HOUSE BILL REPORT
SSB 5916
As Passed House
April 19, 1991
Title: An act relating to the department of social and health services.
Brief Description: Changing foster care provisions and providing a grievance process.
Sponsor(s): Senate Committee on Children & Family Services (originally sponsored by Senators Roach, Talmadge, L. Smith and Stratton).
Brief History:
Reported by House Committee on:
Human Services, April 4, 1991, DPA;
Passed House, April 19, 1991, 98-0.
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON
HUMAN SERVICES
Majority Report: Do pass as amended. Signed by 11 members: Representatives Leonard, Chair; Riley, Vice Chair; Winsley, Ranking Minority Member; Tate, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Anderson; Beck; Brekke; Hargrove; Hochstatter; R. King; and H. Myers.
Staff: David Knutson (786-7146).
Background: Foster parents and other individuals are concerned that when they have a complaint concerning a policy or action of the Department of Social and Health Services, there is no standard, formal grievance process to access, nor is there a neutral forum to hear and make decisions on such grievances.
Summary of Bill: The Department of Social and Health Services is directed to develop and implement a complaint resolution process to review grievances pertaining to a Division of Children and Family Services policy or procedure, or the application of a division policy or procedure.
When a child resides in the home of a foster parent or relative pursuant to a disposition order, the court shall allow the foster parent or relative to attend dependency review proceedings pertaining to that child, for the sole purpose of providing information to the court about the child. The department must inform the foster parent of the date and location of all dependency review hearings.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.
Testimony For: The Department of Social and Health Services has no effective complaint resolution process for foster parents and others who feel the department has made a mistake. An independent complaint resolution process is preferable to an in house process. Foster-adopt parents should have the right to seek the termination of the biological parents rights when their child has been in foster care over 12 months. Foster parents who have a foster child in their home over 18 months should have legal standing regarding the future of the child in foster care.
Testimony Against: Biological and adoptive parents whose child is in foster care should not be challenged by foster parents for the legal custody of their child. Foster parents should provide a custodial service, while the court, Department of Social and Health Services, biological or adoptive parent, and child, all work to reunite the family. A complaint resolution process involving administrative hearings and superior court involvement is too time consuming and costly. The department should be allowed to establish an in-house complaint resolution process.
Witnesses: Senator Talmadge (pro); Timothy Sell, Public Defenders Association (con); Colleen Waterhouse, Department of Social and Health Services (con); Lee Ann Miller, Attorney General's Office (con); Laurie Lippold, Children's Home Society (pro); and Karen Sullivan and Betty Floyd, foster parents (pro).