For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
Oregon sues nonprofit it once trusted to care for kids placed in foster care
Oregon sues nonprofit it once trusted to care for kids placed in foster care
Oregon sues nonprofit it once trusted to care for kids placed in foster care

Published on: 01/16/2026

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

Go To Business Place

Description

The state of Oregon is suing a religious nonprofit it once paid millions of taxpayer dollars to take care of the state’s most vulnerable children.

The lawsuit focuses on one of the smaller contracts the state had with Dynamic Life, a nonprofit based in Marion County.

The $1.3 million contract was so that Dynamic Life could create a mobile child-caring agency. The idea was to offer services to families in crisis in their homes in order to avoid having to remove kids and teenagers and put them in hotels.

But the lawsuit filed last week alleges that, despite the state sending $966,666.64 to the nonprofit, none of the “specific deliverables” or “anything else of any value” to the state was received.

The Oregon Department of Human Services building is pictured in Salem, Ore., on Sept. 26, 2019.

Dynamic Life Inc. was founded by a former pastor based in Keizer, Oregon. Fueled by taxpayer dollars, it grew quickly.

The lawsuit filed Jan. 6 alleges that Dynamic Life’s founder, Nathan Webber, and his son Josiah, entered the contract with the state through a “series of misrepresentations and false promises as to Dynamic Life’s experience and capabilities, when they had no intent or ability to actually perform, and used the funds obtained from ODHS for their own personal benefit.”

Neither Webber nor the state responded to a request for comment.

An OPB investigation published in 2023 first raised questions about the nonprofit, which had several state contracts at the time. One of the contracts was to pay the nonprofit nearly $3,000 per day for every child placed in their care.

At the time, the state was paying foster parents about $795 per month. The state had paid nearly $8 million of taxpayer dollars when OPB started asking questions.

Despite initially pushing back on the public revelations about the nonprofit, the state cancelled all contracts shortly after OPB’s story and stopped placing foster kids in Dynamic Life’s care.

The lawsuit is the latest iteration of the state reversing course with the nonprofit.

The state also allowed Dynamic Life to rent unlicensed short-term rentals where they housed groups of foster care kids and offered little oversight, both over the state contracts and over the well-being of the children who were placed in care.

At the time of OPB’s initial report, the state could not say definitively whether the Dynamic Life staff working with the kids placed in care had passed appropriate background checks.

The state has struggled for years to find appropriate placements for children and teenagers placed in its care. It’s been sued over its practice of placing kids in hotel rooms. As part of a class-action lawsuit against the state’s Department of Human Services, a “neutral expert” is now overseeing the system and expected to help shepherd the agency through changes.

ODHS, which is responsible for overseeing the care of about 5,000 children placed in its care, is also undergoing a leadership change.

The state Senate also recently confirmed Liesl Wendt to be the next director of the agency.

Gov. Tina Kotek nominated Wendt after Fariborz Pakseresht, the long-time director, retired in October

News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2026/01/16/oregon-sues-nonprofit-once-trusted-to-care-for-kids-placed-in-foster-care/

Other Related News

Addiction advocacy group and service provider join forces amid funding uncertainty
Addiction advocacy group and service provider join forces amid funding uncertainty

01/16/2026

Oregon Recovers merged with 4D Recovery in Dec 2025 amid funding uncertainty from Medicaid...

Former Oregon OLB Tobi Haastrup commits to Big 12 team
Former Oregon OLB Tobi Haastrup commits to Big 12 team

01/16/2026

Former Oregon outside linebacker Tobi Haastrup is going to the Big 12

Orcas breach, tail slap and draw crowds near Seattle shoreline
Orcas breach, tail slap and draw crowds near Seattle shoreline

01/16/2026

With breaches and tail slapping a pod of orca whales put on a show near Seattle on Friday

Coast Guard OKs less costly Oregon-to-Washington Interstate 5 bridge proposal
Coast Guard OKs less costly Oregon-to-Washington Interstate 5 bridge proposal

01/16/2026

Advocates for a new Interstate Bridge between Oregon and Washington won a victory Friday w...

Former Oregon QB Austin Novosad commits to MAC team
Former Oregon QB Austin Novosad commits to MAC team

01/16/2026

Former Oregon quarterback Austin Novosad is heading to the MAC

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500