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SCMP Editorial

Vulnerable children need Hongkongers to open their homes and hearts

While the number of registered foster families has risen in the past five years, the average waiting time for placement has also increased

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Lin Lai looks after baby Lok Lok in Sha Tin on September 25, 2025. In the past 13 years, Lai has been an emergency foster parent for more than 20 children. Photo: Edmond So
Editorials represent the views of the South China Morning Post on the issues of the day.
Foster care is an essential lifeline, providing stability, safety and a nurturing environment to vulnerable children who need shelter from traumatic situations. However, it is a challenge to find enough carers in most communities, including Hong Kong. Mother’s Choice has made a worthy appeal for more people from diverse backgrounds to step forward.

The charity organisation said on Saturday that it had 222 children on its official waiting list for placement. Its referrals increasingly involve complex backgrounds such as children of young mothers with a history of drug use, child abuse cases or mums unprepared to care for children. Mother’s Choice, which operates a conventional foster care service funded by the Social Welfare Department, launched an alternative programme called Project Bridge in 2016 to expand placements for children aged up to six awaiting adoption or family reunification. The self-financed project has recruited 111 foster families and supported 141 children with temporary homes and early intervention. It has attracted a mix of 91 per cent couples, including same-sex couples, and 9 per cent single carers. In a bid to expand the pool, the charity is pushing for fostering to be seen as not just limited to traditional family structures.

Government figures show a long backlog in the city’s foster care system. Needs have increased since mandatory reporting of child abuse laws came into effect earlier this year. While the number of registered foster families has risen 16.6 per cent over five years to 1,112, the average wait time for placements increased from 1.66 months in 2021-22 to 1.95 months. More than two years ago, authorities took an important step to boost foster care by doubling allowances offered to carers. However, the bottleneck has shifted from funding to a shortage of homes.
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Authorities could still explore other policy changes, including a long-requested exemption of foster allowances from public housing income caps that could allow more working-class households to help. Meanwhile, fostering should be seen as a collective civic duty rather than an institutional problem. The city’s most vulnerable children have the best chance at a brighter future if enough people can open their hearts to provide caring temporary homes.

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