RAKER, Judge.
■ The issue we must decide in this case is whether a natural parent whose parental rights were terminated as a result of her failure to respond to a petition for guardianship is entitled to present evidence in a status hearing conducted pursuant to Maryland Code § 5-319 of the Family Law Article. We shall hold that a natural parent, who has not waived the right to notice of the status of his or her child(ren) provided by § 5-319(b) and who attends a hearing under § 5-319(f) to review that status, has a statutory right to participate in the hearing, and thus is entitled to present evidence.
I.
Petitioner, Clemy P., appeals from a proceeding of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County to review the guardian[577]*577ship of her two biological children, ten-year old Stephon and eight-year old Alphonso. The circuit court had previously granted guardianship of the two boys to the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services (hereinafter “DHHS”),1 including the right to consent to adoption or long-term care, based on the consent of the boys’ father and Ms. P.’s failure to respond to DHHS’s petition. As provided by statute, the court’s decrees of guardianship, on October 20, 1993, terminated Petitioner’s parental rights with respect to Stephon and Alphonso as of that date. See Maryland Code (1984, 1999 Repl.Vol.) Family Law Article, § 5—317(f)(1).2 On December 1, 1995, in response to Petitioner’s motion to set aside its two-year old decrees, the circuit court vacated the judgments of guardianship.
Clemy P’s case was among the five cases considered by this Court in In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. 458, 687 A.2d 681, cert. denied, 520 U.S. 1267, 117 S.Ct. 2439, 138 L.Ed.2d 199 (1997). This Court reversed the circuit court’s order vacating the guardianship decrees, thereby reinstating guardianship of Stephon and Alphonso to DHHS and reestablishing termination of Petitioner’s parental rights. See id. at 496, 687 A.2d at 699. We held that a natural parent who fails to heed the warning within the show cause order and file a timely notice of objection is deemed by statute to have consented to the guardianship and, as a matter of law, lacks the power to revoke the statutorily deemed consent at any point thereafter. Id. at 480-86, 687 A.2d at 692-94. Moreover, “[s]uch a parent is entitled to no further notice of proceedings on the DSS petition [for guardianship] and has no further right to participate in the action.” Id. at 486, 687 A.2d at 694-95. Nonethe[578]*578less, by way of a “caveat,” we noted the possible relevance of § 5-319 to Petitioner’s case and left open “[t]he issue of whether § 5—319(f) would allow the court to reopen or vacate an enrolled judgment of guardianship in the limited circumstances enumerated in the statute.” Id. at 487, 687 A.2d at 695. Stated another way, we left open the question concerning delayed or disrupted adoptions as to whether the trial court was authorized to reinstate the rights of a natural parent who had previously consented to adoption.
Following upon the heels of our decision and caveat, Petitioner filed a “Request For Hearing Based Upon Delay in Adoption,” citing § 5-319’s directive to the court to conduct a review hearing, after guardianship has been granted, in certain situations in which.there occurs a delay in placement for adoption, a disruption in placement for adoption, or a delay in entry of a final decree of adoption. See § 5-319(b) and (f).3 In her pleadings, Petitioner asserted that a review hearing was required because the boys had been under the guardianship of DHHS for more than two years without a final decree of adoption having been entered and because there had been a disruption in the boys’ placement for adoption without their being placed in another pre-adoptive home within 120 days, citing § 5—319(b)(3) and (b)(2), respectively.
On April 23, 1997, pursuant to Petitioner’s request for a hearing, the circuit court held a § 5-319(f) review hearing. Petitioner appeared at the hearing, represented by the Public Defender. She asserted a statutory basis under § 5-319 to testify and present evidence. Although the trial court had allowed Petitioner to cross-examine DHHS’s single witness, the social worker then assigned to the case, the court refused to permit Petitioner to testify or present other witnesses, ruling that Petitioner “simply has no standing in this matter any longer, except for provisions ... where she is entitled to notice if the adoption is not completed or there has been a change in the adoption plan.” At the conclusion of the hearing [579]*579the court determined that it was in the children’s best interest to continue their placement by DHHS with the prospective adoptive parent, who by that point had relocated to Texas with the boys.
