Mumbai: The Maharashtra government will soon implement a foster care policy for the protection and rehabilitation of children, state Women and Child Development Minister Yashomati Thakur has said.
Talking to media, the minister said the foster care policy will not be necessary for orphans, but also for other children who are in need of care and protection.
Since every child needs and has the right to be cared for in a family, foster care is a programme whereby a home is provided to the child for a short or extended period.
As part of the policy, foster families will be selected based on their ability, intent, capacity and prior experience in taking care of children. The shortlisted foster families will be trained to meet the needs and rights of the child, Thakur said.
The foster family will not be permanent and will not have legal rights over the child, she further said.
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Family foster care is mandated under the Juvenile Justice Act, the minister said, adding that guidelines have already been prepared and the implementation will begin soon after proper training of different stakeholders.
"Care and protection of children are important. The policy will be implemented on a pilot basis in Mumbai suburbs, Solapur, Pune, Palghar and Amravati," she said.
A district-level committee headed by collector will prepare the list of foster parents and seek a report on whether they are fit to provide care to the child. The district-level child welfare committee, a quasi-judicial body which works for the welfare of children in shelter homes and adoption, will have the final authority in this regard, she said.
Thakur also said her department has decided to decentralise the Mumbai-based state women's commission.
The commission will now have offices at district and divisional levels also. These offices will be inaugurated on August 15, she said.