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An opioid epidemic. High smoking rates. Health care provider shortages. Indiana faces serious public health challenges. Side Effects Public Media provides in-depth coverage of these issues and more.

Indiana Child Services Director Resigns With Scathing Letter To Governor

Indiana Department of Child Services Director Mary Beth Bonaventura says the lives of Hoosier children has been put at risk because of steps taken by Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb’s administration.

Bonaventura’s sharp criticisms came in her resignation letter, delivered to Holcomb last week.

In the letter, Bonventura claims DCS leadership changes have undermined her work. She also cited cutbacks to provider contracts and aging technology.Bonaventura is credited by many for a quick response to the growing number of children entering the foster care system. That number has swelled with the opioid epidemic.

Holcomb thanked Bonaventura for her work and says Indiana’s children will continue to be in good hands.

“We’re head down and focused on kids and there will be more to come soon,” Holcomb says.

Holcomb says his administration helped increase nearly half a billion in funds for DCS this year.

Democrats responded quickly to Bonaventura’s resignation. House Minority Leader Rep. Terry Goodin (D-Crothersville) says he wants an immediate investigation.

“This merits action way before we can get back into the legislative session,” he says.

Brent Kent, CEO of Indiana Connected by 25 — a nonprofit that works with foster youth — says the leadership change could be an opportunity “to reevaluate what we’re doing and how we can make changes to benefit foster youth.”

Holcomb says the search for a new director is underway.

Indiana fiscal leaders say it’s too soon to say whether there will be money available to supplement the Department of Child Services’ budget in the upcoming legislative session. House Ways and Means Chair Tim Brown (R-Crawfordsville) says the legislature approved more than $500 million more for DCS over the last two state budgets.

“We’ll just have to look at is that the appropriate level,” Brown says. “Hopefully done in a budget situation. I don’t know, as I said earlier it may be too early to tell what the 2018 session will bring.”

But the legislature won’t write a new two-year state budget until the 2019 session.

If DCS does ask for more money in 2018, a new revenue forecast unveiled Monday predicts the state will have nearly $400 million less than previously expected over the next year and a half.

Sen. Karen Tallian (D-Portage) notes that’s as an ongoing cut to the state’s corporate tax rate is expected to cost the state $24 million next year.

“I think we should ask Mary Beth Bonaventura what we can spend $24 million on this year. Just saying,” Tallian says.

The 2018 legislative session gets underway in January.

This story originally appeared on Indiana Public Broadcasting stations.