institute to get more information on this FREE skin cancer screening.

It’s just another way to show the kids in your care that you love them–that’s right, you have to take care of yourself before you can truly take care of anyone else. So get on it.




Can Being a Foster Parent Truly Change Lives?

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 2:18 pm on May 11, 2010

by Amy O.
Utah Foster Care Foundation

When you wake up in the morning, chances are you follow your standard daily routine–you exercise, you eat breakfast, take a shower, get dressed, brush your teeth…the list goes on and on. But what you probably don’t do is ponder the ways in which you might be able to change the world. And if those thoughts, by chance, happen to cross your mind, you’re thinking of small things–like recycling or composting, instead of throwing everything from breakfast in the trash can. Or you promise not to use the pellet gun to shoot at the neighbor’s cat again this weekend…in an effort to preserve some sanctity for nature.

You probably don’t wonder what a difference you could make if you were a foster parent. And you especially don’t wonder what kind of a difference you could make if you were a foster parent to a teenager.

Because let’s face it. When you thinking about fostering (if you do at all) or adopting (way more common than thinking about foster care), you think of cute little babies, not teenagers who can run faster than you, think quicker than you and whoop your behind at every video game on the planet…not to mention wear clothes that you could never dream of fitting into or even looking “cool” in, even when you were a teenager.

But a foster parent truly can make a difference in the life of a child, especially that of a teenager.

Kaylee Allen, of Rutherford County in Tennessee had quite a bit to say in her recent Guest Column on DNJ.com, Rutherford County’s First News Source.

“My life had been one disappointment, one rejection after another. My volatile mother asked me to leave her house when I was 14. I spent a few weeks living in homeless shelters and on the street. My dad took me in, but then he left to take a contractor job overseas. There was nowhere else for me to go.”

Like so many other teens in foster care, Kaylee was suffering because her parents were unable/unwilling to care for her most basic needs–a roof over her head, a bed to sleep in, clean clothes and food to eat. And when she arrived at the home of John and Beverly Berryhill just five days before Christmas at the age of 17, she didn’t expect them to care about her at all.

Kaylee wasn’t shy in her commentary about letting people know what it’s REALLY like to be a teenager in foster care.

“I struggled in foster care. Most people don’t realize how hard it is to be a foster child. You always feel temporary. You never know how long you’re going to stay in one place, in one school. Older foster children, like me, have often had to fend for themselves or parent younger siblings. Forced to grow up fast, we miss out on many of the joys other kids know.”

What most people don’t understand about teenagers in foster care is that they are normal kids…like every other teenager out there, they have dreams, aspirations, wants and needs. They’re not bad kids. They’re not troublemakers. They’re not drug addicts, or alcoholics and they won’t abuse your younger children. They just want someone to love them. And when no one understands that, the going can be rough. As Kaylee says in her column, “When you’re a foster child, it’s easy to be angry.”

As a foster parent, you have the chance to not only make a change for a teenager, but for yourself as well.

“So there I was on the Berryhills’ doorstep. I didn’t expect anything from them, and from the first day, they offered me everything.

My first surprise was discovering so many presents for me under the Christmas tree. Everyone in the family had known I was coming and had gotten me presents, just like they did for the Berryhills’ other children. It was the beginning of one of the best years of my life.

I was a senior in high school, and my foster parents made sure I had a senior year filled with great memories. I have a collage of photos that tell the story of that year. There are photos of my birthday, the prom, graduation parties and graduation day. I was accepted to college, and the Berryhills both took off work one day to help me move in the dorm.”

To you, these may be just “things that every teenager experiences or has”. But to Kaylee, and thousands of other teenagers in foster care, these “little things” that we all take for granted each and every day are the things that truly make a difference. For Kaylee, a collage, a scrapbook, Christmas presents and a trip to the dorms at college meant being a part of the family, having someone to love her…and…just mattering.

“When I met the Berryhills, I had expected just another foster home. Instead, I found a family who cared about me — and will always care about me. I’m so grateful they came into my life at just the right time. They gave me so much just by treating me like their own child.

I’m married now, but I still have my house key and a place to come home to every Christmas.”

So what do you think?

When you wake up tomorrow morning and start your daily routine, as you make your breakfast, toss the leftovers into the trash can, shout to your kids that it’s time to go to school and wonder what wonderful or startling events might make up your day…this time, instead of just having an ordinary day, why not make it extraordinary?

Take a moment to wonder what it might be like to truly make a difference in the life of a child–in the life of a teenager–to bring the NORMALCY of a daily routine, of family traditions and of the upsets of a teenage life back into the life of a teenager. And then pick up the phone and do something about it. Change your daily routine to include just one more person and you might find yourself changing the world.

