Administrative Structure of States

There are two types of state structures which reflect how a state provides oversight and services to child welfare services. They are commonly referred to as (a) state supervised and county operated and (b) state operated. The majority of states are type (b) in which the state government employs and supervises the staff who provide the services. For those states that are type (a), the local government (county, district or city) employs the staff and provides the services while the state monitors compliance. In both types, the state is responsible for legislative and policy development as well as compliance with federal requirements.


For child welfare programs like ICAMA, working with states that provide services directly (type b) has one less layer of accountability to work through on such things as gathering information, achieving consensus on policy/practice issues and problem solving. Both types experience communication gaps and philosophical differences from office to office.


This chart lists the states and type of administration for each.

 

STATE TYPE STATE TYPE
Alabama

 

Nebraska

 

Alaska

 

Nevada

 

Arizona

 

New Hampshire

 

Arkansas

 

New Jersey

State operated

California

County operated

New Mexico

 

Colorado

 

New York

 

Connecticut

 

North Carolina

 

Delaware

 

North Dakota

 

Florida

 

Ohio

 

Georgia

 

Oklahoma

 

Hawaii

 

Oregon

 

Idaho

 

Pennsylvania

State supervised

Illinois

 

Rhode Island

 

Indiana

 

South Carolina

 

Iowa

 

South Dakota

 

Kansas

 

Tennessee

 

Kentucky

 

Texas

 

Louisiana

 

Utah

 

Maine

 

Vermont

 

Maryland

 

Virginia

 

Massachusetts

 

Washington

 

Michigan

 

Washington, DC

 

Minnesota

 

Wisconsin

 

Missouri

 

Wyoming

 

Montana