Skip to content
CapRadio

CapRadio

listen live donate
listen live donate
listen live
donate
  • News
    • News

    • State Government
    • Environment
    • Health Care
    • Race and Equity
    • Business
    • Arts and Lifestyle
    • Food and Sustainability
    • PolitiFact California
    News
    • News

    • State Government
    • Environment
    • Health Care
    • Race and Equity
    • Business
    • Arts and Lifestyle
    • Food and Sustainability
    • PolitiFact California
  • Music
    • Music

    • Classical
    • Jazz
    • Eclectic

    • Daily Playlist
    Music
    • Music

    • Classical
    • Jazz
    • Eclectic

    • Daily Playlist
  • Podcasts & Shows
  • Schedules
  • Events
  • Support
    • Support
    • Ways to support
    • Evergreen Donation
    • One-Time Donation
    • Corporate Sponsorship
    • Vehicle Donation
    • Stock Giving
    • Legacy Giving
    • Endowment Support
    • Members
    • Member Benefits
    • Member FAQ
    • Member Newsletter

    • Fund drives
    • Drawing Winners
    • Thank You Gifts
    Support
    • Support
    • Ways to support
    • Evergreen Donation
    • One-Time Donation
    • Corporate Sponsorship
    • Vehicle Donation
    • Stock Giving
    • Legacy Giving
    • Endowment Support
    • Members
    • Member Benefits
    • Member FAQ
    • Member Newsletter

    • Fund drives
    • Drawing Winners
    • Thank You Gifts
  • About
  • Close Menu
 We Get Support From:
Become a Supporter 
 We Get Support From:
Become a Supporter 
  • Health Care
  •  

Out Of The Closet, Onto the Street: Foster System a 'Pathway to Homelessness' For LGBT Youth

  •  Sammy Caiola 
Monday, October 2, 2017 | Sacramento, CA
Listen
/
Update RequiredTo play audio, update browser or Flash plugin.
Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

Scott Dukes and his adoptive daughter, Erica Dukes, meet for lunch to celebrate her birthday.

Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

Scott Dukes says he’ll never forget the day he met his adoptive daughter Erica. She wore a black-and-white striped jacket with a big yellow flower on the lapel and a pair of bright pink pants.

She was 14, in need of a foster home and just starting to transition from male to female.

“I was super nervous and she looked at me and said, ‘you look scared,’ Scott remembers. "And I said, ‘I’m terrified, actually, thank you for noticing.’"

"[She said] ‘Why are you scared? I’m the one who should be scared’ and I said, ‘Well, kids are scary and this is all really new, so come inside let’s be scared together.’”

Erica had no reason to trust Scott. She had  jumped between 10 or 12 foster placements before meeting him, constantly getting into clashes with temporary guardians. Every time she embraced her female identity, she says she faced harsh words and new restrictions.

“They were just very mean, they were just very judgmental towards it all,” she says. “They were like, you’re going to go to hell, that’s not what the bible wanted you to do … you’re on this earth to reproduce and you’re a man and you need to reproduce.”

But with Scott, things were different. She moved into his house in 2012 as a foster child. The next Father’s Day, Erica asked Scott to be her adoptive dad.

Now 19, Erica Dukes just started her first semester studying cosmetology at American River College. Thanks to Scott, her future is looking pretty good right now. The same can’t be said for most LGBT foster youth.

Half of all foster youth who age out of the system statewide end up homeless or incarcerated. Advocates say that number is probably higher for LGBT kids, who are less likely to find a permanent home, more frequently abused while in foster care, and more likely to run away from foster families.

Jesse Archer works with youth every day at the Sacramento LGBT Community Center. He goes so far as to call foster care a "pathway to homelessness."

“LGBTQ youth often end up in the foster system because their families are unaccepting and they live in dangerous housing,” he says. “So they end up in the foster care system, which is largely untrained and unprepared to take care of LGBTQ youth. So many of the foster families go into foster care for religious reasons, and they end up causing a lot of harm.”

One UCLA study found that LGBT foster youth were twice as likely as straight youth to report being treated poorly by the foster system, and more than three times as likely to have been hospitalized for emotional reasons.

Archer helped launch the LGBTQ Foster Youth Collaborative, a joint effort between Sacramento County, the Sacramento LGBT Center, Sierra Forever Families, Stanford Youth Solutions, Sierra Child and Family Services and CASA for Children Sacramento County. 

The collaborative is now training existing foster families on how to care for LGBT youth. That might mean helping them through a gender transition, advocating for them if they’re harassed at school, or simply talking to them about same-sex dating issues.