Petitioner noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. That court affirmed, holding that because Petitioner did not have either a due process or statutory right to participate in the review hearing, the trial judge did not abuse his discretion by refusing Petitioner the right to testify or present witnesses. In re Adoption No. 11387, 120 Md.App. 566, 575-79, 707 A.2d 926, 930-32 (1998). We granted Ms. P.’s petition for writ of certiorari to consider whether the Court of Special Appeals erred in concluding that Petitioner was not entitled to participate in the hearing conducted pursuant to § 5-319 regarding the status of her children.
II.
A.
We first reiterate the principles of statutory construction that guide our decision. The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the Legislature. Degren v. State, 352 Md. 400, 417, 722 A.2d 887, 895 (1999); Wesley Chapel v. Baltimore, 347 Md. 125, 137, 699 A.2d 434, 440 (1997). “Where the statutory language is plain and free from ambiguity, and expresses a definite and simple meaning, courts do not normally look beyond the words of the statute itself to determine legislative intent.” Degren, 352 Md. at 417, 722 A.2d at 895 (citing Marriott Employees v. MVA, 346 Md. 437, 445, 697 A.2d 455, 458 (1997) and other cases). When, however, “the words of the statute are susceptible to more than one meaning, it is necessary to consider their meaning and effect ‘in light of the setting, the objectives and [the] purpose of the enactment.’ ” Wesley Chapel, 347 Md. at 137, 699 A.2d at 440 (quoting Tucker v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 308 Md. 69, 75, 517 A.2d 730, 732 (1986) (alteration in original)). In accordance with this endeavor, we construe the statute as a whole and inter[580]*580pret each of its provisions in the context of the entire statutory scheme. Blondell v. Baltimore Police, 341 Md. 680, 691, 672 A.2d 639, 645 (1996). With similar emphasis,, this Court has stated:
If the language alone does not provide sufficient information on the Legislature’s intent, then courts will look to other sources to discern the Legislature’s purpose____ Because the meanings of even common words may be context-dependent, ... we often proceed to consider other external manifestations of legislative intent, such as the amendment history of the statute, its relationship to prior and subsequent law, and its structure.
Armstead v. State, 342 Md. 38, 56, 673. A.2d 221, 229-230 (1996) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Finally, “[c]ommon sense must guide us in our interpretation of statutes, and “we seek to avoid constructions that are illogical, unreasonable, or inconsistent with common sense.’ ” Marriott Employees, 346 Md. at 445, 697 A.2d at 459 (quoting Frost v. State, 336 Md. 125, 137, 647 A.2d 106, 112 (1994)).
B.
The statutory provision at the heart of the dispute in this case is § 5-319(b)’s requirement that a guardian with the right to consent to adoption give notice of the child(ren)’s status to the natural parent(s) in certain instances where there has been a delay in adoption after guardianship has been granted. Section 5-319 provides as follows:
§ 5-319. Delay in adoption after guardianship granted.
(a) “Disrupted placement ” defined.—In this section, “disrupted placement” means the permanent removal of a child to be adopted from the prospective adoptive family or adopting individual by a child placement agency before the entry of a final decree of adoption.
(b) In general.—Except as provided in subsection (g) of this section, a guardian with the right to consent to adoption, including a guardian with the right to consent to adoption who was appointed without the consent of the [581]*581natural parents, shall file a written report with the court and give notice of the child’s status to each natural parent of the child under the guardianship and to the child’s court-appointed counsel if:
(1) a placement for adoption is not made within 9 months of the decree of guardianship;
(2) a placement for adoption is made within 9 months of the decree of guardianship, but there is a disrupted placement, and a new placement is not made within 120 days of the disrupted placement; or
(3) a final decree of adoption is not entered within 2 years after placement for adoption.
(c) Mailing notice.—The guardian shall mail the notice required by this section to each natural parent at the last address known to the guardian.
(d) Waiver of notice.—A natural parent may waive the right to notice under this section. The waiver shall appear expressly in:
(1) the natural parent’s consent to the guardianship; and
(2) the decree of guardianship.
(e) Report to court.—The written report required by this section shall:
(1) be filed with the court; and
(2) state the reasons for delay in placement for adoption.
