Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Ohio's top lawman sent out an SOS on Thursday to residents thinking of becoming foster parents — we need you now to take in kids from drug-ravaged families.

“There is a growing chasm between the number of available foster families and the increasing number of children who enter the child welfare system because one or both of their parents are drug addicts,” Attorney General Mike DeWine said.

“Today I want to issue a call to Ohioans who may be interested in being a foster parent," he added. "I ask them to make that leap and open their home to a kid or kids who could use a stable, loving home."

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine speaks during a news conference at the Attorney General's office on May 31, 2017 in Columbus, Ohio. file Brooke LaValley / The Columbus Dispatch via AP file

DeWine’s plea came as the child welfare officials in Ohio, which has the nation’s highest rate of deadly heroin overdoses, have been struggling to find homes for the youngest victims of this plague.

Currently there are more than 15,000 kids in the child welfare system but only 7,200 foster families to take care of them, according to DeWine.

“We’ve seen a spike in children 12 and younger coming into care in the last few months,” Deborrha Armstrong of the Franklin County Children Services, which also serves the state’s capital city Columbus, told NBC News. “In the past it’s been pretty easy to find foster homes for younger children, the problem was finding homes for the teenagers. But recently we’ve been challenged to find foster homes even for the little kids.”

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings. This site is protected by recaptcha

There are now nearly 3,000 more children in the child welfare system than there were when the opioid crisis began seven years ago and “we just don’t have enough families to meet the demand,” she said.

Related: The Awful Arithmetic of America’s Opioid Crisis May Have Gotten Worse

How dire is the situation? Half of all the kids in foster care are there because one or both of their parents are drug addicts.

In some of the hardest hit counties like Ross, Vinton and Highland in southern Ohio, the rate of kids in foster care because of parental drug abuse was over 80 percent, according to the latest statistics from 2015.

In rural Van Wert County, which hugs the Indiana border, the rate was 100 percent.

“We rely a lot on kinship care, which means placing children with grandparents or other relatives to reduce the trauma,” Armstrong said.

Related: Trump Calls Opioid Crisis a National Emergency But Still Hasn't Made It Official

But in many cases that is not possible because entire families are struggling with opioid addiction, Armstrong said.

To make it easier for Ohioans to become foster parents, DeWine directed the state’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation to speed up the required background checks through a dedicated email address, which is FosterCheck@OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov.

DeWine has also earmarked $1 million in grants for child welfare agencies to help recruit new foster families in some of the hardest hit counties like Franklin, which earlier this year was averaging one fatal fentanyl overdose per day.

The impact of the opioid epidemic on children Public Children Services Association of Ohio

A Republican, DeWine is running for governor and in recent months he has taken aggressive steps to confront the crisis.

In May, DeWine filed a lawsuit suit against five of the biggest prescription painkiller manufacturers and accused them of helping to create “a population of patients physically and psychologically dependent on them.”

“And when those patients can no longer afford or legitimately obtain opioids, they often turn to the street to buy prescription opioids or even heroin,” the suit states.

During a press conference, DeWine acknowledged that his job has nothing to do with foster care and that he was moved to act after hearing about the crushing demand.

“It was a reaction to what I was hearing out there,” he said. “It’s not like we have all the answers, but we can use the bully pulpit of the attorney general’s office to help.”