


📌 Why it matters
- Reunification is the process by which children who were separated from their families (for whatever reason) are reunited with their parents or primary caregivers — safely and sustainably. Better Care Network+2PubMed+2
- It’s widely considered a preferred outcome in many child-welfare settings because staying or returning home, when safe, often supports better long-term outcomes for children and families. PubMed+1
- But successful reunification is not guaranteed: research shows many families face re-entry (the child returns to care) or struggle with instability after reunification. PubMed+2PubMed+2
🔍 Key research findings
- A study of children ages 0-5 found that about one-third of children who reunified reentered foster care within three years. Better Care Network+1
- Another study found that children who did not receive post-reunification caseworker visits were at higher risk of re-entry. PubMed
- Housing stability matters: A study found that providing housing vouchers (via the Family Unification Program) helped speed child-welfare case closure and supported reunification. PubMed
- Interventions like the Strengthening Families Program (for families impacted by substance-use) increased reunification rates compared to peers not in the program. Office of Justice Programs
💬 What families experience in the recovery process
- A parent may come out of incarceration, immigration detention, or a CPS removal with multiple demands: complete treatment programs, stable housing, maintain employment, attend parenting classes, comply with visitation schedules.
- They can feel like their entire life is being evaluated — not just “Can I parent?” but “Can I meet these conditions under surveillance?”
- Even once reunified, the fear of “what if I slip up?” remains. Many parents describe it as life-on-trial rather than life-restored.
- The trauma of separation remains: Children and parents often carry scars from the separation period, and the process of healing and rebuilding trust takes time.
✅ Our Purpose: Restore
- The mission is not just to reunify — but to restore family dignity, voice, and permanence.
- Restoration means supporting families beyond compliance: providing cultural, trauma-informed, accessible supports that acknowledge systemic injustice and aim for true healing rather than mere risk management.
- The goal is to shift from “how do we monitor risk?” to “how do we nurture strength, resilience, and reconnection?”
🌍 CALL TO ACTION: Turn Art into Action
Subtitle: “A film that feeds change.”
- The indie film is just the first step:
- 🎥 Screenings & Community Dialogues: Use the film to spark conversations in schools, churches, and civic spaces.
- 🧠 Training & Policy Change: Offer it to social workers, legal teams, and lawmakers as an educational tool.
- 🎭 Creative Healing Programs: Inspire arts-based healing and advocacy spaces for parents and youth.
- Every screening is a call to legislators, social agencies, and communities to reimagine systems of care rather than control.
