FAUQUIER CO. DEPT. SOC. SERV. v. Robinson

455 S.E.2d 734, 20 Va. App. 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 4, 1995
DocketRecord No. 0690-94-4
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 455 S.E.2d 734 (FAUQUIER CO. DEPT. SOC. SERV. v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FAUQUIER CO. DEPT. SOC. SERV. v. Robinson, 455 S.E.2d 734, 20 Va. App. 142 (Va. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

455 S.E.2d 734 (1995)
20 Va. App. 142

FAUQUIER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Fauquier County Community Policy and Management Team, Fauquier County School Board, Fauquier Family Guidance Services, and Fauquier County Family Assessment and Planning Team,
v.
Timothy Elliott ROBINSON and Charlene Banks Robinson.

Record No. 0690-94-4.

Court of Appeals of Virginia, Alexandria.

April 4, 1995.

*735 Kevin J. Burke, Deputy Fauquier County Atty. (Paul S. McCulla, Fauquier County Atty.; Fauquier County Attorney's Office, on briefs), for appellants.

Sandra L. Havrilak, Fairfax (Marlene M. Hahn, Havrilak & Hahn, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Present: WILLIS, BRAY and FITZPATRICK, JJ.

FITZPATRICK, Judge.

The Fauquier County Department of Social Services, the Fauquier County Community Policy and Management Team, the Fauquier County School Board, Fauquier Family Guidance Services, and the Fauquier County Family Assessment and Planning Team (appellants) appeal the placement of Timothy and Charlene Robinson's daughter in a residential treatment facility. Appellants argue that: (1) the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to hear the parents' petition seeking residential treatment for their daughter; (2) the parents failed to exhaust required administrative remedies; and (3) residential treatment was not the least restrictive alternative *736 available to the court as a treatment option. Finding no error, we affirm the trial court.

THE ACT

This case requires an initial determination of the scope of the Comprehensive Services Act for At-risk Youth and Families (CSA) that became effective in July 1993. See Code §§ 2.1-745 to 2.1-759.1. The CSA establishes a system of teams to administer state funds available to troubled children and their families. Every county, city, or combination of counties and cities is required under the CSA to designate a Community Policy and Management Team (CPMT), whose members are appointed by the local governing body. Code § 2.1-750. The CPMT includes local agency heads or their designees from (1) the community services board, (2) the juvenile court services unit, (3) the department of health, (4) the department of social services, (5) the local school division, and (6) a private organization providing children's or family services. Code § 2.1-751. The CPMT also has a parent representative who is not employed by any program serving the community's children and families. Id.

Each local CPMT must establish at least one Family Assessment and Planning Team (FAPT), whose members include representatives with authority to access services from (1) the community services board, (2) the juvenile court services unit, (3) the department of health, (4) the department of social services, and (5) the local school division, and a parent representative who is not employed by any program serving children and families. Code § 2.1-753.

The CSA is funded by a state pool of funds under Code § 2.1-757(A) and by a state trust fund established pursuant to Code § 2.1-759(A). In creating the state pool of funds, the General Assembly appropriates monies sufficient to meet the relevant federal mandates for the provision of services. Code § 2.1-757(C). The state trust fund also contains funds appropriated by the General Assembly, including monies from the state general fund, federal grants, and private foundations. Code § 2.1-759(A).

In administering the CSA's available funds, the FAPT first identifies the services required for a family and child. Code § 2.1-754. As a part of this process, the FAPT must (1) "[p]rovide for family participation in all aspects of assessment, planning and implementation of services" and (2) develop a services plan that "provides for appropriate and cost-effective services." Code § 2.1-754(2)-(3). The CPMT reviews the FAPT's recommendations and requests for funding. Code § 2.1-752(4). The CSA then mandates the expenditure of funds for youths within certain target populations. Code § 2.1-757(A)-(B). Once the FAPT makes a recommendation for services, the courts "may make such other disposition as is authorized or required by law" after considering the FAPT's recommendation. Code § 2.1-757(E).

BACKGROUND

In April 1992, Dr. Lynne Hahnemann of Fauquier Family Guidance Services (FFGS) began treating the daughter of Timothy and Charlene Robinson (the parents). Throughout treatment, Dr. Hahnemann observed the following behaviors and symptoms in the child's behavior: (1) physical aggression toward her brother and parents; (2) noncompliance; (3) explosive outbursts; (4) persistent homicidal ideations; and (5) developmental delay. From April to December 1992, Dr. Hahnemann noticed marginal improvement in the child's behavior, but aggression and hostility toward her brother continued and at times became acute. Dr. Hahnemann diagnosed the child as having a conduct disorder, dysthymia (low-level depression), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

In October 1992, the child entered her brother's bedroom at night with a pair of scissors and stood beside his bed intending to kill him. She was hospitalized at the Virginia Treatment Center for Children as a result of this incident, and upon discharge, the child was medicated and the family cautioned to monitor and separate the child and her brother. The child's aggressive behavior continued, and in May 1993, she again took a knife from the kitchen and told a friend of her intention to kill her brother. She was hospitalized at DeJarnette State Hospital for *737 Children with Psychiatric Problems. The hospital recommended residential treatment, and upon discharge, advised an out-of-home placement.

In July 1993, Dr. Hahnemann, still the child's treating therapist, became a member of the newly created Fauquier County FAPT and presented her case to the FAPT. The FAPT treated the child as one covered by the CSA pursuant to Code § 2.1-757(B)(3), which provides that the target populations of the CSA include "[c]hildren for whom foster care services ... are being provided to prevent foster care placements."[1] In an August 11, 1993 letter, the Fauquier County CPMT also acknowledged that the child was "a mandated child in that she is a child in need of preventive foster care services, i.e. at risk of foster care placement within six months if services are not provided."

Consequently, the FAPT developed a service plan for the child that recommended residential treatment. The CPMT rejected the plan and suggested that a less restrictive alternative was more appropriate. In August 1993, the FAPT and the CPMT developed an intermediate plan that provided the child and her family with intensive in-home services, including a mentor[2] and in-home counseling, for a thirty-day period. In addition, the parents installed an alarm on the child's bedroom door to protect the family if the mentor fell asleep. The child cut the wires on the alarm and destroyed it and the door three times. Dr. Hahnemann noticed no improvement in the child's aggressive behavior as a result of this more intensive service.

A day treatment service program was approved by the FAPT and the CPMT in September 1993. The parents refused to sign this plan because of a disagreement over transportation provisions and mentoring hours. Services were provided under the day treatment plan without the parents' signatures.

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Bluebook (online)
455 S.E.2d 734, 20 Va. App. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fauquier-co-dept-soc-serv-v-robinson-vactapp-1995.