BILL REQ. #: H-3419.3
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2014 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/22/14. Referred to Committee on Early Learning & Human Services.
AN ACT Relating to parents with intellectual or developmental disabilities involved in dependency proceedings; reenacting and amending RCW 13.34.136 and 13.34.138; and creating a new section.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature intends to assure that for
parents with intellectual or developmental disabilities, the department
of social and health services takes into consideration the parent's
disability when offering services to correct parental deficiencies. To
do so, the legislature finds that the department must contact the
developmental disabilities administration. The legislature further
intends to allow the court to apply an active efforts standard to the
department at dependency review hearings involving parents with
intellectual or developmental disabilities.
Sec. 2 RCW 13.34.136 and 2013 c 316 s 2, 2013 c 254 s 2, and 2013
c 173 s 2 are each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
(1) Whenever a child is ordered removed from the home, a permanency
plan shall be developed no later than sixty days from the time the
supervising agency assumes responsibility for providing services,
including placing the child, or at the time of a hearing under RCW
13.34.130, whichever occurs first. The permanency planning process
continues until a permanency planning goal is achieved or dependency is
dismissed. The planning process shall include reasonable efforts to
return the child to the parent's home.
(2) The agency supervising the dependency shall submit a written
permanency plan to all parties and the court not less than fourteen
days prior to the scheduled hearing. Responsive reports of parties not
in agreement with the department's or supervising agency's proposed
permanency plan must be provided to the department or supervising
agency, all other parties, and the court at least seven days prior to
the hearing.
The permanency plan shall include:
(a) A permanency plan of care that shall identify one of the
following outcomes as a primary goal and may identify additional
outcomes as alternative goals: Return of the child to the home of the
child's parent, guardian, or legal custodian; adoption, including a
tribal customary adoption as defined in RCW 13.38.040; guardianship;
permanent legal custody; long-term relative or foster care, until the
child is age eighteen, with a written agreement between the parties and
the care provider; successful completion of a responsible living skills
program; or independent living, if appropriate and if the child is age
sixteen or older. The department or supervising agency shall not
discharge a child to an independent living situation before the child
is eighteen years of age unless the child becomes emancipated pursuant
to chapter 13.64 RCW;
(b) Unless the court has ordered, pursuant to RCW 13.34.130(8),
that a termination petition be filed, a specific plan as to where the
child will be placed, what steps will be taken to return the child
home, what steps the supervising agency or the department will take to
promote existing appropriate sibling relationships and/or facilitate
placement together or contact in accordance with the best interests of
each child, and what actions the department or supervising agency will
take to maintain parent-child ties. All aspects of the plan shall
include the goal of achieving permanence for the child.
(i) The department's or supervising agency's plan shall specify
what services the parents will be offered to enable them to resume
custody, what requirements the parents must meet to resume custody, and
a time limit for each service plan and parental requirement.
(A) If the parent is incarcerated, the plan must address how the
parent will participate in the case conference and permanency planning
meetings and, where possible, must include treatment that reflects the
resources available at the facility where the parent is confined. The
plan must provide for visitation opportunities, unless visitation is
not in the best interests of the child.
(B) If a parent has either an intellectual or developmental
disability or both, the department shall make reasonable efforts to
consult with the developmental disabilities administration to create an
appropriate plan for services. The plan for services must be tailored
to correct the parental deficiency taking into consideration the
parent's disability. The department shall also determine an
appropriate method to offer those services based on the parent's
disability.
(ii)(A) Visitation is the right of the family, including the child
and the parent, in cases in which visitation is in the best interest of
the child. Early, consistent, and frequent visitation is crucial for
maintaining parent-child relationships and making it possible for
parents and children to safely reunify. The supervising agency or
department shall encourage the maximum parent and child and sibling
contact possible, when it is in the best interest of the child,
including regular visitation and participation by the parents in the
care of the child while the child is in placement.
(B) Visitation shall not be limited as a sanction for a parent's
failure to comply with court orders or services where the health,
safety, or welfare of the child is not at risk as a result of the
visitation.
