Santa Clara County holds special hearing on infant’s fentanyl overdose death

SAN JOSE — In a packed and passion-fueled special hearing Tuesday over the fentanyl death of a 3-month-old, Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors President Susan Ellenberg made one thing clear from the start: There is “no doubt that our system failed baby Phoenix.”

Over the next four hours, the county’s child welfare leaders and social workers, public health nurses and doctors, nonprofit leaders and parents, the district attorney and a juvenile dependency judge clashed over what’s best for vulnerable children: Keeping families together despite reports of child abuse or neglect or removing them, even temporarily, from their homes.

But Supervisor Sylvia Arenas saved the most dramatic confrontation of Tuesday’s special hearing for the end.

Citing what she called “a breach of trust” with the county’s child welfare leaders, Arenas called for a restructuring of the system, stripping the Social Services Agency of its role in overseeing the county’s child protection agency and moving the county’s Department of Family and Children’s Services to report to a deputy county executive with a background in child welfare instead.

The shakeup, which county supervisors will consider in March, culminated an explosive hearing that follows a Bay Area News Group investigation into the county’s missteps leading up to the death of Phoenix Castro. The baby died in May after the county’s child welfare agency discarded numerous red flags before sending baby Phoenix home with her father, who had a history of drug abuse.

Santa Clara County Supervisor Sylvia Arenas listens to a speaker during a Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors meeting in San Jose, Calif., on Dec. 19, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

In a series of pointed questions, Arenas, who spent her career as an early-education specialist, grilled the county’s Department of Family and Children’s Services Director Damion Wright and his boss, Social Services Agency Director Daniel Little, for what she called a “tone deaf” report that emphasized the agency’s family preservation strategy during the hearing. Arenas was especially upset that Little had failed to share with the supervisors that the county was under investigation last year by the state of California over its dramatic decline in child removals from troubled families in the last three years.

“This is a lack of trust,” she said. “Unfortunately for me this is a breach of trust, when a department head … doesn’t provide that information.”

“I wish I would have lifted that up,” Little responded, “and shared it with the entire board so we could have had that discussion back then.”

She also took Wright to task for telling a story during his presentation about the importance of family to his 1-year-old granddaughter taking her first steps.

“It saddens me to think that Phoenix will never reach that stage where she’s walking because she stayed with her family,” Arenas said from the dais as Wright remained in his seat at the front table. “We need to make it clear that safety is first.”

Earlier in the hearing, one by one, more than 50 speakers stood up to tell their stories, from civic leaders opposing family unity models to parents who lost custody of their children who supported the county’s approach to help troubled families heal with services such as parenting classes and drug treatment.

Still, the biggest concern among many of the speakers was without dispute: Who is watching out for the safety of children?

“Something has gone awry,” Juvenile Dependency Judge Shawna Schwarz told the supervisors, noting that the number of child welfare cases before her court plummeted over the past five years from 3,000 to 400 because of the county’s shift toward family-preservation policies. She wants to know, she said, what has happened to those children who didn’t come before her court:  “Are they safe, and how do we know they are safe?”

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