Child Welfare Consulting
Helping Children Grow Up in Supportive Families
All children deserve to grow up with the support of a loving, permanent family. Sadly, many do not experience this because of neglect, abuse, behavioral challenges, or delinquency. Unfortunately, our societal response to these challenges is sometimes part of the problem. Far too many families—particularly families of color—are broken up, when they could have been strengthened and kept whole.
We work with nonprofits, funders, and government leaders to help strengthen families and prevent system involvement whenever possible. When system involvement is necessary, we work to ensure that it creates safety, permanency, and well-being for children. Our approach is data-driven and focused on the needs of the children and families affected by these challenges.
Four Oaks is a child welfare, juvenile justice, and behavioral health agency based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, that offers services state-wide. Four Oaks came to Bridgespan with the vision of developing a holistic service delivery model under which they would link services together seamlessly to ensure that recipients receive all of the services they need to be successful. Bridgespan helped Four Oaks understand the strategic operational steps needed to launch the “TotalChild” initiative, focusing particularly on a clear understanding of how services, organizational alignment, funding, and performance measurement needed to change to achieve the vision and enable continued rapid growth. The project culminated in a business plan and a detailed implementation plan. In the years since developing this plan, TotalChild has not only succeeded in its original design but also expanded the model to serve larger, more diverse populations.
"Bridgespan's expertise, experience and business acumen has helped us look at the Child Welfare System very differently. They've consistently encouraged us to think deeper about our mission, driving us to have much greater impact in helping our country's most vulnerable children and families - especially helping young adults aging out of the foster care system - live successfully."
CEO, Youth Villages
The Annie E. Casey Foundation works to develop a brighter future for millions of children at risk of poor educational, economic, social, and health outcomes. One of the foundation’s focus areas is juvenile justice. After working for many years to reduce juvenile detention, the foundation decided in 2012 to broaden the scope of its juvenile justice work. Bridgespan helped the foundation identify probation as one of several new areas it wanted to pursue, understand what was already being done in the field, and develop a strategy for improving the juvenile probation system. In subsequent years, this strategy has taken off. The foundation has raised awareness of the problems in probation, published its vision for a transformed system, and supported the growth of best practices across the country.

