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Housing Crunch Hurts Foster Care Oversight

The oil boom has brought jobs and prosperity to Midland and Odessa, but it has also driven up housing prices, making it difficult for the Department of Family and Protective Services to hire caseworkers.

Child Protective Services caseworker Juan Carlos Pacheco rents a spare bedroom in his childhood friend's home in Odessa. He has also lived in a trailer with five other people and a one-bedroom apartment with six other people. His own family lives in El Paso.

Since moving to Odessa in September to work as a state Child Protective Services investigator, Juan Carlos Pacheco has bounced among three homes, struggling to find a place he could afford. At one point, he shared a one-bedroom apartment with six people.

“It was a situation kind of like a sardine can,” said Pacheco, 29, who now rents a room in the house of a family of four. His wife, 1-year-old daughter and 5-year-old son live in El Paso.

The oil boom that has brought jobs and prosperity to Midland and Odessa has driven up housing prices, making it difficult for the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services to hire caseworkers at a time when the agency is under pressure to fill jobs following the high-profile deaths of two foster children.

Midland had the nation’s highest increase in median home value after the recession, according to a NerdWallet study last month that examined census data from 2009 to 2012 for 510 cities. The median home price in the Midland metro area last month was $283,100 — the highest in Texas, according to the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University.

“It is an overwhelming problem,” said John Specia, the family and protective services commissioner. “The rents have tripled or more. We have a number of people who want to transfer to other areas because it’s like getting an immediate boost in pay.”

The department has tried to fill vacancies by temporarily sending workers from elsewhere in the state to the Midland and Odessa area; offering new caseworkers $5,000 signing bonuses, a practice since discontinued; and giving all 153 workers in the area $500-a-month housing supplements. A typical rate for a one-bedroom apartment in Midland is $1,100 a month, Mayor Jerry Morales said recently.

With the housing supplement, Pacheco’s annual pay is about $49,000.

Juan Carlos Pacheco with wife Jessica, son Victor and daughter Xochitl outside their apartment on Sunday in El Paso. Pacheco rents a room in Odessa, where he works for Child Protective Services, and travels regularly to El Paso to visit his family.
Juan Carlos Pacheco with wife, Jessica; son, Victor; and daughter, Xochitl, outside their apartment on Sunday in El Paso. Pacheco rents a room in Odessa, where he works for Child Protective Services, and travels regularly to El Paso to visit his family.

But Specia said the  housing supplements had not “stemmed the tide” of workers leaving. Because of the nature of the work — the agency has 24 hours to investigate urgent reports that a child faces harm — “we don’t have the luxury of teleworking,” he said.

When Camille Gilliam became the department’s regional director a year and a half ago, there were so many vacancies that 200 children did not have caseworkers, she said. Bringing in reinforcements has helped, and she tells new hires that they are “doing God’s work.” But employees continue to resign or transfer.

One employee, Gilliam said, recently transferred to Houston to escape her Odessa home: a trailer with electrical problems and no running water. Another is staying in the area in a better-paying job, as a manager for Domino’s Pizza.

Of 18 investigator jobs in Ector County, including Odessa, seven were vacant; five were filled by new hires; and six were held by workers who had been on the job for at least a year, Gilliam said.

“Children need to be able to develop a trusting relationship with their caseworker,” she  said. “But if you have four caseworkers in a year, how are you really able to do that successfully?”

She said more money could solve the turnover problem.

But state Rep. Richard Peña Raymond, chairman of the House Human Services Committee, said raises might not help.

“We’re working with the agency on what can be done salary-wise, but if you’ve got a housing shortage, I’m not sure what the state can do,” said Raymond, a Laredo Democrat. “That’s kind of the private sector.”

Still, the state is responsible for 16,700 children in foster care and 10,000 being cared for by relatives. Among them were two Austin-area girls, Alexandria Hill, 2, and Orion Hamilton, 11 months, who died last year from head injuries that led to murder charges for adults in their foster homes.

Those deaths increased scrutiny on the department, which is using an infusion of money from the Legislature to hire more caseworkers statewide.

Pacheco said his position in Odessa was an opportunity he would not have had in El Paso, where he found stiff competition for such work.

“This is a very good job,” he said. “I’ve been growing as a person here.”

His wife hopes to join him soon, he said. Their goal is to buy a house in Odessa.

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