(f) Hearing; orders.—On receipt of the guardian’s report under subsection (b) of this section, and every 12 months thereafter, the court:
(1) shall hold a hearing to review the progress which has been made toward the child’s adoption and to review whether the child’s current placement and circumstances are in the child’s best interest; and
(2) shall then take whatever action the court considers appropriate in the child’s best interest.
(g) Long-term placement.—(1) Further reports, notices to the natural parents, and hearings are not required if the court determines after a hearing that it is in the best interest of the child to remain with a specified family which agrees to the long-term placement.
[582]*582(2) If the long-term placement is subsequently changed, the child is entitled to annual hearings under subsection (f) of this section.
. (h) Periodic progress reports.—The court may require the guardian to file periodic written progress reports on the child’s status, with recommendations for further supervision, treatment, or rehabilitation.
(i) Jurisdiction of the equity court.—If guardianship with the right to consent to adoption or long-term care short of adoption has been ordered by an equity court, the jurisdiction of the equity court over the child may continue until that individual reaches 21 years of age, unless terminated sooner.
As the core thesis of her present appeal, Petitioner argues that her right to notice of her children’s status under § 5-319(b), in conjunction with her right to representation by the Public Defender in a review hearing under § 5—319(f), as provided by § 5-323(b)(2) and Maryland Code (1957, 1997 Repl.Vol.) Article 27A, § 4(b)(5), conferred party status upon her, and thus granted her the right to. full participation in the hearing, including the right to present witnesses and testimony. In addition, § 5-319 implicitly afforded her the right to participate in the April 23, 1997 status hearing thereunder, based upon a number of reinforcing factors. First, the statute’s requirement that Petitioner, and the boys’ natural father, receive notice of their children’s status distinguished them from any other persons, to whom no such right is allotted.4 Second, the hearing was held in response to Petitioner’s request for a hearing because of a delay in the adoption of her children after guardianship had been granted.5 Lastly, the [583]*583hearing was intended to review DHHS’s progress toward adoption and to determine whether the boys’ placement and circumstances at that time were in their best interest, with the distinct possibility that the court might find reunification of Petitioner with her children to be the appropriate course of action, a possibility this Court anticipated in the issuance of our “caveat,” In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. 458, 487-88, 687 A.2d 681, 695 (1997).
Respondent counters that the language and legislative history of § 5-319 reveal a clear intent on the part of the General Assembly that the only affirmative right currently granted by the statute to Petitioner, or to any natural parent whose parental rights have been terminated through a guardianship decree, is a right of notice as to the child(ren)’s status, and no more. This right to notice does not extend even to the fact of a review hearing, let alone the date, place, and time of any such hearing. Nor can this notice provision be distorted in such a way as to grant Petitioner the right to participate in a § 5-319 review hearing: it does not confer party status. While the statute may envision the possibility of Petitioner’s reunification with her children, the right of notice acts merely as a signal to the natural parent that should she desire to plead the case for her re-involvement, she must either contact and persuade the guardian to recommend such or file a motion with the court for permissive intervention.
We hold that, as a natural parent whose parental rights had been terminated yet who had not waived the right to notice of a delay in her children’s adoption, Petitioner had a statutory right under § 5-319 to participate in the court hearing con[584]*584ducted to review her children’s status.6 This right derives, first, from the statutory conferral of party status upon a natural parent attending a § 5-319 hearing, as indicated by the explicit provision of counsel, under § 5-323(b)(2) and Article 27A, § 4(b)(5), to such a parent, if indigent. Secondly, the right to participate in the review hearing, possessed by any natural parent who has not waived notice of the child(ren)’s status, evolves also from the implicit acknowledgment by the Legislature of natural parents’ “renewed” legal interest in their children in requiring that notice be given to them in the event of a delay in adoption.
Natural Parents’ Party Status
The notice-of-status requirement found within § 5-319 has been a part of the statute since its enactment in 1982 when the statute was codified as Article 16, § 75.7 The statute has always required that natural parents be notified in the event [585]*585of certain, specifically defined delays in the adoption of their child(ren) under guardianship. A separate provision within Article 16, § 75(d) had required that natural parents also receive notice, unless waived, of the review hearing.8 In 1984, while re-codifying Article 16, § 75 as § 5-319 of the newly created Family Law Article, the General Assembly amended the language of the provision requiring notice of the review hearing and included it within § 5~319(f).9 This provision, in both its original and amended form, essentially instructed the court to hold a review hearing only after the requirement of notice of the hearing to the natural parents was satisfied. In 1987, the General Assembly repealed the requirement of notice to the natural parents of the hearing as a condition precedent to holding the hearing.
