Family Principles
Family Policy Council and Community Networks
Family Policy Council Principles:
CW 74.14A.025
Services for emotionally disturbed and mentally ill children, potentially
dependent children, and families-in-conflict -- Policy updated.
To update, specify, and expand the policy stated in RCW 74.14A.020,
the following is declared:
It is the policy of the state of Washington to promote:
(1) Family-oriented services and supports that:
(a) Respond to the changing nature of families; and
(b) Respond to what individuals and families say
they need, and meet those needs in a way that maintains their dignity and
respects their choices;
(2) Culturally relevant services and supports that:
(a) Explicitly recognize the culture and beliefs
of each family and use these as resources on behalf of the family;
(b) Provide equal access to culturally unique communities
in planning and programs, and day-to-day work, and actively address instances
where clearly disproportionate needs exist; and
(c) Enhance every culture's ability to achieve self-sufficiency
and contribute in a productive way to the larger community;
(3) Coordinated services that:
(a) Develop strategies and skills for collaborative
planning, problem solving, and service delivery;
(b) Encourage coordination and innovation by providing
both formal and informal ways for people to communicate and collaborate in
planning and programs;
(c) Allow clients, vendors, community people, and
other agencies to creatively provide the most effective, responsive, and flexible
services; and
(d) Commit to an open exchange of skills and information;
and expect people throughout the system to treat each other with respect,
dignity, and understanding;
(4) Locally planned services and supports that:
(a) Operate on the belief that each community has
special characteristics, needs, and strengths;
(b) Include a cross-section of local community partners
from the public and private sectors, in the planning and delivery of services
and supports; and
(c) Support these partners in addressing the needs
of their communities through both short-range and long-range planning and
in establishing priorities within state and federal standards;
(5) Community-based prevention that encourages and
supports state residents to create positive conditions in their communities
to promote the well-being of families and reduce crises and the need for future
services;
(6) Outcome-based services and supports that:
(a) Include a fair and realistic system for measuring
both short-range and long-range progress and determining whether efforts make
a difference;
(b) Use outcomes and indicators that reflect the
goals that communities establish for themselves and their children;
(c) Work towards these goals and outcomes at all
staff levels and in every agency; and
(d) Provide a mechanism for informing the development
of program policies;
(7) Customer service that:
(a) Provides a climate that empowers staff to deliver
quality programs and services;
(b) Is provided by courteous, sensitive, and competent
professionals; and
(c) Upholds the dignity and respect of individuals
and families by providing appropriate staff recognition, information, training,
skills, and support;
(8) Creativity that:
(a) Increases the flexibility of funding and programs
to promote innovation in planning, development, and provision of quality services;
and
(b) Simplifies and reduces or eliminates rules that
are barriers to coordination and quality services.
[1992 c 198 § 2.]
NOTES:
Severability -- Effective date -- 1992 c
198: See RCW 70.190.910
and 70.190.920.
Family policy council: Chapter 70.190
RCW.