Gov. Mark Dayton took immediate steps Monday that he said will protect Minnesota's children from abuse and prevent the kinds of systemic failures that led up to the death last year of 4-year-old Eric Dean.
The state will begin conducting random checks to see if counties are wrongly rejecting abuse reports, Dayton said, and will set up a team of child protection specialists to respond rapidly to social workers struggling with difficult cases. The governor also created a task force that will review how Minnesota's child welfare system can improve and make recommendations by the end of the year.
Dayton said he wants the Legislature to take action on those recommendations by January.
The changes follow a series of Star Tribune stories in recent months about child protection failures in the state, including the case of Eric, whose abuse was reported to Pope County child protection 15 times before he died.
"The picture of 4-year-old Eric Dean, smiling at the camera, despite a visible wound on his face, will haunt me for a long time," the governor said.
Some who have criticized the child protection system say Dayton's actions are the first positive steps they have seen in years. Dr. Lisa Hollensteiner, an Edina emergency room physician for 26 years, said she has become frustrated that abuse that she's required to report often fails to prompt action.
Dayton read a letter Hollensteiner wrote to the Star Tribune in which she said her "heart sinks" when she makes those reports, even though, as a trained medical professional, she should be taken seriously.
The task force will be formed by early October and co-chaired by Human Services Commissioner Lucinda Jesson and Ramsey County Commissioner Toni Carter.