(C) Visitation may be limited or denied only if the court
determines that such limitation or denial is necessary to protect the
child's health, safety, or welfare. When a parent or sibling has been
identified as a suspect in an active criminal investigation for a
violent crime that, if the allegations are true, would impact the
safety of the child, the department shall make a concerted effort to
consult with the assigned law enforcement officer in the criminal case
before recommending any changes in parent/child or child/sibling
contact. In the event that the law enforcement officer has information
pertaining to the criminal case that may have serious implications for
child safety or well-being, the law enforcement officer shall provide
this information to the department during the consultation. The
department may only use the information provided by law enforcement
during the consultation to inform family visitation plans and may not
share or otherwise distribute the information to any person or entity.
Any information provided to the department by law enforcement during
the consultation is considered investigative information and is exempt
from public inspection pursuant to RCW 42.56.240. The results of the
consultation shall be communicated to the court.
(D) The court and the department or supervising agency should rely
upon community resources, relatives, foster parents, and other
appropriate persons to provide transportation and supervision for
visitation to the extent that such resources are available, and
appropriate, and the child's safety would not be compromised.
(iii)(A) The department, court, or caregiver in the out-of-home
placement may not limit visitation or contact between a child and
sibling as a sanction for a child's behavior or as an incentive to the
child to change his or her behavior.
(B) Any exceptions, limitation, or denial of contacts or visitation
must be approved by the supervisor of the department caseworker and
documented. The child, parent, department, guardian ad litem, or
court-appointed special advocate may challenge the denial of visits in
court.
(iv) A child shall be placed as close to the child's home as
possible, preferably in the child's own neighborhood, unless the court
finds that placement at a greater distance is necessary to promote the
child's or parents' well-being.
(v) The plan shall state whether both in-state and, where
appropriate, out-of-state placement options have been considered by the
department or supervising agency.
(vi) Unless it is not in the best interests of the child, whenever
practical, the plan should ensure the child remains enrolled in the
school the child was attending at the time the child entered foster
care.
(vii) The supervising agency or department shall provide all
reasonable services that are available within the department or
supervising agency, or within the community, or those services which
the department has existing contracts to purchase. It shall report to
the court if it is unable to provide such services; and
(c) If the court has ordered, pursuant to RCW 13.34.130(8), that a
termination petition be filed, a specific plan as to where the child
will be placed, what steps will be taken to achieve permanency for the
child, services to be offered or provided to the child, and, if
visitation would be in the best interests of the child, a
recommendation to the court regarding visitation between parent and
child pending a fact-finding hearing on the termination petition. The
department or supervising agency shall not be required to develop a
plan of services for the parents or provide services to the parents if
the court orders a termination petition be filed. However, reasonable
efforts to ensure visitation and contact between siblings shall be made
unless there is reasonable cause to believe the best interests of the
child or siblings would be jeopardized.
(3) Permanency planning goals should be achieved at the earliest
possible date. If the child has been in out-of-home care for fifteen
of the most recent twenty-two months, and the court has not made a good
cause exception, the court shall require the department or supervising
agency to file a petition seeking termination of parental rights in
accordance with RCW 13.34.145(((3)))(4)(b)(vi). In cases where
parental rights have been terminated, the child is legally free for
adoption, and adoption has been identified as the primary permanency
planning goal, it shall be a goal to complete the adoption within six
months following entry of the termination order.
(4) If the court determines that the continuation of reasonable
efforts to prevent or eliminate the need to remove the child from his
or her home or to safely return the child home should not be part of
the permanency plan of care for the child, reasonable efforts shall be
made to place the child in a timely manner and to complete whatever
steps are necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
(5) The identified outcomes and goals of the permanency plan may
change over time based upon the circumstances of the particular case.
