Dependency Of D.f.-s. Lo Saelee v. Dshs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 2, 2017
Docket76150-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dependency Of D.f.-s. Lo Saelee v. Dshs (Dependency Of D.f.-s. Lo Saelee v. Dshs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dependency Of D.f.-s. Lo Saelee v. Dshs, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON In the Matter of the Dependency of ) ) No. 76150-1-1 D.F.-S., ) DOB: 03/29/2004, ) DIVISION ONE ) Minor Child. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND ) HEALTH SERVICES, ) ) -4 > p". Respondent, ) ) •; V. ) ) D> ru Mai (1)111 L.S., ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: October 2, 2017 cn )

TRICKEY, J. — Following successive dependencies during which L.S. made little progress with services, the superior court terminated his parental rights to his son, D.F.-

S. L.S. appeals, arguing the Department of Social and Health Services (Department)

failed to satisfy the statutory prerequisites to termination. Because the Department met

its burden, we affirm.

FACTS

Pretrial History

L.S. is the biological father of D.F.-S, born March 29, 2004. In 2005, the

Department learned that D.F.-S.'s parents left him with inappropriate caregivers. His

mother voluntarily engaged in services and D.F.-S. was returned to her care.

In 2007, the Department learned that D.F.-S.'s parents were leaving him

unsupervised and that drug charges were pending against L.S. The Department removed No. 76150-1-1 / 2

D.F.-S. and the parents entered agreed orders of dependency. The order relating to L.S.

required him to participate in parenting classes, a substance abuse evaluation, and

random urinalysis (UAs). He participated in a substance abuse evaluation but by 2009

was no longer complying with services. The court dismissed the dependency, however,

because D.F.-S.'s mother made sufficient progress to return him to her care.

In July 2013, the Department again removed D.F.-S. because his parents had

abandoned him. A family friend who retrieved D.F.-S. described the home as "filthy with

cat feces... and spoiled food and garbage on the floors and counters." The Department

filed and served another dependency petition. L.S., however, did not participate in the

early stages of the proceedings. He told the Department he was mourning the death of

his eldest son "and could not care for [D.F.-S.]"2

In September 2013, the court entered default orders of dependency as to both

parents. The order relating to L.S. alleged in part as follows:

2. The mother and father continue to show a pattern of relapsing and being inconsistent in the child's life. The current caregiver reports that this is the fifth time that she has had [D.F.-S.] in her care and that each time he becomes more withdrawn and detached. She further describes him as "desensitized" to the absence of his parents and increasingly unaffectionate. In addition to the vulnerability that his age presents, [D.F.- S.'s] primary caretaker, his brother Brandon Williams, was shot and killed in May, 2013.

3. The mother and father have extensive Child Protective Services(CPS) history. . .. • • •

Clerk's Papers(CP) at 272(Findings of Fact(FF)2.3.3). 2 CP at 273(FF 2.4).

2 No. 76150-1-1 / 3

5. On 7/3/13,[L.S.] told the Department that he was in mourning and could not care for his son at this time. [He] has not seen his son since 6/12/13. [He] did not deny his current use of crack cocaine.

6. On 7/8/13, [the mother] attended a Family Team Decision Making Meeting (FTDM). . . . Mother refused to do a UA and later admitted to actively using crack cocaine.[L.S.] did not attend the FTDM.

7. [The parents] pattern of behavior shows a serious disregard for the consequences to [D.F.-S.] of such magnitude that it creates a clear and present danger to the child's health, welfare and safety. The family situation results in no adults in the home performing child [c]are duties and responsibilities to assure the child's safety.13]

The order required L.S. to complete a drug and alcohol evaluation "within 30 days" and

follow any recommended treatment, submit to random UAs,and schedule a psychological

evaluation with a parenting component "within 30 days" and initiate all recommended

treatment "promptly."

During the following two and a half years, dependency review and permanency

planning orders indicated that L.S. was not complying with services or making progress.

In February 2015, L.S. entered the King County Jail on a charge of possessing

cocaine. In June 2015, he pleaded guilty and remained in the jail until his transfer to the

Washington Corrections Center in Shelton in October 2015. In December 2015, the

Department transferred him to the Cedar Creek Correctional Facility. He is eligible for

work release in June 2018.

In March 2016, a permanency planning order indicated that L.S. had completed a

drug/alcohol assessment while incarcerated.

3 Ex. 1 Ex. 1. No. 76150-1-1 /4

In April 2016, the Department filed a petition to terminate both parents' parental

rights. The petition alleged that neither parent had complied with service requirements or

remedied their parental deficiencies. Trial commenced in October 2016.

Trial Testimony

Social worker Alyssa Livingston testified that she was assigned to D.F.-S.'s

dependency in the fall of 2013. According to Livingston, the parents, who were homeless,

abandoned D.F.-S. at a funeral for L.S.'s eldest son and "disappeared for weeks" without

leaving any contact information.5

Livingston testified that L.S. did not appear at the initial Family Team Decision

Making meeting. The mother attended the meeting and admitted that she and L.S. were

using crack cocaine.

L.S. did not contact Livingston until April 2014. Livingston provided him a copy of

the dependency order and tried to explain his services and visitation rules. L.S. angrily

threw the dependency order at Livingston and said "that essentially he wasn't going to do

anything and he felt like this was unnecessary."6 He then "stormed out of the room and

returned only to sign the visitation rules.7 Livingston testified that she offered L.S. his

court-ordered services, but he "was not interested in doing UAs or a psychological

evaluation. The only thing he was interested . . . in doing [was] the drug and alcohol

evaluation."5 Livingston said she stressed "the importance of keeping in communication

5 2 Report of Proceedings(RP)at 164. 62 RP at 156. 7 2 RP at 156. 8 2 RP at 174-75.

4 No. 76150-1-1 / 5

so that [she would] know what services they might be doing and . . . so we can do

visitation" but the parents left invalid contact information.9 L.S. "didn't remain in contact"

or engage in any services."

When asked if L.S. ever contacted her after their initial meeting, Livingston said he

came by on another occasion and told her he would get an alcohol evaluation at the Indian

Health Board. "[B]ut beyond that there was no conversation or anything about him

following through with the recommended services."11 Livingston and L.S. agreed that

since no referral was necessary for the Indian Health Board service, L.S. would initiate

that service on his own and notify Livingston when it was completed. Livingston did not

believe L.S. could safely parent D.F.-S. without addressing his substance abuse.

Livingston testified that L.S. only requested one visit with D.F.-S. while she was

assigned to the case. That visit occurred in May 2015.

Pamela Rago,the second caseworker assigned to D.F.-S.'s dependency, replaced

Livingston in September 2015. At that time, L.S. was incarcerated in the King County

Jail.

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