skip to content
Back to top

Site Visit: Alaskan Tribal TANF-Child Welfare Collaboration

February 1, 2013

https://cbexpress.acf.hhs.gov/index.cfm?event=website.viewArticles&issueid=143&sectionid=19&articleid=3771

Cook Inlet Tribal Council (CITC) is an Alaskan Native organization that serves the needs of Native people throughout the Cook Inlet region and beyond. The organization's mission is "to work in partnership with Our People to develop opportunities to reach Our endless potential." CITC is grounded in four core values: interdependence, resilience, accountability, and respect.

The 2006 Children's Bureau grant cluster Collaboration Between TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) and Child Welfare to Improve Child Welfare Program Outcomes represented an opportunity for CITC to increase collaboration among its four major departments: Education, Child and Family Services, Recovery Services, and Employment and Training. Although all four departments were located in the same building, they operated largely as independent entities with little communication or collaboration. Clients (or "participants," as the CITC refers to them) participating in multiple programs reported providing the same information multiple times, as well as conflicting requirements and schedules that hindered their success. At the same time, CITC's Chief Executive Officer was moving toward a collaborative leadership model that moved agency decision-making to the four division directors as a collaborative group. With the release of the funding opportunity announcement, the time was ripe within the agency to emphasize collaboration as a means of providing program participants with more cohesive service delivery that would better meet their needs.

The CITC program is based on the premise that integrated services, beginning with standardized intake and coordinated through integrated case management, will allow for the provision of better coordinated services for program participants. CITC strives to improve community outcomes by increasing:

  • Self-esteem and cultural identity
  • Self-sufficiency
  • Health and stability of families
  • Equity and social justice

For more information about this project, contact Cristy Allyn Willer at cwiller@citci.org. The full site visit report will soon be posted on the Child Welfare Information Gateway website:

https://www.childwelfare.gov/management/funding/funding_sources/tanfcw.cfm

The CITC program is funded by the Children's Bureau (Award 90CW1135). This article is part of a series highlighting successful Children's Bureau grant-funded projects around the country, emerging from Children's Bureau site visits.

 

Back

This site contains links to other web sites that may be of interest to you. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) / Children's Bureau (CB) does not endorse the views expressed or the facts presented on these sites. Their contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not represent the official views or policies of the Children's Bureau. Access to this information does not in any way constitute an endorsement by the Department of Health and Human Services. Furthermore, ACF/CB does not endorse any commercial products.