HHS OIG Report: Alaska Missed Foster Care Opportunities for Native Children
Summary
The HHS Office of Inspector General issued a report finding that Alaska missed opportunities to protect American Indian and Alaska Native children missing from foster care. The report details failures in notification, follow-up actions, sex trafficking assessments, caseworker visits, and tribal communication, recommending improvements supported by ACF.
What changed
The HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) has released a report detailing significant failures by Alaska in protecting American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) children who went missing or ran away from foster care placements in 2023. The OIG found that Alaska frequently failed to notify relevant parties, take required steps to locate children, assess for sex trafficking, conduct necessary caseworker visits, and collaborate with Tribes. These shortcomings put vulnerable AI/AN children at increased risk of victimization.
The report recommends that the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) support Alaska in improving its compliance with federal and state requirements for missing children, develop resources for tribal collaboration, and enhance states' abilities to track children's whereabouts. ACF has concurred with all recommendations. While this is a report and not a new regulation, it highlights critical compliance gaps that could lead to future scrutiny or policy changes for states regarding the protection of AI/AN children in foster care.
What to do next
- Review state child welfare protocols for missing children, particularly AI/AN youth.
- Ensure all required notifications and follow-up actions are consistently implemented.
- Verify that sex trafficking risk assessments and required caseworker visits are conducted as per federal guidelines.
Source document (simplified)
Alaska Missed Opportunities to Protect American Indian and Alaska Native Children Missing from Foster Care
Issued on
02/23/2026
| Posted on
02/26/2026
| Report number: OEI-07-23-00480
Report Materials
Why OIG Did This Review
- Nationwide, American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) children go missing at a rate more than double their representation in the population and are more likely to go missing from a foster care placement than from any other location.
- AI/AN children in foster care are at an increased risk of human trafficking and other forms of victimization as compared to their non-AI/AN peers.
- ACF—which oversees State foster care agencies—requires State agencies to develop policies and implement protocols regarding children who go missing from foster care.
What OIG Found
For the population of AI/AN children who went missing or ran away from a foster care placement in 2023 (as documented in Alaska’s case management system), Alaska missed opportunities to protect children from the risks associated with these incidents. Our review of children’s case file documentation found that:
- Alaska often did not notify parties who could assist with locating children and returning them to foster care.
- In 25 percent of incidents, Alaska did not take additional steps (beyond notifications) to locate children and return them to foster care, as required.
- Alaska frequently did not assess children for signs of sex trafficking or determine their experiences while missing or after running away, as required.
- In nearly 60 percent of incidents, Alaska did not conduct all required caseworker visits before children went missing or ran away from care.
- Tribes that OIG interviewed reported experiencing a lack of communication and collaboration from Alaska when children went missing from care.
- Thirty-eight percent of children reviewed had additional incidents that were not documented in Alaska’s case management system.
What OIG Recommends
- ACF should support Alaska in improving compliance with Federal and State requirements related to children who go missing or run away from foster care.
- ACF should develop resources for Alaska, and other States as appropriate, on working with Tribes to support children in foster care.
- ACF should support Alaska, and other States as appropriate, to improve States’ abilities to accurately track children’s whereabouts. ACF concurred with all three recommendations.
Report Type Evaluation HHS Agencies Administration for Children and Families Issue Areas Mental Health Public Health Issues Target Groups Children and Families Financial Groups Other Funding
Notice
This report may be subject to section 5274 of the National Defense Authorization Act Fiscal Year 2023, 117 Pub. L. 263.
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