Title: DO THE RIGHT THING!
1DO THE RIGHT THING!
- The History and Purpose of the Review
2Key Principlesof the Review
- RESOURCE GUIDELINES -Improving Court Practice in
Child Abuse and Neglect Cases - published by the National Council of Juvenile and
Family Court Judges - Reno, Nevada
3Permanency for Children
- Permanent homes, permanency, for children is the
fundamental principle behind the Adoption
Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980. - Statutory provisions designed to achieve
permanency are based on several widely accepted
principles of child development.
4Permanency for Children
- Not enough to protect children from immediate
harm - Emotional impact of separation must be taken into
account - Ensure that children are brought up in stable,
permanent families, rather than in temporary and
unstable foster placements
5Stable Caregivers
- Children need secure and uninterrupted emotional
relationships with adults who are responsible for
their care. - Repeatedly disrupted placements and relationships
can interfere with a childs ability to form
close emotional relationships after reaching
maturity.
6Permanent Family
- Foster care, with its inherent instability and
impermanence, can impose great stress on a child - Weathering the normal situational changes of
childhood in a permanent family enables a child
to envision a more secure future
7Family Superior to the State
- Parents are likely to be capable of making the
best, most timely decisions for a child - Decision-making concerning a child in foster care
can often be fragmented and inconsistent
8Protecting without Removing
- Preventing unnecessary removal helps to preserve
the constitutional right of families to be free
from unwarranted state interference - To prevent unnecessary removal, the state must
take strong, affirmative steps to assist families
- Federal law requires reasonable efforts to
prevent the necessity of foster placement
9Reunification
- Achieving permanent homes for abused and
neglected children also includes working toward
the reunification of families - States must make reasonable efforts to bring
about the safe reunification of children and
their families
10Reunification Not Feasible
- When reunification is not feasible, the search
for a new, permanent home for the child
supersedes that as a goal - Federal law makes it clear that permanent homes
are to be arranged within a reasonable time.
11Purpose of the Review
- Ensure that cases progress and that children
spend as short a time as possible in temporary
placement - Keep cases moving toward successful completion
- Identify inadequacies in the States response
12Purpose of the Review
- Create incentives for the State to make decisions
concerning the permanent status of a child - When the review hearing is challenging and
demanding, greater consideration is given - Create a valuable record of the actions of the
parents and the State
13Purpose of the Review
- Helps a case progress by requiring the parties to
set timetables, take specific action, and make
decisions - Provide a forum for the parents
- Help assure that a parents viewpoint is
considered in case planning
14Purpose of the Review
- Re-examine long-term case goals and change any
which are no longer appropriate - Identify cases in which reunification should not
be the goal because a child cannot safely be
returned home in a timely fashion
15WARNING!
- Reviews can malfunction as a rubber stamp of the
State recommendations or produce arbitrary
decisions based on inadequate information.
16Issues for Reviews
- Case plans failing to clearly specify what each
party must do - Case plans which fail to adequately document
- Case plans developed solely by State staff,
without the collaboration of parents or the
child.
17Issues for Reviews
- When caseloads are high, cases may be neglected
- If things are going smoothly, appropriate
attention may not be paid - Unnecessarily restricting visits, accelerating
breakdown of the parent-child relationship
18Citizen Reviews
- The best alternative or complement to judicial
review is review by panels of judicially
appointed citizen volunteers. - Members of citizen review panels should be
carefully recruited, screened, trained and
supervised by court personnel. - A professional staff person should be present at
all panel reviews.