Excerpts for this blog post were taken from DNJ.com at http://www.dnj.com/article/20100508/OPINION02/5080301, where you will find the full text of Kaylee Allen’s Guest Column entitled, “Foster Parents Give Love.” About Kaylee: “Kaylee Allen is married to a member of the US Air Force who will deploy to Afghanistan this fall. While he’s gone, she’ll be completing coursework to become and emergency medical technician.”

 




ATTENTION!!! ***MEDICINE RECALL FOR TYLENOL, MOTRIN, ZYRTEC, BENADRYL***

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 1:06 pm on

Children's Tylenol Recall list at www.utahfostercare.org; photo taken from http://injurylaw.labovick.com/articles/product-recalls/In an effort to keep you, your family and the children you care for SAFE, Chris Chrytraus, Program Manager for the Fostering Healthy Children Program, has provided Utah Foster Care Foundation with a list of OVER THE COUNTER medications that are currently on recall.

Below you will find the NAME, SIZE, FLAVOR (if applicable) and NDC NUMBER of the affected products. If you have ANY QUESTIONS, please call your RFC or your child’s caseworker.

YOU MAY ALSO VISIT: http://www.mcneilproductrecall.com/ to request a refund and get additional information.

PRODUCTS

NDC Number

TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 1 OZ. GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-144-01
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. GRAPE FLAVOR* 50580-144-15
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 1 OZ. CHERRY DYE FREE 50580-167-01
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. CHERRY FLAVOR 50580-143-15
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 1 OZ. CHERRY FLAVOR 50580-143-30
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. GRAPE – HOSPITAL 50580-144-18
CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 0.25 OZ. GRAPE – SAMPLE 50580-144-40
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSIONS
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 2 OZ. CHERRY BLAST FLAVOR 50580-123-02
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 4 OZ. CHERRY BLAST FLAVOR 50580-123-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL DYE-FREE SUSPENSION 4 OZ. CHERRY FLAVOR 50580-166-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 4 OZ. GRAPE SPLASH 50580-296-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 4 OZ. BUBBLEGUM FLAVOR 50580-407-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 4 OZ. VERY BERRY STRAWBERRY FLAVOR 50580-493-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 1 OZ. CHERRY BLAST FLAVOR – SAMPLE 50580-123-01
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL SUSPENSION 4 OZ. CHERRY BLAST FLAVOR – HOSPITAL 50580-123-03
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSIONS
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COUGH & SORE THROAT CHERRY FLAVOR 50580-247-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COUGH & RUNNY NOSE CHERRY FLAVOR 50580-249-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS DYE-FREE SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COLD & STUFFY NOSE GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-253-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS DYE-FREE SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COLD & COUGH GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-254-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS DYE-FREE SUSPENSION 4 OZ. MULTI-SYMPTOM COLD GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-255-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. FLU BUBBLEGUM FLAVOR 50580-386-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COLD GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-387-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COLD & ALLERGY BUBBLEGUM FLAVOR 50580-390-04
CHILDREN’S TYLENOL PLUS SUSPENSION 4 OZ. MULTI-SYMPTOM COLD GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-391-04
MOTRIN INFANTS’ DROPS
CONCENTRATED MOTRIN INFANTS’ DROPS 1 OZ. BERRY DYE FREE 50580-198-01
CONCENTRATED MOTRIN INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. BERRY DYE FREE 50580-198-15
CONCENTRATED MOTRIN INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. BERRY FLAVOR* 50580-100-15
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSIONS
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. BERRY DYE FREE 50580-184-04
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 2 OZ. BERRY FLAVOR 50580-601-02
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. BERRY FLAVOR 50580-601-04
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. TROPICAL PUNCH FLAVOR 50580-215-04
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. GRAPE FLAVOR 50580-603-04
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. BUBBLEGUM FLAVOR 50580-604-04
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 1 OZ. GRAPE SAMPLE 50580-603-01
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 1 OZ. BUBBLEGUM SAMPLE 50580-604-01
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 1 OZ. BERRY SAMPLE 50580-601-01
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. BERRY HOSPITAL 50580-601-50
CHILDREN’S MOTRIN SUSPENSION 4 OZ. COLD BERRY FLAVOR 50580-902-04
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC LIQUIDS IN BOTTLES
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC 4 OZ. BUBBLEGUM SYRUP 50580-721-04
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC DYE FREE 4 OZ. GRAPE SYRUP 50580-730-04
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC SUGAR-FREE DYE-FREE 0.5 OZ. GRAPE 50580-730-15
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC SUGAR-FREE DYE-FREE 0.5 OZ. BUBBLEGUM 50580-721-15
CHILDREN’S ZYRTEC SUGAR-FREE DYE-FREE 2 X 4 OZ. BUBBLEGUM LIQUID 50580-721-08
CHILDREN’S BENADRYL ALLERGY LIQUIDS IN BOTTLES
CHILDREN’S BENADRYL ALLERGY 4 OZ. BUBBLEGUM FLAVORED LIQUID 50580-535-04

*CONCENTRATED TYLENOL INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. GRAPE FLAVOR is also included in JOHNSON’S Baby Relief Kit.