It is upon this repeal of the provision requiring notice of the hearing that Respondent substantially bases its contention that Petitioner had no right to participate in the § 5-319 hearing held by the circuit court on April 23,1997. The Court of Special Appeals similarly found the Legislature’s repeal of the right to notice of the hearing to be dispositive:
In this revision, the General Assembly specifically removed the requirement that the child’s status hearing be [586]*586held only after the natural parent was notified of the hearing.
❖ * Hi Hi Hi
After reviewing the language and history of F.L. § 5-319, we conclude that, if there ever was a time when the parent was entitled by right to participate in the mandatory status hearing, this right was revoked by the General Assembly when it revised subsection (f) in 1987.
In re Adoption No. 11387, 120 Md.App. 566, 577, 707 A.2d 926, 932 (1998).
Before addressing the 1987 rescission of the notice-of-hearing requirement in § 5-319(f), we turn our attention to two separate, yet linked provisions within the Maryland Code that make specific reference to § 5—319(f) hearings. Article 27A, § 4 provides, in pertinent part:
§ 4. Duty to provide legal representation.
(a) In general.—It shall be the primary duty of the Public Defender to provide legal representation for any indigent defendant eligible for services under this article....
(b) Included proceedings.—Legal representation shall be provided indigent defendants or parties in the following proceedings:
(5) An involuntary termination of parental rights proceeding or a hearing under § 5-319 of the Family Law Article, if the party is entitled to Public Defender representation under § 5-323 of the Family Law Article.
The cross-referenced § 5-323 in turn provides in pertinent part as follows:
§ 5-323. Counsel.
Hs Hí Ht H« H* Hs
(b) Representation by public defender.—The public defender shall represent:
[587]*587(1) in an involuntary termination of parental rights, an indigent parent; and
(2) in a hearing under § 5-319 of this subtitle, an indigent natural parent who has not waived the right to receive notice of the child’s status.
Hence, a natural parent is entitled, by statute, to representation by the Public Defender in a § 5-319 review hearing as long as that parent is indigent and has not waived the right to receive notice of the child’s status. DHHS’s sole response to the existence and possible import of this right to appointed counsel is that the provision does not apply to Petitioner because she waived the right to notice of her children’s status. As discussed later, however, we reject this contention by the agency and hold that Petitioner did not waive her right to such notice. See infra Part II.C. Because Respondent’s argument that the right-to-counsel provision does not apply in the present case is founded upon a singular, false premise, it cannot logically stand, and, hence, must fall.
Besides this now failed argument, DHHS has-in no way accounted for the right-to-counsel provision in the position it advocates before this Court. Nor has the guardian agency offered any other explanation why Petitioner should not have been represented by the Public Defender at the April 23,1997 hearing.10 Even more detrimental to its cause, the agency is silent as to how the right-to-counsel provision fits within the overall scheme of § 5-319 and how it might reasonably support its construction of the statute as not affording Petitioner [588]*588the right to participate in a review hearing thereunder.11 The legislative guarantee of public counsel to indigent natural parents for § 5-319 review hearings plays a crucial role in determining the status and the rights the statute affords to Petitioner—or to any other natural parent who has not waived the right to notice of her child’s status—at such hearings.
