The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 28, 1980-Page 5 DENOUNCES SOCIAL SER VICE SNAFUS 'U' program fights child abuse By ANNE GADON While working at the Wayne County Juvenile Court last year, participants in the University's Interdisciplinary Project on Child Abuse and Neglect (IPCAN) discovered the files of 64 abused children whose cases had never been forwarded to the Department of Social Services for adoption proceedings. In reply to a suit filed by IPCAN Director Donald Duquette, the state Supreme Court administrator's office i remors in Calif.' injure 7, trigger landslides From AP and UPI MAMMOTH LAKES, Calif.-The third and largest in a series of major earthquakes hit this High Sierra resort yesterday, injuring at least seven per- sons, touching off a gas explosion, triggering landslides, and causing widespread minor damage. Aftershocks continued to rumble through the area as the state Office of Emergency Services urged residents to prepare for even more temblors. "THE QUAKES ARE all related," said Eileen Rockwell, spokeswoman for the seismology laboratory at California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. "Nobody is saying there will be more, but after this many we usually do ex- pect more." The quake at 7:51 a.m. yesterday, which measured 6.1 on the Richter scale, was centered 10 miles east of here. Seven people were treated at a hospital for minor injuries following two 6.0 quakes that hit Sunday. Two hikers were listed in stable but serious condition at a Fresno, Calif., hospital after they were injured in rockslides in Yosemite National Park. ONE OF THEM, who was eight- months pregnant, lost her baby and suf- fered a broken leg and internal injuries. Visitors streamed out of Yosemite National Park but park officials said they were not being asked to leave. "You should see them getting out of here," said Yosemite Park Librarian Mary Niles. "They're leaving like a herd of buffalos. They're afraid the mountains will fall-and, who knows, maybe they will." The temblor was felt for nearly 45 seconds in Fresno where the three- story Fresno Bee Building swayed. Clipboards on the walls of the newsroom swung like clock pendulums. It also was felt as far away as San Francisco, Sacramento and Los Angeles, where an executive in the Oc- cidental Tower said the building seemed to sway to both sides while the heavy drapes in his office moved as if blown by a moderate wind. began an investigation of such cases. In a September, 1979 report, the ad- ministrator's office verified IPCAN's findings and also revealed that the cases of an additional 76 children had never been forwarded. THIS INCIDENT is only one example of social and legal agencies working against the best interest of children in child abuse cases, say Duquette and IPCAN co-director Kathleen Coulbourn Faller. Faller claims the traditional method of handling such cases through local agencies - including schools, police, juvenile courts, and hospitals - often creates duplication of gaps in ser- vice, and occasionally, a situation pit- ting agencies against one another. To achieve greater communication between workers handling abuse cases, IPCAN has trained "multi-disciplinary teams" of professionals. Thus far, 97 professionals have been trained and this group, in turn, will train an ad- ditional 1,000 professionals in 10 state communities, according to IPCAN staff members. 'The community teams trained by the project will help organize and coor- dinate services for abused children in each county, assist the Department of Social Services on specific cases of child abuse and neglect, and provide training to other community professionals," according to Duquette and Faller. IPCAN TRAINING programs are of- fered free of charge to participating communities. The University also of- fers inter-disciplinary programs in treating child abuse and neglect to students in the School of Social Work, the School of Medicine, and the School of Law. The program additionally of- . fers its students the opportunity to represent clients in child abuse cases through the Child Advocacy Law Clinic. Duquette and Faller blame the high "job burnout" rate among caseworkers at the Michigan Child Protective Ser- vices Agency - which handles more than 32,000 abuse cases per year - par- tially on the absence of inter-agency cooperation. "The average length of time a foster care worker spends at one agency is 18 months," claims Duquette. "We want to encourage longer-lasting teams of workers, to help them work together, and provide them with stability." Without proper advice, caseworkers are also more likely to intervene in an abuse or neglect case by removing the child from his or her ndtural home, rather than seek resolutions to problems within the existing family unit, according to IPCAN workers. Faller warns against making a hasty decision to place a child ina foster care facility because the act "will mean a traumatic adjustment for the child, with lifelong repercussions." WORKWEAR FOR FUN A. Fatigue Pants in 10 different colors; 100% cotton, sizes 24-36 by MADEWELL B. Bib-Overalls 100% cotton denim sizes 26-36 by WASHINGTON, DC C. Painter Pants 100% cotton drill by MADEWELL and WASHINGTON DC ALL OF THESE ITEMS NOW AVAILABLE IN KIDS SIZES 8-8. , Nickels Arcade ... .a