For homeschooling parents, CPS encounters can be commonplace. Demands to investigate living conditions and interview minors privately, however, are troubling.
In this undated photo provided by Dalaine Bradley, Drew Waller, 7, Zion Waller, 10, and Ahmad Waller, 11, left to right, study during homeschooling, in Raleigh, N.C. A front door is many things. When opened, it welcomes friends, family, laughter, and joy. When closed, it guards the threshold between the safety of home and the outside world. It signals security. At least, it should. But for one Texas homeschool family, this recently came under threat.
When the CPS investigator came to the home to investigate, two common demands were made: first, to come into the home to look at the living conditions, bedrooms, and to ensure adequate food was present; second, to interview all of the kids privately, apart from the parents. The circumstances in North Carolina were strikingly similar to those of our recent Texas case. In North Carolina, during the family’s morning routine, an undressed child slipped out the front door unattended in pursuit of the family cat and an anonymous report was made to CPS by a passing driver.
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