Karen Parker, Program Planner for Sacramento County Child Protective Services, says they’re also actively recruiting new LGBT-friendly foster families at quarterly orientation sessions.

The collaborative has educated about 80 Sacramento County families about the needs of LGBT foster kids so far. They don’t know how many of them went on to house a youth.

“These youth are definitely at a higher likelihood to have more placements, more frequent placement changes, be placed in group or congregate care,” she says, “They may choose to go AWOL because they feel their needs aren’t being met or something like that. So for us, it’s important to create an environment where they have the potential for a good outcomes.”

Scott says he wasn’t sure whether or not he could get Erica to high school graduation. They argued. She struggled at school. But they slowly built a foundation of trust and respect, he says.

Together, they worked through Erica’s gender transition: buying bras for the first time, navigating the legal name-change process, and ultimately starting hormone therapy.

“I had never met a transgender person in my life before I’d met my child,” Scott says, “I didn’t get it. I still don't really get it. But what I do know is this is who she is, and this is how she is. There’s nothing wrong with it, it just is what it is. She helped me learn so much about her. I’m honored that I was able to be the advocate she needed me to be.”

He says almost anyone can foster an LGBT child, as long as they’re willing to love and support them.

“We have an obligation to take care of our kids, and help shape them,” Scott says. “Without us, those kids just have so much more to learn and it’s a much harder journey than if we just stepped in and helped.”


Follow us for more stories like this

CapRadio provides a trusted source of news because of you.  As a nonprofit organization, donations from people like you sustain the journalism that allows us to discover stories that are important to our audience. If you believe in what we do and support our mission, please donate today.

Donate Today  

 lgbtsacramento countyfoster systemfoster careFOSTERCPSSacramento LGBT Center

Andrew Nixon / CapRadio

Sammy Caiola

Former Healthcare Reporter

Sammy Caiola has been covering medical breakthroughs, fitness fads and health policy in California since 2014. Before joining CapRadio, Sammy was a health reporter at The Sacramento Bee.  Read Full Bio 

 @sammycaiola Email Sammy Caiola

Sign up for ReCap and never miss the top stories

Delivered to your inbox every Friday.

 

Check out a sample ReCap newsletter.

Thanks for subscribing!

Thank you for signing up for the ReCap newsletter! We'll send you an email each Friday with the top stories from CapRadio.

Browse all newsletters

More Stories

Ariana Drehsler / CalMatters

More than a million undocumented immigrants gained driver’s licenses in California

January 31, 2023

CDC via AP

California coronavirus updates: February 2023

February 1, 2023

Andrew Nixon / CapRadio

State Justice Department hasn’t probed — or even logged — all police shootings of possibly unarmed people

January 27, 2023

Most Viewed

California coronavirus updates: COVID-19 pandemic has shifted people's finances

California announces plan to convert 3 office buildings in downtown Sacramento into housing

10 new California laws that go into effect in 2023

North Davis store becomes first Peet's Coffee in the country to form a union

Q&A: Speaker Anthony Rendon on a budget deficit, gun bills and handing over the gavel

We Get Support From:
Become a Supporter

Most Viewed

California coronavirus updates: COVID-19 pandemic has shifted people's finances

California announces plan to convert 3 office buildings in downtown Sacramento into housing

10 new California laws that go into effect in 2023

North Davis store becomes first Peet's Coffee in the country to form a union

Q&A: Speaker Anthony Rendon on a budget deficit, gun bills and handing over the gavel

Back to Top

  • CapRadio

    7055 Folsom Boulevard
    Sacramento, CA 95826-2625

    •  
      (916) 278-8900
    •  
      (877) 480-5900
    •  Contact / Feedback
    •  Submit a News Tip
  • About

    • Mission / Vision / Core Values
    • Stations & Coverage Map
    • Careers & Internships
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Directors
    • Press
  • Listening Options

    • Mobile Apps
    • Smart Speakers
    • Podcasts & Shows
    • On-Air Schedules
    • Daily Playlist
    • Signal Status
  • Connect

    •  Facebook
    •  Twitter
    •  Instagram
    •  YouTube
  • Donate

  • Listen Live

  • Newsletters

CapRadio stations are licensed to California State University, Sacramento. © 2023, Capital Public Radio. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Website Feedback FCC Public Files: KXJZ KKTO KUOP KQNC KXPR KXSR KXJS. For assistance accessing our public files, please call 916-278-8900 or email us.