Department of Human Services v. T. M. M.

273 P.3d 322, 248 Or. App. 352, 2012 WL 758906, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 29, 2012
Docket09J5718; Petition Number 04J5718; A147854; 09J5719; Petition Number 04J5719; A147855; 09J5720; Petition Number 04J5720; A147856; 09J5721; Petition Number 04J5721; A147857; 09J5722; Petition Number 02J5722; A147858
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 273 P.3d 322 (Department of Human Services v. T. M. M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Services v. T. M. M., 273 P.3d 322, 248 Or. App. 352, 2012 WL 758906, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 255 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*356 WOLLHEIM, J.

Mother appeals judgments terminating her parental rights with respect to five of her children: N, C, G, L, and W. She argues that, whatever her history of opiate dependence and resulting neglect, she was not unfit to parent as of the time of the termination hearing. She further argues that the Department of Human Services (DHS) failed to present child-specific evidence that N, C, G, L, and W, whose ages at the time of the termination hearing ranged from 13 to 2, could not be reintegrated into her home within a reasonable time. On de novo review, ORS 19.415(3)(a), we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts 1

1. Family history with child welfare agencies

Mother and father have six children together, five of whom — N, C, G, L, and W — are the subject of these termination proceedings; their sixth child, B, was born during the course of the termination hearing. In January 2008, the family (other than W and B, who were not yet born) were living in Indiana. The Indiana Department of Child Services (DCS) received a report that father had been arrested, that mother had warrants out for her arrest, and that the family’s home was unsuitable for children. A DCS case manager, Vieck, went to the home on the day of the report, but no one was there. The family’s landlord let Vieck into the home, and she found it to be in complete disarray — clothes and trash scattered throughout; mouse feces on the countertops; and mice living in piles of laundry. At that point, Vieck tried to locate the family but was notified the following day that mother had been arrested. The children, Vieck learned, were living with their maternal great aunt in a nearby city. The aunt herself *357 had a history with DCS — a substantiated sexual abuse allegation with regard to one of the aunt’s children — and DCS removed the children and placed them in foster care.

Mother’s parenting difficulties in Indiana stemmed from what was, by 2008, a longstanding addiction to opiates. Mother first used opiates after a gall bladder surgery in 2001, and later used pain medications in connection with various other health problems. But mother also turned to opiate use to deal with the stress of her conflicts with father, her relationship with her family, and financial pressures. By 2005, mother was using opiates on a daily basis, and was diverting a significant percentage of the family’s scarce resources to her drug habit; in fact, while in Indiana, mother’s addiction reached the point at which she was trading sex for drugs. 2

In July 2008, DCS returned the children to mother and father. Shortly after the children were returned, two of them suffered serious injuries; L, the youngest at that time, severely burned her hands on the oven and was taken to the emergency room, and N, their oldest, required stitches after getting into father’s tools and cutting himself with a knife. Nonetheless — and despite concerns on the part of service providers that mother was continuing to abuse opiates — DCS closed its case on the family in December 2008.

In January 2009, the family (now including W) moved to Astoria, Oregon, so that mother could be closer to her family and father could pursue an employment opportunity that never materialized. They left behind all of their belongings, taking, in father’s words, only the clothes on their backs. They had no plans for suitable housing. The seven of them initially stayed in a two-bedroom apartment with three of mother’s family members. At some point during that stay, L suffered another severe burn — purportedly from hot water from the tap or water from a pot on the stove. The blister from the burn covered the back of L’s hand, but mother, fearing *358 that hospital personnel would report the injury to DHS, elected to treat it at home.

Mother also found herself unable to escape opiate addiction. After moving to Oregon, mother routinely engaged in drug-seeking behavior at emergency rooms and urgent care clinics. Between January 2009 and August 2010, mother sought urgent care on more than 30 occasions, sometimes appearing at different hospitals and clinics on the same date. Mother often complained of dental pain and, despite being repeatedly advised to visit a dentist or local doctor, reappeared in emergency rooms and medical clinics seeking opiates for the same dental pain. On other occasions, mother complained of pain levels that doctors described as disproportionate to what they would expect from her exams, and mother became hostile with medical professionals who refused to prescribe her pain medications. When she was not able to obtain pain medication, she went into withdrawal, had difficulty getting out of bed, and was unable to parent.

In March 2009, the family moved into their own two-bedroom apartment. Thereafter, on March 16, mother and father had an intense argument that began, according to father, because members of mother’s family had left baggies of methamphetamine on the floor of the apartment where children could reach them. Mother, in the course of the dispute, cut her own wrist with a razor blade. Police responded and took mother to the hospital, where she was placed on a “mental health hold.”

The police subsequently contacted DHS about possible drug use and child neglect by mother and father. (On the night that mother cut herself, father told police that mother was spending $100 per day on prescription narcotics and had been drinking excessively.) While DHS was investigating that referral, mother was arrested in Seaside for shoplifting lunch meat and a can of baby formula. A few days later, mother and father failed to show up for urinalyses that they had agreed to provide. The following day, a DHS investigator attempted to deliver a playpen for W to sleep in, but no one was home. The investigator made phone contact, however, with one of the family’s friends, who had been trying to help the family obtain furniture for their apartment. The *359 friend reported concerns to the investigator that mother was abusing prescription medication and was “high when she was around the kids.” On March 26,2009, DHS removed the children from the home and placed them in foster care.

2. Children’s behavior and needs

Mother does not dispute that her substance abuse and consequent neglect were seriously detrimental to her children. Mother and father’s oldest child, N, had just turned 12 at the time he was placed in foster care in Oregon. He was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and “adjustment disorder with disturbance of conduct,” and was provisionally diagnosed with “disorder of written expression.” He also exhibited “parentified” behavior. Beth Erickson, one of the social workers who provided mental health services to the children, explained that “parentified” behavior results when parents fail to meet their children’s basic needs, thereby causing the children to step into the role of parent.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P.3d 322, 248 Or. App. 352, 2012 WL 758906, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-services-v-t-m-m-orctapp-2012.