Washington Court Improvement Program

Two parents (appear male and female) holding the hand of a one year old child as they walk toward a government building

Washington’s Court Improvement Program (CIP) is a federally funded initiative that focuses on enhancing the ability of Superior Courts to effectively resolve cases involving child maltreatment and supporting systemic improvements, program initiatives, and ongoing training designed to result in better outcomes for children, families and professionals involved in child dependency cases. We are committed to promoting continuous quality improvement to implement best practices that advance meaningful, equitable, inclusive, and ongoing collaboration among court communities to achieve safety, permanency, and well-being for children and families. CIP accomplishes these goals through close collaboration with key court, legal, child welfare and system partners, including the Superior Court judicial officers and court staff, Department of Children, Youth & Families, Attorney General’s Office, Office of Public Defense, Office of Civil Legal Aid, Washington Association for Child Advocate Programs, Parents for Parents and many more.

CIP has existed in Washington State since 2013. The program oversees the application for and distribution of federal grant funds, facilitates cross-system change efforts and provides resources, training and technical assistance to courts and system partners. It is overseen by the multi-disciplinary Washington State Supreme Court Commission on Children in Foster Care (CCFC), co-chaired by Washington State Supreme Court Justice Barbara Madsen and Secretary Ross Hunter, Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF), and staffed by the Administrative Office of the Courts’ Family & Youth Justice Programs (FYJP).

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Priority Areas

Child Safety

Training and technical assistance to help court communities develop a common understanding and language to clearly and consistently articulate safety-related information.

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Quality Court Hearings

Creation of a Hearing Quality Observation Tool that accurately captures relevant data points and provides valuable insights into the implementation of new HB 1227 practices during the Shelter Care Hearing.

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Quality Legal Representation

Increasing capacity of judicial officers and attorneys to engage in quality reasonable and active efforts inquiries and decision-making at the appropriate points in the case.

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Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Accessibility

Creation and implementation of an Equity & Engagement Framework to increase the number of diverse lived experts being recruited, trained, and supported to effectively engage in dependency court systems change efforts.

ICWA/Tribal Collaboration

Increase dependency court system alignment with quality ICWA practices and increase capacity of court communities to effectively collaborate with local tribal court systems.

Engagement

Educate system leaders, partners, youth, and lived experts in the basics of the science of hope and the benefits of implementing the science.

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