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Colorado Lab Studies Highlighted at Convening on Children, Youth, & Families

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three women take a photo outside of a conference

Pictured (left to right): Lily Colby, Founder of the National Network for Foster Sibling Connections; Dr. Courtney Everson, Colorado Lab; and Maddie Lang-Silva, Colorado’s Office of the Child’s Representative Lived Experts Action Panel and member of the High Quality Parenting Time Task Force.

The Colorado Lab presented on two studies at the 2025 Colorado Convening on Children, Youth, & Families. Hosted by the Colorado Court Improvement Program, the annual gathering brought together 600 judges, magistrates, human services caseworkers, legal advocates, state agency representatives, and people with lived experience from across the state.

In the plenary session, Dr. Courtney L. Everson, Senior Project Director for the Colorado Lab, and Melanie Jordan, Policy Director at the Office of Respondent Parents’ Counsel (ORPC), shared actionable opportunities to advance best practices standards from a statewide study on family time in Colorado. The Colorado Lab conducted the legislatively authorized study (House Bill 23-1027) in partnership with the High Quality Parenting Time Task Force, leading to evidence-based recommendations to improve outcomes for families separated during child welfare involvement.

The presentation marked a significant opportunity to align cross-system partners around the recommendations on how to move toward a community-based model that promotes home-like environments and the use of kin for supervision. The recommendations include removing bias in safety-based decision making, cultivating family strengths, and advancing culturally respectful family time. A follow-on, interactive session provided participants with the opportunity to dive deeper into the recommendation to engage in collaborative goal setting.

Additionally, Dr. Everson and Dr. Elysia Versen, Deputy Executive Director and COO for the Colorado Lab presented findings from ongoing evidence building with the ORPC on their interdisciplinary (IDT) model of legal representation. The IDT model pairs an attorney with a social worker or parent advocate to better serve families experiencing challenging circumstances such as substance use, homelessness, domestic violence, and previous child welfare involvement. Tailored support allows the attorney to focus on legal aspects of the case while other team members provide care and guidance to help set families up for success. The session included actionable guidance on the evidence base and how Dependency and Neglect court partners can leverage the model to meet complex case needs and advance equitable outcomes.

To learn more, please contact Dr. Courtney Everson.