Foster advocate was ‘tremendous’

Deb Stolz

Debora Stolz was a single parent of eight children, four of them through adoption, and an active member in the foster care community. Stolz was president of the San Diego County Foster Parent Association and worked for more than 20 years as a train­er for resource parents with Grossmont College’s Foster, Adoptive & Kinship Care Edu­cation Program, an employee of the Foundation for Grossmont and Cuyamaca College.

Stolz was fatally shot, along with her daughter Lisa Stolz, on July 12, the result of a domestic dispute between her daughter and the father of their 6-month-old son. Police said they believed that the two were killed by Jus­tice Love Peace, who fled to Mexico and died a day later of an apparent self-inflicted gun­shot wound.

Foundation CEO Sally Cox said that Stolz played an in­tegral part of the program through her training and sup­port to countless resource par­ents for foster youth in San Di­ego County in an email she sent to Grossmont and Cuyamaca College’s administrators, teach­ers and staff.

“Grossmont College’s pro­gram for foster care education is responsible for training all the resource parents in San Diego County and is the largest of its kind in the state,” stated Cox. “Deb was an important part of that program and she will be deeply missed.”

Foster, Adoptive & Kinship Care Education Program man­ager Barbara Wojtach said the program is 30 years old, funded by an allocation from the state through the college, and a small contract with the County of San Diego Child Welfare Services to provide a mentoring program for resource parents.

“We provide all of the educa­tion for resource parents, the new term for foster parents, and Debbie was a big part of that. She was a mentor,” said Wojtach.

Wojtach said, first, everyone at the college and the entire fos­ter care community is in shock. She said in Stolz’s 35 years of fostering, hundreds of foster youth lived in her home.

“It’s unbelievable,” said Wojtach. “But what I have heard over and over again is that there is just a huge hole in the foster care community now. Debbie did all those things, but she was the kind of person if someone need help, she was always there.”

Wojtach said Stolz helped re­source parents, not only in edu­cation, but in life, taking chil­dren in to give resource parents a break from a struggling youth. She said that her work with children in her home, resource parents, that her incredible skills were mostly self-learned and that she never said no to re­sponding to resource parents or youth’s needs.

“She was just a tremendous individual,” said Wojtach. “She did so much, and everybody, even the resource parents are saying that there is nobody at that caliber, that has the skills, knowledge, willingness to step in for other people to help other people. She is somebody who laid down her life for the kids, and that was her focus.”

Wojtach said Stolz believed that if she could help the care­givers to hang in there with these kids, she could help the kids. “Kids in foster care get moved from place to place and it is trauma on top of trauma. Giv­ing those kids a chance to grow was what Debbie was all about,” she said.

Wojtach said in order to be approved for fostering, resource parents, even relatives, are re­quired to have initial education and are required to have at least eight hours of continuing edu­cation every year to continue. The college’s program meets these educational requirements.

“She was one of the main trainers. We have a group of fos­ter care trainers as well as ad­ministrative staff that we call our team. Debbie was an inte­gral part of that,” said Wojtach.

“Debbie taught pre-approval training, post approval, and specialty classes. She was very well versed in attachment and how trauma impacts children or youth. Debbie had a passion for helping people understand how infants are impacted by the traumas that they experience.”

Wojtach said Stolz’s passion for teens was just as essential. The program provides resource parent support groups, and Stolz led the support group along with many others.

“Often, in the foster care sys­tems, teens get a bad rap,” said Wojtach. “Parents are concerned about raising a teen that they haven’t grown up with. Debbie ran the support group to help the parents and to ask other people to step up and be willing to take care of teens. She did that herself. She was an active resource parent.”

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