It is not immediately apparent from the language of the current statute itself what, if any, status natural parents have at a review hearing under § 5-319. The cross-referencing provision of counsel under Article 27A, § 4(b), however, expressly employs the term “parties” (as well as the singular form “party”) in referring to natural parents. The term’s appearance in a statute generally directing the Public Defender to represent indigent persons in certain “legal proceedings” and its specific conjunction with the term “defendants” supports reading the term in a legal sense. Moreover, the General Assembly has demonstrated a capacity to exempt persons from legal party status in family law proceedings when it desires to do so. See Maryland Code (1974, 1998 RepLVol.) § 3-826.1(g)(4) of. the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (expressly withholding automatic party status from foster parents, pre-adoptive parents, and childcare-providing relatives despite their rights to notice and the opportunity to be heard in Child In Need of Assistance proceedings). Similarly, this Court, in our legislative capacity of promulgating rules and procedures implementing the statutory provisions of the Family'Law Article, has recently made clear when a provision of notice does not infuse a natural parent with standing to participate in a guardianship action. See Maryland Rule 9-104(c).12 Neither we nor the General Assembly [589]*589has denied party status to natural parents under § 5-319. Based on these considerations, we conclude that natural parents who have not expressly waived the right to notice of a delay in their child(ren)’s adoption enjoy a statutorily conferred party status for review hearings held pursuant to § 5-319(f).13
We come then to the following question: How does the provision to indigent natural parents of the right to public counsel at a § 5-319 review hearing, and the party status it confers, jibe with the 1987 repeal of natural parents’ right to notice of the review hearing? Did the amendment also repeal natural parents’ party status and the concomitant right to participate in the review hearing, or did the amendment merely modify them?
The Legislature’s 1987 repeal of then § 5—319(f)(2)’s prohibitive requirement, that notice to natural parents of the review hearing be achieved before such a hearing could be held, was conjoined with no effect whatsoever upon § 5-323(b)(2)’s guarantee of counsel.14 Indeed, the right-to-counsel provision has [590]*590remained substantively intact since its inception.15 Most importantly, the right-to-counsel provision has always been linked to the right of natural parents to notice of the child’s status, not to the right to notice of the review hearing.16 Had the General Assembly intended to significantly alter § 5-323(b)(2)’s provision of the right to counsel, and its conferral of party status upon natural parents, repealing the right to notice of the hearing under then § 5—319(f)(2) comprised a rather indirect method of accomplishing such. The more sensible interpretation is that any deliberate incursion upon the status and remaining rights of natural parents whose parental rights have been terminated would have been effected by the Legislature through direct modification of the right-to-counsel provision itself, or through some revision of the right of natural parents to notice of their child(ren)’s status. We therefore disagree that the repeal of the notice-of-hearing provision negated whatever right to participate a parent had in the review hearing, for natural parents’ right of participation need not have resided only in that provision.
It is evident from the original enactment and history of the provisions relating to a delay in adoption after guardianship, particularly the right-to-counsel guarantee and the two notice requirements, that the General Assembly has been seeking continually to balance the interests of natural parents in the possible reunification with their child(ren) against the paramount concerns that review hearings occur relatively quickly [591]*591and that the court be enabled to assess the children’s best interests and take appropriate action in a timely fashion. Both parties before this Court have acknowledged that the purpose in repealing the notice-of-hearing requirement in particular was to ensure that review hearings in fact be held in every case, that delayed adoptions not be delayed unnecessarily longer, and that the best interests of the child(ren) be met as soon as possible. It is clear that the Legislature intended that the proceedings not be delayed by the inability to serve notice upon both parents. This assessment is in accord with the legislative history of the 1987 amendment.
The Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee declared the “Legislative Intent” of the 1987 amendment of § 5-319 to be “to insure periodic circuit court review of agency efforts to achieve adoption or long-term placements of children in foster care.” 1987 Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee, Summary of Committee Report, Senate Bill 183, at 2. Unfortunately, however, not a single comment within the bill file for Chapter 606 of the 1987 Laws of Maryland is dedicated specifically to the repeal of the notice-of-hearing provision, nor does there appear within the legislative history any clear intent or statement of purpose on the part of the General Assembly with respect to the status and rights of natural parents at such hearings. Consequently, the legislative history of the 1987 amendment of § 5-319 does not speak against the interpretation that natural parents have retained their party status and right of participation in § 5—319(f) review hearings.
Given the background, history, legislative intent, and underlying concerns presented by the particular provisions in question, combined with the general purposes and goals of the adoption and guardianship statutes, we conclude that the repeal of the prohibition that a review hearing could not be held until the guardian had achieved notice to the natural parents of the hearing was not intended by the Legislature to rescind the right of natural parents to participate in § 5-319 hearings, nor their party status. This is not to say, however, [592]*592that the 1987 amendment of § 5-319 had no effect on natural parents’ right of participation and party status. For, Respondent is undoubtedly correct in asserting that “[t]he elimination of the parental-notice[-of-hearing] requirement in itself ... indicates the legislative intent to rescind any rights that requirement may have been originally intended to serve.”
