Days after 6-year-old Kendrea Johnson died with a jump rope around her neck in the bedroom of her Brooklyn Park foster home, the Minnesota Department of Human Services temporarily suspended the license of her foster care mother.
Because of the girl's death late Saturday, the agency decided Monday that Tannise Nawaqavou cannot ensure the safety of the children she has under her care, the state said.
Johnson's 1-year-old brother, Charles, has been removed from her home, and no other children remain in the house, the state said.
Nawaqavou, 53, who was licensed in 2011, can appeal the department's decision. As recently as September, Kendrea's court-appointed advocate had recommended that Hennepin County consider alternative housing for the girl, court documents said.
"She was a cute little girl who appeared well-cared-for to me," said Barbara Englund, her kindergarten music teacher in 2013 at Sheridan Arts Magnet School in Minneapolis. "She never acted up in my class, and worked really hard. The teachers cared about her."
But a report made in late November by the caseworker assigned to reunite Kendrea and her brother with their parents painted a more troubled life at school and with her various foster providers.
The children had been in foster care for nearly a year. Nawaqavou had cared for them over the previous six months, Kendrea's uncle Willie Venzant said Wednesday.
They were placed in foster care after child protection said their parents repeatedly failed to comply with efforts to keep the children safe, according to court documents. In August, a guardian ad litem said Kendrea wanted to live with her grandmother.