Changeflow GovPing Government Operations Mayor Bowser Ends Three-Decade Lawsuit, Announc...
Routine Notice Amended Final

Mayor Bowser Ends Three-Decade Lawsuit, Announces DC CFSA Transformation

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Summary

Mayor Muriel Bowser announced the official end of LaShawn A. v. Bowser, a 31-year class action lawsuit filed in 1989 on behalf of children in the District's foster care system. After a settlement agreement was reached and affirmed fair and reasonable by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Hogan, the final status hearing on September 9, 2022 marked the conclusion of federal court oversight. The transformation was enabled through CFSA's Four Pillars strategic framework, the federal Five-Year Family First Prevention Plan, and the Families First DC citywide prevention strategy.

Why this matters

The conclusion of LaShawn A. v. Bowser represents a significant milestone for DC's child welfare system, transitioning from three decades of court-ordered reform to self-directed operation. The agency's adoption of the Four Pillars framework and Family First Prevention Plan aligns with a broader national trend toward prevention-focused child welfare models. While the announcement emphasizes CFSA's newfound 'bandwidth' for prevention work, the agency's stated commitment to data-driven practice and self-correction suggests ongoing accountability mechanisms remain in place even without judicial supervision.

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What changed

This press release announces the conclusion of LaShawn A. v. Bowser, a landmark 1991 class action lawsuit that placed the District's child welfare agency under federal court supervision due to systemic deficiencies in the foster care system. The case concluded after the one-year data validation period confirmed CFSA met the terms of the settlement agreement, allowing U.S. District Court to release the agency from federal oversight.\n\nFor the District's child welfare system, the end of litigation marks a shift from a compliance-focused model under court supervision to a self-regulating, prevention-oriented framework. CFSA's Four Pillars approach, Family First Prevention Plan, and participation in the Thriving Families, Safer Children national initiative signal a move toward family preservation rather than reactive child removal. Stakeholders including sister agencies, providers, and community partners will need to align with the agency's evolved mission emphasizing prevention services and family support.

Archived snapshot

Apr 20, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Friday, September 9, 2022 Washington, DC – Today, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced the official end of LaShawn A. v. Bowser, a 31-year-old class action lawsuit filed in 1989 on behalf of children in the District’s foster care system. Last June, a settlement agreement to exit federal court oversight was reached by all parties, and a virtual fairness hearing before United States District Court Judge Thomas Hogan affirmed the settlement fair, reasonable, and adequate. This afternoon, after a one-year period of data validation, all parties agree that today’s in-person court appearance marks the final status hearing of the case.

“The end of LaShawn v. Bowser is indicative of a collective, District-wide commitment to children and families,” said Mayor Bowser. “We have made it a priority to ensure CFSA is resourced and supported to carry out its mission to protect our most vulnerable children. The agency’s focus on family, love, and prevention means that child welfare in the District doesn’t look the same as it did 30 years ago or even 10 years ago. Today, we are proud that it looks more like providing families the services they need to keep their children safe and well at home.”

With the development of the values-based Four Pillars strategic framework; approval of the District’s federal Five-Year Family First Prevention Plan; and implementation of the robust citywide prevention strategy, Families First DC, CFSA has steadfastly laid the groundwork for a transformation from a child welfare agency to a child and family well-being system. And as a member of Thriving Families, Safer Children: A National Commitment to Child and Family Well-Being, CFSA is a leading jurisdiction within this cross-sector movement.

Under strong leadership, CFSA’s adherence to best practices when addressing abuse and neglect along with an expanded network of partnerships within DC government and the community have paved the way for increased accountability, transparency, and prevention.

“CFSA’s work ensuring the safety of children in the District does not end with LaShawn. As a proven self-regulating and self-correcting agency driven by data and quality, we will continue to improve our clinical practice,” said CFSA Director Robert L. Matthews. “The end of this lawsuit allows CFSA the bandwidth to focus on prevention with an even greater fidelity. Thriving Families, Safer Children is the next era for child welfare. We know that when families are supported before, during, and after their challenges, children are safer. We are proud of the progress CFSA has made, and together with our sister agencies, providers, and partners, we look forward to continuing this transformation to a child and family well-being system for the District.”

Social Media:
Mayor Bowser Twitter: @MayorBowser
Mayor Bowser Instagram: @Mayor_Bowser
Mayor Bowser Facebook: facebook.com/MayorMurielBowser
Mayor Bowser YouTube: https://www.bit.ly/eomvideos

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
DC CFSA
Published
September 9th, 2022
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Social Services
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Child welfare services Foster care Family preservation
Geographic scope
US-DC US-DC

Taxonomy

Primary area
Social Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Healthcare Public Health

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