While DHHS assumes the repealed provision to have served at most the right of natural parents to participate in a § 5-319 hearing, the prohibition of a hearing in the absence of notice to the natural parents had afforded those parents much more than the bare right to participate in the hearing. Rather, from 1982 to 1987,17 natural parents, whose parental rights had been terminated yet who had not affirmatively waived their right to notice of a delay in the adoption process, essentially enjoyed the ability to forestall or prevent a review hearing, merely by avoiding notice—whether intentionally or unintentionally. Even more significantly, these parents seemingly possessed the right, to compel the court to void the effects of any such hearing conducted without their notice. In sum, what the repealed provision had misguidedly established in 1982 was that, once the adoption process passed a critical point of delay, in the absence of notice to the natural parents, no agency action or court resolution could be finalized. Five years later the Legislature sought to undo its misdeed. From our perspective then, the legislative intent of the repeal of the notice-of-hearing provision was simply to retract the perverse power placed by that provision during its half-decade lifespan upon natural parents whose parental rights had been terminated.
Although the repeal of the right to notice of the hearing ensures that hearings may be conducted and final actions taken irrespective of the natural parents’ knowledge thereof, or interests therein, the repeal does not require that natural [593]*593parents lose all status and rights. In short, the fact that natural parents no longer have to be included in § 5-319 hearings does not necessitate that they be excluded. It is our view that the General Assembly in 1987 purposefully went only so far as necessary to ensure that delayed adoptions be acted upon quickly and appropriately by the circuit court. We therefore hold that the 1987 amendment of § 5-319 did not rescind natural parents’ party status or their right to participate in § 5-319 hearings; instead, it revoked their status as parties necessary to such hearings. In essence, the repeal of the right to notice of the hearing placed a greater burden on natural parents whose parental rights have been terminated to be more proactive in bringing about reunification "with their child(ren). Rather than wait to be notified of any hearing conducted under the possibility of such a result, it is now incumbent upon natural parents to keep informed of their child(ren)’s status as well as the related proceedings and actions being undertaken. For while a natural parent should certainly be able to rely on the guardian agency to fulfill its duty of notification in the event of a delay in the adoption process, it would seem that after 1987, failure by the guardian to notify natural parents of the status of their child(ren) in the event of such a delay cannot be grounds either for preventing a § 5-319 review hearing from occurring "without their presence, or for voiding the hearing after its occurrence.18
Natural Parents’ “Renewed” Interest
We agree with both parties before this Court, as we intimated in our earlier caveat in this case, In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. at 487-88, 687 A.2d at 695, that § 5-319 contemplates, indeed since its inception has always contemplated, the possibility of reunifying children under guardianship with their natural parents. Similarly, the Court of Special Appeals has acknowledged that “some measure of parental [594]*594re-involvement is to be found within F.L. § 5-319.” In re Adoption No. 11387, 120 Md.App. 566, 578, 707 A.2d 926, 932 (1998). We presume the underlying policy rationale to be that when the adoption process has been significantly delayed, the reasons for termination of parental rights may no longer abide, or may have been sufficiently overcome. Moreover, in an instance such as that claimed by Petitioner, a natural parent’s statutorily deemed consent may have arisen from a failure to comply with the duties imposed upon her by the filing of a guardianship petition, rather than from a lack of interest or a self-recognized lack of fitness.
The delay in adoption acts in some sense to permit a “renewed” legal interest of natural parents in their children with respect to whom their parental rights have been terminated. The judicial conclusion that such a parent stands as “a legal stranger to [the] offspring” in question, Walker v. Gardner, 221 Md. 280, 284, 157 A.2d 273, 275 (1960), is thus legislatively mitigated by a subsequent delay in adoption, which delay becomes the triggering cause for keeping natural parents notified as to their children’s status once such circumstances arise. It was perhaps in recognition of this change in the natural parent’s legal relationship to a child under guardianship that DHHS itself, assured the circuit court in one of its earlier pleadings in this case that “the mother ... has a right to notice and to further hearing pursuant to Family Law Article, Section 5-319 in the event of specified delays in adoption after guardianship has been granted.” (Emphasis added.)