(6) The court shall consider the child's relationships with the
child's siblings in accordance with RCW 13.34.130(6). Whenever the
permanency plan for a child is adoption, the court shall encourage the
prospective adoptive parents, birth parents, foster parents, kinship
caregivers, and the department or other supervising agency to seriously
consider the long-term benefits to the child adoptee and his or her
siblings of providing for and facilitating continuing postadoption
contact between the siblings. To the extent that it is feasible, and
when it is in the best interests of the child adoptee and his or her
siblings, contact between the siblings should be frequent and of a
similar nature as that which existed prior to the adoption. If the
child adoptee or his or her siblings are represented by an attorney or
guardian ad litem in a proceeding under this chapter or in any other
child custody proceeding, the court shall inquire of each attorney and
guardian ad litem regarding the potential benefits of continuing
contact between the siblings and the potential detriments of severing
contact. This section does not require the department of social and
health services or other supervising agency to agree to any specific
provisions in an open adoption agreement and does not create a new
obligation for the department to provide supervision or transportation
for visits between siblings separated by adoption from foster care.
(7) For purposes related to permanency planning:
(a) "Guardianship" means a dependency guardianship or a legal
guardianship pursuant to chapter 11.88 RCW or equivalent laws of
another state or a federally recognized Indian tribe.
(b) "Permanent custody order" means a custody order entered
pursuant to chapter 26.10 RCW.
(c) "Permanent legal custody" means legal custody pursuant to
chapter 26.10 RCW or equivalent laws of another state or a federally
recognized Indian tribe.
Sec. 3 RCW 13.34.138 and 2009 c 520 s 29, 2009 c 491 s 3, 2009 c
397 s 4, and 2009 c 152 s 1 are each reenacted and amended to read as
follows:
(1) The status of all children found to be dependent shall be
reviewed by the court at least every six months from the beginning date
of the placement episode or the date dependency is established,
whichever is first. The purpose of the hearing shall be to review the
progress of the parties and determine whether court supervision should
continue.
(a) The initial review hearing shall be an in-court review and
shall be set six months from the beginning date of the placement
episode or no more than ninety days from the entry of the disposition
order, whichever comes first. The requirements for the initial review
hearing, including the in-court review requirement, shall be
accomplished within existing resources.
(b) The initial review hearing may be a permanency planning hearing
when necessary to meet the time frames set forth in RCW 13.34.145(1)(a)
or 13.34.134.
(2)(a) A child shall not be returned home at the review hearing
unless the court finds that a reason for removal as set forth in RCW
13.34.130 no longer exists. The parents, guardian, or legal custodian
shall report to the court the efforts they have made to correct the
conditions which led to removal. If a child is returned, casework
supervision by the supervising agency or department shall continue for
a period of six months, at which time there shall be a hearing on the
need for continued intervention.
(b) Prior to the child returning home, the department or
supervising agency must complete the following:
(i) Identify all adults residing in the home and conduct background
checks on those persons;
(ii) Identify any persons who may act as a caregiver for the child
in addition to the parent with whom the child is being placed and
determine whether such persons are in need of any services in order to
ensure the safety of the child, regardless of whether such persons are
a party to the dependency. The department or supervising agency may
recommend to the court and the court may order that placement of the
child in the parent's home be contingent on or delayed based on the
need for such persons to engage in or complete services to ensure the
safety of the child prior to placement. If services are recommended
for the caregiver, and the caregiver fails to engage in or follow
through with the recommended services, the department or supervising
agency must promptly notify the court; and
(iii) Notify the parent with whom the child is being placed that he
or she has an ongoing duty to notify the department or supervising
agency of all persons who reside in the home or who may act as a
caregiver for the child both prior to the placement of the child in the
home and subsequent to the placement of the child in the home as long
as the court retains jurisdiction of the dependency proceeding or the
department is providing or monitoring either remedial services to the
parent or services to ensure the safety of the child to any caregivers.
Caregivers may be required to engage in services under this
subsection solely for the purpose of ensuring the present and future
safety of a child who is a ward of the court. This subsection does not
grant party status to any individual not already a party to the
dependency proceeding, create an entitlement to services or a duty on
the part of the department or supervising agency to provide services,
or create judicial authority to order the provision of services to any
person other than for the express purposes of this section or RCW
13.34.025 or if the services are unavailable or unsuitable or the
person is not eligible for such services.
