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No More Missed Warning Signs With Arizona Rewriting Its Child Safety Rules

State Senator Carine Werner (R-AZ) is making waves in the state's child protection system after a series of bills she championed were officially signed into law.

Senator Werner, who chairs the Arizona Senate's Health & Human Services Committee, spearheaded a bipartisan package of reforms to address gaps in the state's protection of vulnerable children.

The bills were signed into law late last week, capping months of investigations and hearings into Arizona's Department of Child Safety (DCS).

Those hearings painted a troubling picture, one where abuse reports weren't always properly reviewed, investigations had weaknesses, and children already on the state's radar sometimes slipped through the cracks anyway.

The new laws target those exact problems.

Werner's Priorities

One bill, SB 1127, clarifies the rules on mandatory reporting, giving teachers, doctors, counselors, and similar professionals clearer guidance on when they're legally required to report suspected abuse or neglect.

Another, SB 1174, now requires hotline staff to pull up a child's history with DCS before deciding how to respond to a new abuse report.

A third measure, SB 1496, updates several DCS procedures and ensures children in dependency court have proper legal representation. Perhaps most striking is SB 1631, which requires that children who report sexual abuse receive a forensic interview, conducted by a trained specialist, within 72 hours whenever possible.

Werner says the reforms came directly out of what lawmakers discovered during their oversight work.

"Protecting vulnerable children is one of government's most important responsibilities, and there have been far too many cases where that responsibility was not met," Werner said. "These new laws address real problems we uncovered through legislative oversight."

The bills were developed in collaboration with DCS, child advocates, prosecutors, law enforcement, and medical professionals.

They build on additional measures signed in April and represent what supporters are calling one of the most significant overhauls of Arizona's child welfare system in recent memory.

Ericka Rodriguez Diaz

Ericka Piñon is a reporter for Cactus Politics specializing in Arizona Legislative Correspondent. With 1 year on the ground in Phoenix, Arizona, they have been cited by Cactus Politics, Big Energy News, The Floridian Press, and Texas Politics. Her focus is on Public Relations and Communications. Email: Ericka@dnm.news

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