Nonetheless, parallel to our discussion above regarding the statute’s framework and history, § 5-319’s implicit recognition of natural parents’ possible “renewed” legal interest in their children once a delay in adoption occurs does not invest automatically or by default. Natural parents whose parental rights have been terminated must actively pursue reunification. In undertaking such a pursuit, natural parents may rely upon and avail themselves of the right to participate in a § 5-319 review hearing. Moreover, it is the natural parents’ active [595]*595pursuit, comprised in part by their attendance at the review hearing, rather than the court’s discretionary leave, which is the grounds for participation as of right.
C.
As a final matter, we reject Respondent’s implicit assertion that an easy resolution to this case lies in the determination that Petitioner’s failure to respond to the guardianship petition, constituting her consent as a matter of law to the guardianship pursuant to § 5-322(d), “waived her right to notice of the original proceedings, and must likewise be deemed to have waived her right to notice of the children’s status under F.L. § 5~319(b).” Respondent’s Brief at 9. Put another way, Respondent contends that waiver of the right to notice under § 5—319(b) is implied as a matter of law from a natural parent’s statutorily deemed consent to the guardianship. Respondent’s argument is unsound for a host of reasons.
We first note that, even if Respondent’s contention that Petitioner waived her right to notice under § 5-319 were correct, it would not necessarily settle the central dispute in this case—whether Petitioner was entitled to participate in the § 5-319 status review hearing. Petitioner’s complaint is not that DHHS failed to give her the notice required under § 5-319(b). Providing such notice was unnecessary in the present case because the apparent catalyst for the April 23rd status review hearing was Petitioner’s “Request For Hearing Based Upon Delay in Adoption,” which was granted by the circuit court.19 DHHS seems to insinuate, however, that the alleged[596]*596ly implied waiver of Petitioner’s right to notice of the delay in her children’s adoption under § 5-319(b), despite her actual notice in this case, effectively resulted in her having no rights whatsoever with respect to the review of her biological children’s status. Yet even Respondent acknowledges that a natural parent whose parental rights have been terminated has some level of interest in the status of her biological children that is greater than a third party unrelated to the children or previously uninvolved in the matter. Moreover, Respondent does not dispute that § 5-819 as a whole contemplates the possibility of reunification of the child(ren) with the natural parent(s). Regardless of what the effect of a waiver of the right to notice under § 5-319(b) might be, we reject the agency’s proposition that the waiver incorporated in a failure to object under § 5-322(d) also constitutes a waiver under § 5-319.20
In support of its argument, Respondent seizes upon several statements from our earlier decision in this case. DHHS’s utilization of those statements, however, demonstrates a misapprehension of our rationale and the agency’s reliance on them is thus misplaced. First, DHHS quotes from our statement that “the evident purpose” of the statutorily deemed consent under § 5-322(d) was
to cut off the right of a parent who fails to file a timely objection to any further notice and any right to participate [597]*597in the action. Indeed, that parent has fewer, not greater, rights than the parent who signs a written consent, for the latter is expressly authorized to retain the right at least to notice of further proceedings, though not the right to participate in them.
In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. 458, 485, 687 A.2d 681, 694 (1997). The agency also highlights our declaration that the statutorily deemed consent
becomes fully effective when the time for filing an objection expires. Thereafter, as to the non-objecting parent, the case becomes uncontested, in the same manner as to a parent who has consented under § 5-317 without reservation and has allowed the revocation period to lapse.
Id. at 486, 687 A.2d at 694 (emphasis supplied by Respondent).
The very next sentence from our earlier opinion clarifies the true import of our reasoning as to the purpose and effect of statutorily deemed consent in guardianship cases: “Such a parent is entitled to no further notice of proceedings on the DSS petition and has no further right to participate in the action.” Id., 687 A.2d at 694-95 (emphases added). At the end of its own quotation from this sentence, DHHS appends the phrase “including any review” and thus misconstrues what we were saying. For, this last sentence excerpted from our earlier opinion makes clear, first, that the term “reservation” pertained only to the right to further notice21 and, second, that the terms “notice” and “right to participate” referred solely to proceedings involving a petition for guardianship. See § 5-317 (“Petitions for guardianship”)22 and § 5-322 [598]*598(“Notice”).23 Our earlier decision in the present case thus [599]*599dealt only with the circuit court’s rulings as to guardianship; it had no bearing on the post-guardianship matters found in the Family Law Article.