19Federal Law
20Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980
- Purpose
- To establish a program of adoption assistance,
strengthen the program of foster care assistance
for needy and dependent children, and improve the
child welfare, social services, and aid to
families with dependent children programs - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
21Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980
- Required that States make reasonable efforts
to prevent removal of the child from the home and
return those who have been removed as soon as
possible - Required participating States to establish
reunification and preventive programs for all in
foster care - Required the State to place a child in the least
restrictive setting and, if the child will
benefit, one that is close to the parents home -
- Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
22Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980
- Required the court or agency to review the status
of a child in any nonpermanent setting every 6
months to determine what is in the best interest
of the child, with most emphasis placed on
returning the child home as soon as possible - Required the court or administrative body to
determine the childs future status, whether it
is a return to parents, adoption, or continued
foster care, within 18 months after initial
placement into foster care - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
23Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
- Purpose
- To promote the adoption of children in foster
care - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
24Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
- Promoted adoptions
- Required States to use reasonable efforts to move
eligible foster care children towards permanent
placements - Promoted adoptions of all special needs children
and ensured health coverage for adopted special
needs children - Required States to document and report
child-specific adoption efforts - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
25Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
- Required shorter time limits for making decisions
about permanent placements - Required permanency hearings to be held no later
than 12 months after entering foster care - Required States to initiate termination of
parental rights proceedings after the child has
been in foster care15 of the previous 22 months,
except if not in the best interest of the child,
or if the child is in the care of a relative - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
26Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
- Clarified reasonable efforts
- Emphasized childrens health and safety
- Required States to specify situations when
services to prevent foster placement and
reunification of families are not required - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
27Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
- Clarified reasonable efforts
- In determining reasonable efforts, the childs
health and safety shall be the paramount concern. - If the court determines that reunification is not
the permanent plan, the court must determine that
reasonable efforts are being made to secure a
permanent home for the child. - Child Welfare Information Gateway
- Childrens Bureau/ACYF
28Social Security Act Sec. 471 (a) (15)
- (A) in determining reasonable efforts to be made
with respect to a child, as described in this
paragraph, and in making such reasonable efforts,
the child's health and safety shall be the
paramount concern
29Social Security Act Sec. 471 (a) (15)
- (B) except as provided in subparagraph (D),
reasonable efforts shall be made to preserve and
reunify families - prior to the placement of a child in foster care,
to prevent or eliminate the need for removing the
child from the child's home and - to make it possible for a child to safely return
to the child's home
30Social Security Act Sec. 471 (a) (15)
- (C) if continuation of reasonable efforts of the
type described in subparagraph (B) is determined
to be inconsistent with the permanency plan for
the child, reasonable efforts shall be made to
place the child in a timely manner in accordance
with the permanency plan (including, if
appropriate, through an interstate placement) and
to complete whatever steps are necessary to
finalize the permanent placement of the child
31State Law
32ORS 419A.116 (1)
- After reviewing each case, the local citizen
review board shall make written findings and
recommendations with respect to - Whether reasonable efforts were made prior to the
placement, to prevent or eliminate the need for
removal of the child or ward from the home
33ORS 419A.116 (1)
- (b) If the case plan at the time of the review is
to reunify the family, whether the Department of
Human Services has made reasonable efforts or, if
the Indian Child Welfare Act applies, active
efforts to make it possible for the child or ward
to safely return home and whether the parent has
made sufficient progress to make it possible for
the child or ward to safely return home
34ORS 419A.116 (1)
- (c) If the case plan at the time of the review is
something other than to reunify the family,
whether the department has made reasonable
efforts to place the child or ward in a timely
manner in accordance with the case plan,
including, if appropriate, placement of the child
or ward through an interstate placement, and to
complete the steps necessary to finalize the
permanent placement of the child or ward
35ORS 419B.340 (1)
- If the court awards custody to the Department of
Human Services, the court shall include in the
disposition order a determination whether the
department has made reasonable efforts or, if the
Indian Child Welfare Act applies, active efforts
to prevent or eliminate the need for removal of
the ward from the home.
36ORS 419B.476 (2)
- At a permanency hearing the court shall
- If the case plan at the time of the hearing is to
reunify the family, determine whether the
Department of Human Services has made reasonable
efforts or, if the Indian Child Welfare Act
applies, active efforts to make it possible for
the ward to safely return home
37ORS 419B.476 (2)
- (b) If the case plan at the time of the hearing
is something other than to reunify the family,
determine whether the department has made
reasonable efforts to place the ward in a timely
manner in accordance with the plan, including, if
appropriate, reasonable efforts to place the ward
through an interstate placement, and to complete
the steps necessary to finalize the permanent
placement.
38Reasonable efforts
39Federal Regulations
- Child Welfare Policy Manual
- Administration for Children and Families
40Definition
- Not defined - to do so would be a direct
contradiction of the intent of the law. - The statute requires that determinations be made
on a case-by-case basis. - Any definition would either limit the courts'
ability to make determinations on a case-by-case
basis or be so broad as to be ineffective.
41Guidelines
- In determining whether reasonable efforts were
made - (1) Would the child's health or safety have been
compromised had the agency attempted to maintain
him or her at home? - (2) Was the service plan customized to the
individual needs of the family or was it a
standard package of services?
