Contra Costa County Social Services Department v. Darlene G.

74 Cal. App. 4th 198
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 12, 1999
DocketNo. A084637
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 Cal. App. 4th 198 (Contra Costa County Social Services Department v. Darlene G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Contra Costa County Social Services Department v. Darlene G., 74 Cal. App. 4th 198 (Cal. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Opinion

LAMBDEN, J.

Darlene G. (mother) appeals from an order after a hearing under Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26 (hereafter .26 hearing) terminating her parental rights in daughter Janee J. (Janee) and selecting adoption as the permanent plan. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 39.1 A.)1 We reject her contentions and affirm the judgment.

Background

Janee was born on May 10, 1997, with cocaine and marijuana in her system. Mother tested positive for cocaine and admitted cocaine use during the pregnancy. A petition filed by the Contra Costa County Social Services Department (department) on May 13 alleged dependency for lack of care (§ 300, subd. (b)) and for sibling abuse (id., subd. (j)) based on the drag presence, mother’s admission, former dependency status for two half [203]*203brothers (now ages three and eight), and a history of drug use by both mother and the father. Janee was detained; mother was present at the hearing and was served with the order.

Petitions were also filed as to each sibling; those are not part of our record but are referred to as having had nearly identical allegations. At a jurisdictional hearing on June 4, 1997, with mother attending and represented by Public Defender Marita Mayer, a negotiated settlement was reached on all three. For Janee’s petition, allegations of mother’s and Janee’s positive tests for cocaine, plus the father’s drug use history, were sustained (§ 300, subds. (b) & (j)), and all others were dismissed. Mother agreed, despite dismissal of an allegation of her impaired ability to provide due to a drug problem, to comply with an anticipated drug program and testing component of a plan to be ordered at disposition. For the sibling petitions, there was a similar dismissal of all but the two allegations of cocaine testing, which were sustained. Only Janee was detained; the sons remained in mother’s residence, which was the home of their great-great-grandmother, Ella W., who helped care for the sons. The father did not live with them. Counsel for mother said at the close of the hearing that she would contact the social worker right away about mother’s getting started on a plan, given that mother was waiving time on the dispositional hearing.

The joint dispositional hearing was held on August 13, but mother had made no progress. She had missed visits, had not begun drug testing, and was not present for the hearing, although her counsel was. The court followed a recommendation of continued foster care for Janee with a reunification plan, and in-home care for the siblings, with a family maintenance plan. The two plans were virtually the same, each calling for a drug treatment program, random drug testing, Narcotics Anonymous, and cooperation with the department. Owing to mutual past violence with the father, mother was also required to refrain from such violence. For Janee, of course, she had to maintain regular visits and establish a positive relationship. Her drug use was ongoing. Relative placement was being considered with maternal grandmother, Adrienne G., who expressed an intent to move into the Ella W. household, but an investigation by the department left unresolved concerns whether she would actually live and care for Janee there, and about her live-together male partner of six years, who had prior arrests. The dispositional report noted that mother had shown in the past that, “with the support of helpful family members, including her mother,” she could provide adequate care for the older children “despite her habitual drug use.” The department was concerned, however, that she could not do so for Janee, who was fragile due to tender age and drug withdrawal symptoms. Janee was six weeks old and weighed ten pounds. She had tremors, vomiting, excessive [204]*204. crying, waking every few hours, and frequent colds. An experienced foster mother was using swaddling and massage to help, but Janee was being referred to a special program “for assessment and treatment of possible developmental problems.” The reunification plan was put into effect, and the court (and counsel for the minor) stressed a need to warn the parents of their limited time to reunify—six months for Janee and twelve for the others—but noted that neither parent was present in court.

A six-month review was noticed for February 4, 1998. Mother did not appear, but her counsel—now James Jordan from the alternative defender’s office—did. Mother also failed to appear on February 18, but her counsel was granted a continuance to review discovery. The review report noted that, despite repeated referrals by social workers and urgings to get started quickly in drug treatment, mother had never begun a program. Her drug use was ongoing, and she had admitted chronic use of cocaine since 1988. At three unannounced visits to the home, she had not seemed to be under the influence and was caring for her sons appropriately, but she refused to have drug tests. She had not made visits at the social services office and had requested none; a social worker had transported Janee to her home once at Christmastime. Janee remained in emergency foster care, still displaying drug withdrawal symptoms like tremors, frequent waking, crying, colds, and “arching-throwing herself back as you hold her.” Mother claimed she was no longer “in a relationship with domestic violence.” The report recommended continuing the reunification plan, and a supplemental letter of February 1998 explained that more time was being requested because, due to multiple changes in the assigned social worker, services offered for the first two months following disposition had not, in the department’s view, been adequate. The current social worker, however, had been assigned since mid-October of 1997, and services from then on had been adequate. The department asked for a further review after two more months of services.

The review hearing commenced on March 4, 1998, with mother represented by counsel (Michael Kelly) but, again, not present herself. The court honored the request and recommendation. It found the first months of services inadequate, with services after then adequate, found that the parents had not complied with their plans, and set another hearing for April 29. Mother failed to appear on that date, too, and the matter was continued twice, once to receive a late report.

The hearing was held on May 26, over seven months since the start of adequate services and more than nine months since the disposition. Mother again did not appear. The new report plus testimony by case worker Nance Dehring showed no further compliance by mother. Mother had not visited [205]*205Janee since the Christmastime visit, and Dehring had last had contact with mother on February 11, 1998 (apparently an unannounced home visit), when they discussed her lack of plan compliance. Dehring had since mailed a letter to the home, personally visited three times, and left cards and test forms asking for a return call. She had made several referrals to drag programs, without success, and mother still refused to drag test. While there was no particular evidence of drag use, the refusal to drug test meant the department was not “able to collect evidence that she’s not using drags . . . .” The department contemplated filing a supplemental petition for the siblings. While they had appeared adequately cared for with the assistance of other adults in the house, mother was making no further contact. Janee, meanwhile, was doing well in foster care “and only occasionally . . . showing the startle response and shrill cry due to her mother’s cocaine use during pregnancy.”

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Related

In Re Janee J.
87 Cal. Rptr. 2d 634 (California Court of Appeal, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
74 Cal. App. 4th 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/contra-costa-county-social-services-department-v-darlene-g-calctapp-1999.