A practical resource business with a community-first purpose.
New Day Foster was created by a foster and guardianship parent in the United States to support caregivers and young people with clearer guidance, better organization tools, and carefully selected resources.
Our purpose
The first purpose is to support the foster community. The second is to build a sustainable media and digital-products business capable of producing significant income without exploiting children or misleading readers.
Revenue may come from affiliate commissions, advertising, digital printables, sponsorships, and future educational products. Commercial relationships do not change the requirement that content be useful, accurate, respectful, and transparent.
Founded from lived caregiving experience
New Day Foster was founded by Colby Morrison, a foster and guardianship parent. The project grew from the practical questions caregivers face when preparing a home, coordinating school, documenting events, supporting family relationships, and planning for long-term stability.
New Day Foster protects the privacy of children and families. Personal caregiving experience is used to identify useful topics and tools, not to publish a child’s case history or private story.
Our perspective
New Day Foster publishes experience-led educational content. Personal experience can identify practical problems, but it does not replace agency policy, court orders, legal advice, medical care, counseling, or a child-specific safety plan.
Privacy boundary
Children in foster care do not owe the public their stories. New Day Foster does not publish identifiable child details, school information, case records, family allegations, visitation schedules, diagnoses, or private photographs to generate traffic or sales.
Business transparency
Some links are affiliate links. New Day Foster may earn a commission when a reader makes a qualifying purchase. Disclosures appear near commercial recommendations, and the site maintains a detailed affiliate disclosure and editorial standard.
Corrections
Material errors and outdated resources are reviewed when identified. Substantive corrections should be dated and explained rather than silently obscured.