ANDERSON — For moms like Jennifer Moreno, she will tell you that becoming a foster parent is a calling.
“It's not easy at first, but they adapt and once they are loved, they become whole different people,” Moreno said.
The Anderson native is a single mother of five who says she never intended on fostering children. Now, she currently has four foster children and has been fostering for the last 18 months.
“One of the boys was in a youth center – he had nowhere to go, nobody wanted him,” she said.
She told WRTV that her process of becoming a foster parent took her about 30 to 45 days.
“I went through the process of going through the classes and the home checks and stuff like that,” Moreno said.
Sometimes when children are removed from certain situations and moved into new environments, they sometimes come with only the clothes on their backs.
“They really didn’t come with anything. One of them came with an outfit, the other came with like four outfits,” Moreno said.
When Moreno was short of supplies, she, like many families, turned to Katie’s Closet to bridge that gap.
“It is a shopping experience for foster families to come and shop for their foster littles,” Tracy Walters said.
Walters and her husband started Katie’s Closet in August 2021. The closet is an extension of their non-profit Turn Away No Longer. Their mission is to positively impact the lives of children in the foster care system.
"We have over 500 children in foster care in Madison County alone and there is close to 11,000 in Indiana,” Walters said.
The closet relies strictly on donations and is free for any child in the foster care system. More than 50 kids have been served.
“We only take one appointment at a time and it's a private shopping experience so there is not more than one family for privacy issues,” Walters said.
To learn more about Katie’s Closet, click here.
For more information about foster care, click here.
-
Indiana State Police solve 53-year-old murder case
The Indiana State Police Cold Case Unit has identified the killer in the murder of the 1972 killing of 26-year-old Phyllis Bailer.Target baby food recalled over lead contamination
A company that makes baby food for Target is recalling more than 25,000 packages of a product because it may contain elevated levels of lead.Juvenile sentenced to 15 years for fatally shooting intruder on family property
In a case highlighting the complexities of Indiana's self-defense laws, a17-year-old has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for fatally shooting a man searching through his mother's vehicle.Indiana National Guard ends mission at the southern border
Nearly 50 Hoosier Guardsmen are coming home after being mobilized to support the Texas National Guard in Operation Lone Star, the Indiana National Guard said.