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12 votes
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The case of the disappearing ink—a US tax court mystery
4 votes -
Rogers CEO says service back online for most Canadian customers, blames outage on 'network system failure'
17 votes -
Letters from the loneliest post office in the world
4 votes -
A day in the life of a music festival medic
5 votes -
When Harry met Santa – Christmas commercial (long version) for Posten Norway
5 votes -
The mystery of the "same sky" postcards
4 votes -
US Supreme Court rules in favor of Catholic foster care agency that refused to work with same-sex couples
9 votes -
The nonmachinables
3 votes -
Bad software sent postal workers to jail, because no one wanted to admit it could be wrong
20 votes -
Norwegian skier fails in bid to slalom 40km around Covid quarantine rules – bad weather foils attempt to cross over mountains from Sweden
5 votes -
Friedman Adventures Podcast Special - May 19th 1986 rescue at sea
1 vote -
Greta Thunberg features on Swedish postage stamp – illustration of activist is part of a series highlighting government's environmental quality goals
6 votes -
Redesigning the intubation box to better protect first responders
4 votes -
Private firefighting crews in California spark conflict after alleged illegal backfires in Glass Fire
4 votes -
Washington emergency responders first to use SpaceX’s Starlink internet in the field
8 votes -
Postcards from St Kilda arrive ten years later after washing up in Norway – archaeologist Ian McHardy built a waterproof replica of the mail boats a decade ago
5 votes -
United States Postal Service (USPS) files patent for a blockchain-based voting system
24 votes -
Forgotten for a century, Australia's first sanctioned air mail flight re-enacted at Lismore
4 votes -
An ode to the unexpected whimsy (and strength) of your mail delivery
7 votes -
Postman delivers 'somewhere in Sheffield' parcel
17 votes -
Airbnb asks its US hosts to provide 100,000 free rentals to first responders
6 votes -
USPS needs 1,000 workers in the San Francisco Bay Area to keep up with delivery demands
10 votes -
The forgotten story of America's first EMT services
5 votes -
Two German tourists killed in Arctic avalanche – part of a guided snowmobile tour of the island of Spitsbergen in Norway's Svalbard archipelago
6 votes -
Privatizing public services: Does it work?
5 votes -
Finland's flag-carrier airline, Finnair, said it has been forced to cancel almost 300 flights amid a nationwide solidarity strike for postal workers
8 votes -
An armed man has been arrested after he stole an ambulance and drove into a family in Oslo, injuring two babies
5 votes -
Digital transformation is occurring at varying rates and inadvertently creating a new kind of digital divide in cross-border e-commerce
3 votes -
Former public servant Michaela Banerji loses High Court free speech case
7 votes -
Two Czech climbers in their forties lost their lives last week at Norway's well-known Trollveggen rock face in western Norway
7 votes -
It’s not just for first responders anymore. Health experts want regular Coloradans to have Naloxone on hand.
7 votes -
Record numbers rescued from Norway's iconic tourist site Preikestolen
5 votes -
Get rid of (paper) junk mail | No Sweat Tech
10 votes -
EFF launches "TOSsed Out", a new project to highlight ways that Terms of Service and other rules are unevenly and unthinkingly applied to people by online services
12 votes -
The birth of cheap communication (and junk mail)
7 votes -
Advocacy group alleges Oregon's foster care system 'revictimizes children'
4 votes -
I'm a paramedic, please stop asking me about the worst thing I've ever seen
21 votes -
The Apple Card is a perfect example of Apple’s post-iPhone strategy
12 votes -
Trying to figure out my personal craziness
I hope this is the appropriate Tilde for this. If no one has any input it will still have helped me to type this out. TL;DR In over my head with marriage, foster care, family, and work. My wife...
I hope this is the appropriate Tilde for this. If no one has any input it will still have helped me to type this out.
TL;DR In over my head with marriage, foster care, family, and work.
My wife and I became foster parents about 1.5 years ago with the intention to not adopt, but to care for children 3 and under while bio parents worked to regain custody or other permanent placements were arranged. Our first placement was two girls (7 mo and 2.5 yrs) despite wanting to do just one kid at a time (especially to start). We had them for 6 weeks and mom got them back. We had another placement (8 mo boy) for about another 6 weeks. There was a considerable lull and we were getting frustrated about not getting any new placements when the girls from our first placement were placed into custody again. So we were able to take them in again (now about 1.2 and 3.5 yrs). FF to now and we've had them for about 6 months.
We never really intended to have more than one child and for quite this long and we're struggling. My wife has always had a little less ability to weather stressful situations like this and these last 2-3 weeks I'm carrying a lot of weight. In the meantime, bio mom has gotten pregnant and there's not another hearing regarding custody for another 9 months. We fully expect that she will not be able to take them back at that time (or really realistically ever). What should probably happen would be that the county could place the kids into permanent custody (basically getting them adopted). However, from what we've heard from other foster families, temporary custody could drag on for years.
So, our main dilemma is this. We are not equipped (as a couple) to care for these kids for years. With the likely prospect of no change in custody in the near future, it feels like the best thing for these kids would be to get them into the care of someone looking to do this long-term, perhaps to eventually adopt. That being said, we absolutely love them and it feels like some kind of betrayal to force them to make yet another transition. On the other hand, with our limitations, it seems like that is inevitable anyway. Do we try to make that happen sooner?
Some other data points:
Our fostering license expires in October (about a month after the hearing is scheduled) and we don't intend to continue fostering (at least for a while, and definitely not with our current agency).
We don't have many family members close by to give us a hand with the kids, making us feel isolated and making it hard to get breaks from the kids. Our agency has not been very helpful with lining up respite care, but we're trying to be more aggressive about that now.
I've got things pretty well lined up to retire in about 5 years. My company is also just now kicking off a major project of a similar time frame and I'm in a good position to really make a mark before moving on. It will probably require some serious time commitments and effort to do it the way I want to.Thanks for listening.
12 votes -
‘I am dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on earth’: A self-proclaimed white nationalist planned a mass terrorist attack, the government says
34 votes -
Rescuers search for survivors in deadly Indonesian landslide
4 votes -
Washington state officials passed a bill to rename a post office near Jimi Hendrix‘s hometown of Seattle to honor the guitar god.
5 votes -
Losing Laura - Laura Levis died from an asthma attack just outside a Boston-area ER, after calling 911 from outside its locked doors. Her husband has been piecing together how it happened.
9 votes -
Flash floods and landslides kill at least twenty-seven on Indonesian island of Sumatra
3 votes -
Taken for a ride: MD injured in ATV crash gets $56,603 bill for US air ambulance trip
13 votes -
Introducing the Cloudflare Onion Service
12 votes -
Petty charges, princely profits
5 votes -
Mendocino Complex Fire grows to become largest wildfire in California history
8 votes -
'Damoclean sword': Michaela Banerji is still fighting after five years. The former Immigration Department official said her sacking after a tweet "drove a stake" through her.
3 votes