WATCH: Illinois DCFS can’t locate documents showing number of missing children
(The Center Square) – Documents to show the number of missing youth in care from the Department of Children and Family Services still “have not been located.”
The Center Square’s Freedom of Information Act request for the number of missing children from 2019 to 2025, filed on Oct. 21, still has not been fulfilled. The FOIA officer said “Once the documents are located, assuming they exist, the FOIA office will review and release records as appropriate.”
The response comes despite state House candidate Bailey Templeton receiving a FOIA response in early October showing a nearly 1,000% increase in the number of missing children from 2023 to 2024 for a total of 166. A DCFS spokesperson told The Center Square that the previously released numbers were “not completely accurate.”
Republican state Sen. Chapin Rose sits on the bipartisan Legislative Audit Commission.
“Continually, DCFS is really the most important agency in our state and yet continually under Gov. [J.B.] Pritzker, it’s the most, it’s the worst run agency,” Rose told The Center Square. “I mean, it’s just when you were this poorly managed, this poorly run, it should shock no one that you’ve had this kind of a run up.”
Pritzker said Wednesday after an unrelated event that he has made “enormous improvements in DCFS” since taking office.
“When I came in office, for example, the Department of Children Family Services was in terrible shape and we had to invest in and it took us several years to hire up and make sure we’re delivering what people really need,” Pritzker told reporters. “But thank goodness we’ve made enormous improvements in DCFS and across state government, which have been hollowed out by my Republican predecessor, who left us in a shambles.”
Despite those comments, the agency has not been able to locate updated numbers of missing youth in care for an open records request filed by The Center Square on Oct. 21.
Rose said Pritzker has not made the agency better.
“My goodness, these are kids. I mean, like job one ought to be getting DCFS functional, as an agency,” Rose said. “And yet, you know, continuously for six years of Governor Pritzker, we just see, you know, sort of this kind of willful indifference”
Since Pritzker took office in 2019, there have been numerous lawsuits against the agency and three different directors.
The state budget has $2.5 billion from taxpayers going to the agency, an increase of $1.2 billion since fiscal year 2019, according to the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget.
Latest News Stories
Chief John Galvin Heads Beecher Police Department
Tieri and Gorcowski Graduate from the Prairie State College EMT
Beecher High School Students Exceed Goals for Community Food Drive
Flint Man Charged with 1988 Murder of Wife Joan Bernal Following Cold Case Breakthrough
Beecher School Board Approves 2025 Tax Levy; Rate Projected to Drop
Chief Lemming Retires from Beecher Police Department
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher Public Library District for Nov. 2025
Everyday Economics: Why this week’s labor data matters more than the headlines
Costly refugee funding on the table as they rake in over a dozen taxpayer benefits
IL U.S. Senate candidates differ on Affordable Care Act tax credits
Protesters mobilize in wake of Maduro capture
Pritzker: Trump’s military action in Venezuela is ‘unconstitutional’