- Shelter has 3 Foster Care programs
- Traditional
- Home-of-Relative
- Emergency
- Foster Care programs try to reunite families whenever it’s in the child’s best interest to do so, otherwise long-term care and adoption is sought
- The only age limit to be a Foster Parent is being over 21
- In the U.S., there are approximately 100,000 children in Foster Care
- Approximately 18,000 Foster Care children are in Illinois
- There is no discrimination against Foster Care parent applicants due to age, income, marital status or sexual orientation
- Short and long-term Foster Care Parents are needed. Children may live in up to 20 different homes when long-term care or permanency can’t be found
- Typically there are 1,000 children in Illinois waiting to be adopted from Foster Care at any time
- Children and adolescents in Foster Care are not there through their own actions, but because they are at risk when at home
- As a licensed child welfare agency, Shelter provides all Foster Parents with complete training and ongoing support
- Children in Foster Care are all ages from birth to 21
- The average age of a child in Foster Care is 8
- Shelter advocates for brothers and sisters in Foster Care to stay together
- Foster Care parents receive financial support for a child’s room and board, clothing and medical and dental care
- For more information, visit Shelter’s Foster Care page.