by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News:
Earlier this month (October, 2024), we published a report from Hannah Stutts, the owner of JAKS Stables in Western North Carolina, where she serves as the dispatch of relief efforts in isolated towns that still need help after the devastation following Hurricane Helene, where they had distributed over 10,000 body bags, and still needed more. See:
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10,000 Body Bags Were Not Enough – Updates from on the Ground in North Carolina Disaster Relief
Hannah just published an update where she states that Red Cross shelters are now closing down and forcing homeless families out, and that North Carolina Department of Social Services (DSS) is threatening to take their children away from them if they have nowhere to go.
If you’re wondering why the State of North Carolina wants to take these children into custody and place them into the Foster Care system, while doing NOTHING for the parents, the answer is that there is MASSIVE state and federal funding that creates a huge motive to seize these children, while very little to no funding is available to help their parents, especially with housing issues like this.
The Foster Care and Adoption business in the U.S. creates huge financial incentives to local governments to take children into custody, and if they do not meet their quota of children taken into custody, they lose out on that funding.
And when a disaster strikes, such as this hurricane, even MORE federal funding is allocated.
Much of the funding available to child welfare services is through “mental health”, where “free” mental health services are often made available to families in distress, and once you are attached to a “mental health” label, you can basically kiss your life goodbye, because now you are in the government’s database with a legal mental health diagnosis, which they can use to either take your children away, or even put YOU away because now you have a “mental illness” diagnosis.
That funding for “mental health” increases in times of disasters.
In North Carolina, it was just announced that the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services received $2.9 million in federal funding to help increase “crisis counseling services for people impacted by Hurricane Helene.”
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services today announced $2.9 million in federal funding to help increase crisis counseling services for people impacted by Hurricane Helene.
The funding is part of the Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program administered by the U. S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), which is available to states to address behavioral health care needs and support relief for people in disaster-impacted communities. (Source.)
So even if homeless hurricane survivors are not in a shelter that is now closing down, if a “mental health” worker comes to interview them, and the homeless disaster survivor pours out their heart to a “mental health” professional including how hard it is to take care of their children, they will have a solution for you, but it is probably one you are not going to like, as you could lose your children forever to the U.S. child trafficking system known as “foster care and adoption.”
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