*CONCENTRATED MOTRIN INFANTS’ DROPS 0.5 OZ. BERRY FLAVOR is also included in JOHNSON’S Baby Relief Kit.

 




Check out this story: “Life after foster care is an uphill battle (Salt Lake Tribune)”

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 3:25 pm on May 5, 2010

As the need for foster parents willing to care for teenagers continues to grow, we’re thrilled to have the Salt Lake Tribune on the side of these wonderful children. Despite the many misconceptions surrounding teenagers in the foster care system, at Utah Foster Care Foundation we know that they are just like every other child–they need someone who is willing to love them, care for them and open their home. These teenagers just need a parent. They’re normal kids and they just want someone to love them.

Read the story below and get to know Bianca Flores, a NORMAL teenager in foster care. Like Bianca, other teenagers in foster care are there because their own parents are unable to provide for the essential wellbeing and need some time to work things out. Now, Bianca is facing the trouble of aging out of foster care with nowhere to call a permanent home.

When you read her story, we hope that whether you are considering becoming a foster parent or are already a foster parent, that you will pick up the phone and call us to find out how you can help teenagers like Bianca by giving them a place to call home, whether it’s temporary or permanent.

-Amy O.
Marketing & Social Media Manager
Utah Foster Care Foundation

Life after foster care is an uphill battle
by Brooke Adams
The Salt Lake Tribune
05/05/2010

Until she entered foster care, Bianca Flores was too busy tending to her three younger siblings to attend school.

Her mother was either sick or MIA, gone for nearly a week at a time. There was no dad — never had been. So Flores filled in as best she could, putting her own life on hold.

But since January 2009, Flores has powered through three years of high school credits, and this spring she will do what seemed unimaginable a year ago: Flores, 18, will graduate from high school, the second person in her family to do so.

Next up is an even bigger challenge — at the end of August, Flores will exit the state’s foster care system and become a student at Snow College, where she plans to pursue a degree in graphic design.

If Flores succeeds, she will be defying the odds.

Numerous studies, both here and in other parts of the country, have highlighted the struggles of youth who age out of foster care, finding they are more likely to be homeless, unemployed, under-educated and in jail. One report released this month found nearly 60 percent of young men had been convicted of a crime, compared with 10 percent of young men who had never been in foster care. For women, three-quarters were on public assistance by age 24.

The new study, by researchers at the University of Chicago and University of Washington, is the largest, most comprehensive study of young adults leaving foster care in two decades. It comes as a new federal initiative — starting this year — requires states to track outcomes of youth once they leave foster care.

That federal database will require states to do a census of at least a sample of 17-year-olds in foster care and then check at ages 19 and 21 to see how they are doing in six areas: income, education, homelessness, positive adult connections, high-risk behavior and access to health insurance.

Utah plans to track all children, not just a sample of youth. The state also plans to check in with youth yearly from the time they turn 17 and evaluate their use of a broad array of services.

“We felt that was a service we were providing to youth and thought how could we provide it to some but not others,” said Navina Forsythe, evaluation director for the Utah Division of Child and Family Services.

A 2006 DCFS study looking at life after foster care, currently being updated, mirrored the national results. The study reviewed cases of 926 youth who aged out of foster care between 1999 and 2004. Few were able to finish vocational or college educations. Many wound up in low-paying jobs.

More than a third had been arrested for a felony or misdemeanor crime within three years of leaving foster care. For females, a third had given birth within that same time period.

The study also found that 57 percent of the youth who left foster care since 2002 were diagnosed with a major mental illness.

The national study, released in April, showed federal incentives that allow states to extend foster care services to age 21 might not be enough to prevent poor outcomes — that in reality, these youth need support for a longer period.

“What is clear is that substantive policy changes need to be made to do justice to the complex needs of former foster youth,” said Mark Courtney, research and development director of Partners for Our Children at the University of Washington, in a statement.

DCFS caseworker Mindy Leonard said Flores is one of the “few and far between” youth she has worked with who has the puzzle pieces in place for success.

Flores hopes to land an Olene Walker Scholarship, available to youth who are college bound after leaving foster care, that will provide $5,000 a year for four years. Flores also is eligible for Pell Grants. And dorm life will provide some structure.

Flores also has a good support system — her mentors include former Miss Utah Heather Anderson, her religious youth group leader Kristy Hodgson and foster parents Michelle and Daren Williams — which is key to post-foster care success.

Flores admits the prospect of college is “overwhelming” — but so was going into foster care.