42Guidelines
- In determining whether reasonable efforts were
made - (3) Did the agency provide services to ameliorate
factors present in the child or parent, i.e.,
physical, emotional, or psychological, that would
inhibit a parent's ability to maintain the child
safely at home? - (4) Do limitations exist with respect to service
availability, including transportation issues? If
so, what efforts did the agency undertake to
overcome these obstacles?
43Guidelines
- In determining whether reasonable efforts were
made - (5) Are the State agency's activities associated
with making and finalizing an alternate permanent
placement consistent with the permanency goal?
For example, if the permanency goal is adoption,
has the agency filed for termination of parental
rights, listed the child on State and national
adoption exchanges, or implemented child-specific
recruitment activities?
44Guidelines
- The legislative history makes the point that the
required judicial determinations should not
become "...a mere pro forma exercise in paper
shuffling to obtain Federal funding..." (pg.
4056, 65 Fed. Reg.).
45Oregon Case Law
- REASONABLE EFFORTS TO REUNIFY IN DEPENDENCY CASES
- The Oregon Child Advocacy Project
- Professor Leslie J. Harris, Laura Althouse,
Farron Lennon and David Sherbo-Huggins - Last updated August 2009
46Oregon Case Law
- The type and sufficiency of efforts that the
state is required to make and whether the types
of actions it requires parents to make are
reasonable depends on the particular - circumstances." State ex rel. SOSCF v. Frazier,
152 Or. App. 568, 955 P.2d 272 (1998).
47Oregon Case Law
- The plan must be based on the familys needs and
its resources to change and must include the
perspective of the ward and family, ORS
419B.343(1)(b). See also State ex rel. SOSCF v.
Hammons, 170 Or. App. 287, 300-02, 12 P.3d 983
(2000) (reasonable efforts must be tailored to
the facts of each case). To the extent possible,
the family must be allowed to assist in designing
the service program. Id.
48Oregon Case Law
- When DHS has employed a consultant to evaluate
the parent, child or both and to make
recommendations, it ordinarily should provide the
services that the consultant recommends State
ex rel. SOSCF v. Hammons, 170 Or. App. 287,
300-02, 12 P.3d 983 (2000).
49Oregon Case Law
- Under some circumstances the reasonable efforts
obligation may mean that the agency must pay.
For example, in State ex rel. SOSCF v. Burke, 164
Or. App. 178, 990 P.2d 922 (1999), the court held
that , the state had to pay for the service.
50Oregon Case Law
- When services are provided, parents must be
given sufficient time to learn the new skills and
correct the problems. The Court of Appeals
recently held that a permanency plan should not
have been changed from reunification to
termination of parental rights because the
parents had not been given enough time to
implement what they had learned State ex rel.
DHS v. Shugars, 208 Or. App. 694, 717-18, 145
P.3d 354 (2006).
51Oregon Case Law
- DHS has an ongoing obligation to monitor and
adapt the treatment plan, particularly to respond
to significant changes in the parents situation
In State ex rel. Dept. of Human Services v
H.S.C., 218 Or. App. 415, 427 n. 2, 180 P.3d 39,
46 (2008) - When fundamental facts relevant to family
reunification are significantly different during
the assessment period (prior to the permanency
hearing) from those that existed when the case
plan was formulated and the service agreement was
struck, , it may be necessary to modify the plan
and service agreement to reflect those changes in
circumstances in order for DHS to satisfy its
obligation to make reasonable efforts
52Oregon Case Law
- In State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Williams, 204 Or.
App. 496, 130 P.3d 801(2006), The court
observed that DHS is not excused from making
reasonable efforts solely because a parent is
incarcerated and that what was reasonable for
such a parent depended on the circumstances.
53Oregon Case Law
- In State ex rel. Dept. of Human Services v
H.S.C., 218 Or. App. 415, 427, 180 P.3d 39
(2008), the court of appeals reversed a trial
court holding that DHS had made reasonable
efforts on behalf of a father who was detained by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement as an
undocumented alien The court said, the mere
detention of the parent does not excuse the state
from making reasonable efforts by inquiry and
arranging the services that might be available
under the circumstances.
54Oregon Case Law
- Reasonable efforts should be evaluated by asking
whether the services offered - are designed to solve the problems that caused
the court to find the child dependent - are tailored to the specific strengths and needs
of the family, rather than being standardized - specify appropriate, timely, and effective
services that the agency will provide - afford the parents a reasonable amount of time to
adjust their conduct and - are changed when fundamental facts relevant to
family reunification change, as when a parent is
incarcerated, detained, or deported.