March 31, 2026 TAMPA (Bloom) – Just about anyone can be a foster parent if...
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Children and teens who are in foster care are just like other kids. They go to school, they have friends and participate in extracurricular activities, they play sports or read books, and they live right here in our community. The difference is that they’ve experienced a negative family situation, trauma, abuse, or neglect, which makes living at home unsafe—at least for the time being. While we work with parents to resolve issues and overcome challenges, with the goal of reuniting them with their kids, the children need a safe, stable, and temporary place to live.

1. Understand their needs
When you choose to foster a child, you should be prepared to deal with trauma, sensitivities and developmental needs. Understanding, compassion and patience are core virtues that are necessary when becoming a child’s caregiver.
2. Protect and nurture
Be a caregiver, a mentor, an understanding ear and a supportive role model. Be involved in their life and put forth the same unconditional effort you would if he or she were your biological child.
3. Support family relationships
As a foster parent, you’ll not only care for the child in your home, but you’ll encourage the child to maintain a positive relationship with his or her parents, in hopes that the family will be reunified once the case plan goals have been met.
4. Promote lifetime relationships
As a role model, and one who will leave a lasting impression, you’ll connect children to safe, nurturing relationships such as mentors, teachers, coaches, friends and extended family.
5. Be a part of a professional team
When you become a foster parent, you join a network of families and professionals who provide support, encouragement and advice. You’ll also connect and network with the FSS team, including a licensing counselor, case manager, therapists and more.
Please complete the form below. An FSS representative will be in touch.
You must:
Qualified adults can be licensed to foster, regardless of marital status, sexual orientation, age, gender, home ownership or income level.
Generally, 10-14 weeks. The process includes an in-person interview, home visit, training and completed home study.
We work with you to match children based on preferences, gender, age, geographic locations and lifestyle.
Each foster child’s case is different. While the primary goal is to reunify the child with their biological family, in cases where children cannot be reunified with their parents, the focus shifts to finding adoptive families. Visit heartgalleryjax.org to see children currently in need of a forever family.
Yes, a monthly stipend helps reimburse associated costs for housing, transportation, clothing and food. The daily rate is set by the state and is based on the child’s age and individual needs.
Please review our foster care resources here or download the Foster Parent Handbook.
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