“Honestly, I’m a pretty shy person,” Flores said. “When they told me I was going to have to go into a foster home, I made myself not a shy person.”

Leonard expects Flores’ drive and tenacity will help her succeed academically and socially at college.

“She has a lot of initiative,” Leonard said. “Anything you offer her, she jumps at. The motivation in this girl is amazing.”

More often, youth who age out of foster care just want out, period, she said.

“Every kid has available what Bianca has,” Leonard said. But, “When you take a kid who has had trouble their whole life and try to fix things, it often doesn’t work well.”

Flores wasn’t happy about being separated from her siblings — including one born after she entered care — who went to different foster homes, though she sees them and her mother regularly.

But if that had happened, she said, “I wouldn’t have had as much focus and effort on my high school career.”

“For some kids it would be hard to not be with your family, and it has been,” she said. “It’s been hard to not have to care for my siblings any more.”

But at the same time, she said, it was hard not having a shot at shaping her own future.

brooke@sltrib.com
Leaving foster care

Nearly 30,000 young people nationwide — and 300 to 400 in Utah — age out of foster care each year. In most states youths must leave the foster care system when they turn 18, though some states allow them to continue accessing services until they turn 21.

Utah’s foster care system currently has custody of 186 youths who are 18. Most will be emancipated once they graduate from high school. There are just 57 children in state care who are 19 and five who are age 20, according to the Division of Child and Family Services.

“We do have some children who can stay in [custody] longer but it is really up to a court order,” said Navina Forsythe, DCFS’ evaluation director. Many of those teenagers who remain in foster care have medical or mental health issues, she said.




Play Dress-up with Our Logo for Prizes

Filed under: Blog — amy @ 11:43 am on April 15, 2010

If you know Utah Foster Care Foundation, then you know we want YOU to be involved in everything we do, every step of the way!

If you’re a fan of our FaceBook page, then you know we go to great lengths to keep it fun and interesting, while always providing you with the best information and resources available. And now, we want you to be more involved!

DOWNLOAD OUR LOGO BELOW and use your favorite computer program (eg: Paint, Illustrator, PhotoShop, etc.) to dress it up for your favorite holiday. Alternatively, you can always print out a copy of the logo, draw directly on it and then submit a scan or a photograph.

You can pick ANY holiday you want, even if it isn’t well known. And if you’re not into holidays, why not dress it up for a particular season or a sporting event? We know you all love BYU and the U!!! Check out some of the ones we’ve made:

Tag Cloud LogoPumpkin LogoShamrock LogoEaster Logo

We’ll feature ALL ENTRIES here and in an album on our FaceBook page. We’ll use our favorites on the FaceBook page whenever we get a chance. We’ll try to use as many entries as possible so everyone gets a chance to be featured, but our favorites will receive a special surprise when their logo is featured! PLEASE NOTE: You will only receive a prize if your submission is made through the form below as that’s the only way we can get your contact information!

A couple of things you need to know:

1) You can submit here or by posting your entry to our FaceBook wall.

2) Nothing obscene please!

3) You must be able to recognize our logo.

4) If the entry comes from a child in care, it MUST be submitted via the form below.

5) If you submit on FaceBook, please include your REGION and your link to foster care (eg: foster parent, adoptive parent, child in care, former child in care, caseworker, Utah Foster Care Foundation employee, child of employee, etc.); PLEASE DO NOT PROVIDE THE NAME OF A CHILD IN CARE ON FACEBOOK!!!

6) EVERYONE who wants to participate is eligible.

7) Once you make your submission, whether it is via the form below, or via FaceBook, your entry becomes the property of Utah Foster Care Foundation. This means that you’re allowing us the right to use your submission at any time and for any reason without further acknowledging you (though, we will!) and without compensating you.

8 ) Not everyone will get a prize.

9) Not everyone will have a chance to be featured individually, but we will put every entry on this blog and in an album on our FaceBook page!

10) There’s NO LIMIT to the number of entries you can make! So get busy!

11) And lastly, please be respectful. This is the Foundation’s logo!

Download the Foundation’s Logo as a pdf




Welcome!

Filed under: Blog — Tags: , , , , , — amy @ 2:35 pm on February 1, 2010

Welcome to Utah Foster Care Foundation’s new web site and blog!

Our web site is packed with new features and access to all of the information you need, whether you are seeking more information about becoming a foster parent, are currently in training to become a foster parent, or are a current foster parent who is looking for resources to help you with the children in your care.

Our web site will continue to grow and evolve over the coming months and we hope that you will visit us often in order to stay in the loop.

If you need something that you can’t find on our web site, please feel free to call us at 1-877-505-KIDS and one of our friendly, happy staff members will assist you in getting the information you need! Alternatively, you can access a statewide directory of our staff and find exactly who you’re looking for.

If you ever experience problems with our web site or our blog, please contact our web master directly.