(c) If the child is not returned home, the court shall establish in
writing:
(i) Whether the supervising agency or the department is making
reasonable efforts to provide services to the family and eliminate the
need for placement of the child. If additional services, including
housing assistance, are needed to facilitate the return of the child to
the child's parents, the court shall order that reasonable services be
offered specifying such services;
(ii) Whether there has been compliance with the case plan by the
child, the child's parents, and the agency supervising the placement;
(iii) Whether progress has been made toward correcting the problems
that necessitated the child's placement in out-of-home care;
(iv) Whether the services set forth in the case plan and the
responsibilities of the parties need to be clarified or modified due to
the availability of additional information or changed circumstances;
(v) Whether there is a continuing need for placement;
(vi) Whether a parent's homelessness or lack of suitable housing is
a significant factor delaying permanency for the child by preventing
the return of the child to the home of the child's parent and whether
housing assistance should be provided by the department or supervising
agency;
(vii) Whether the child is in an appropriate placement which
adequately meets all physical, emotional, and educational needs;
(viii) Whether preference has been given to placement with the
child's relatives if such placement is in the child's best interests;
(ix) Whether both in-state and, where appropriate, out-of-state
placements have been considered;
(x) Whether the parents have visited the child and any reasons why
visitation has not occurred or has been infrequent;
(xi) Whether terms of visitation need to be modified;
(xii) Whether the court-approved long-term permanent plan for the
child remains the best plan for the child;
(xiii) Whether any additional court orders need to be made to move
the case toward permanency; ((and))
(xiv) The projected date by which the child will be returned home
or other permanent plan of care will be implemented; and
(xv) Whether active efforts are necessary to assist a parent with
either an intellectual or developmental disability or both in
compliance and progress with the case plan. Active efforts as applied
to parents with either an intellectual or developmental disability or
both is defined as a showing to the court that the department has
actively worked with the parent or parents pursuant to existing court
orders and the individual services plan to engage them in remedial
services and rehabilitative programs to prevent the breakup of the
family beyond simply providing referrals to such services.
(d) The court at the review hearing may order that a petition
seeking termination of the parent and child relationship be filed.
(3)(a) In any case in which the court orders that a dependent child
may be returned to or remain in the child's home, the in-home placement
shall be contingent upon the following:
(i) The compliance of the parents with court orders related to the
care and supervision of the child, including compliance with the
supervising agency's case plan; and
(ii) The continued participation of the parents, if applicable, in
available substance abuse or mental health treatment if substance abuse
or mental illness was a contributing factor to the removal of the
child.
(b) The following may be grounds for removal of the child from the
home, subject to review by the court:
(i) Noncompliance by the parents with the department's or
supervising agency's case plan or court order;
(ii) The parent's inability, unwillingness, or failure to
participate in available services or treatment for themselves or the
child, including substance abuse treatment if a parent's substance
abuse was a contributing factor to the abuse or neglect; or
(iii) The failure of the parents to successfully and substantially
complete available services or treatment for themselves or the child,
including substance abuse treatment if a parent's substance abuse was
a contributing factor to the abuse or neglect.
(c) In a pending dependency case in which the court orders that a
dependent child may be returned home and that child is later removed
from the home, the court shall hold a review hearing within thirty days
from the date of removal to determine whether the permanency plan
should be changed, a termination petition should be filed, or other
action is warranted. The best interests of the child shall be the
court's primary consideration in the review hearing.
(4) The court's authority to order housing assistance under this
chapter is: (a) Limited to cases in which a parent's homelessness or
lack of suitable housing is a significant factor delaying permanency
for the child and housing assistance would aid the parent in providing
an appropriate home for the child; and (b) subject to the availability
of funds appropriated for this specific purpose. Nothing in this
chapter shall be construed to create an entitlement to housing
assistance nor to create judicial authority to order the provision of
such assistance to any person or family if the assistance or funding
are unavailable or the child or family are not eligible for such
assistance.
(5) The court shall consider the child's relationship with siblings
in accordance with RCW 13.34.130(((3)))(6).