Executive Director Richard Wexler asserts that the Buttigieg case is not a political outlier but a symptom of a system frequently weaponized against families. While the twins faced 24 hours away from home and intense questioning based on unfounded allegations, Wexler notes that such investigations are routine for millions of American children. Data suggests over one-third of all children—and more than half of Black children—undergo these investigations, which are often rooted in false reports or the misinterpretation of poverty as neglect.
The NCCPR advocates for two primary legislative shifts: replacing anonymous reporting with confidential systems and transitioning from mandatory to permissive reporting for professionals. By requiring callers to identify themselves to authorities, states like Texas and New York have already begun to curb the ease with which individuals can harass others through child protective services. Furthermore, current mandatory reporting laws often overwhelm agencies with trivial cases, diverting resources away from children in genuine danger. According to Wexler, this surveillance-heavy approach backfires by exhausting workers and failing to protect the most vulnerable, ultimately making the entire child welfare system less effective at identifying real abuse.

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