Contrary to Respondent’s interpretation, the § 5-319 status review hearing precipitated by a delay in adoption subsequent to the decree of guardianship is separate from the § 5-317 petition for guardianship itself. Likewise, a guardian’s requirement to give notice under § 5-319 comprises a duty that is different from and unaffected by the notice requirement under § 5-322. Even so, the Court of Special Appeals found, as cited by Respondent, that “the requirements of F.L. § 5-319 are analogous to the requirements of F.L. § 5-322.” In re Adoption No. 11387, 120 Md.App. 566, 578, 707 A.2d 926, 932 (1998). It is our conclusion, however, that the analogy does not run sufficiently deep.24
[600]*600That the provisions of § 5-319 are distinct from those of §§ 5-317 and 5-322 is obvious from the plain language and structure of the three sections. Sections 5-317 and 5-322 pertain solely to “a petition for guardianship,” § 5-317(a), and “notice of the filing of a petition for adoption or a petition for guardianship,” § 5-322(a), at which point the parental rights of the natural parents are still intact, cf. § 5—317(f)(1) (indicating that effect of decree of guardianship is to terminate natural parents’ rights). On the other hand, § 5-319 applies only after guardianship has been granted—and the parental rights of the natural parent(s) have been terminated. See, e.g., § 5-319(b) (“a guardian with the right to consent to [601]*601adoption ... shall ... give notice of the child’s status to each natural parent.”); § 5-319(c) (“The guardian shall mail the notice required .... ”); § 5-319(h) (“The court may require the guardian to file periodic written progress reports on the child’s status____”).'
Moreover, the General Assembly explicitly ensured that the duties and provisions of § 5-319 “includ[e] a guardian with the right to consent to adoption who was appointed without the consent of the natural parents.” § 5-319(b) (emphasis added).25 Hence, the statute applies and compels DHHS to notify Petitioner whenever § 5-319 is triggered. More importantly, § 5-319 provides that a waiver by a natural parent of “the right to notice under this section ... shall appear expressly in: (1) the natural parent’s consent to the guardianship; and (2) the decree of the guardianship.” § 5-319(d) (emphasis added). Petitioner did not give affirmative consent to the guardianship; instead, her consent was only statutorily deemed by her failure to respond to DHHS’s petition. Hence, [602]*602any waiver by her of the right to notice under § 5-319 could not have appeared “expressly” as required.26
Another miscue by DHHS in propounding its waiver of notice argument is its failure to heed this Court’s admonition regarding the effect of the expiration of the revocation period for a parent who consented to guardianship -without reserving the right to further notice. Given our equation of such a parent with a parent statutorily deemed to have consented, as discussed earlier, the effect upon Petitioner would be identical:
Unless the parent, in the consent, has expressly reserved the right to notice, he or she is not entitled to any notice of the petition or of any proceedings on it, including entry of a judgment, for the consent has made the case an uncontested one with respect to that parent. The only further notice to which such a parent is entitled, unless it too has been waived, is that provided for in § 5-319(b) ....
In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. at 484-85, 687 A.2d at 694 (emphasis added). We thus made abundantly clear that waiver of the right to further notice of proceedings relative to guardianship does not by itself constitute waiver of the right to notice under § 5-319(b). Instead, a separate, express-waiver is required by § 5-319(d), as we have already indicated.27
[603]*603Contrary to Respondent’s misreading and misapplication of our earlier pronouncements in this case, the fact that the status of a non-objecting parent is the same as that of a natural parent who has consented to guardianship under § 5-317 “without reservation” is irrelevant to the application of § 5-319, under which no such reservation is necessary. The right to notice under § 5-319 is specifically guaranteed by the plain language of the statute to any natural parent, including Petitioner, who failed to file timely notice of objection to the petition for guardianship. Upholding DHHS’s attempt to extend the pertinent rationale of In re Adoption No. 93321055 would therefore lead to a legally untenable conclusion, the judicial repeal of a legislative provision. The Legislature has mandated that Petitioner’s waiver of the right to notice under § 5-319 be express.
Lastly, Respondent’s prior pleadings in this case substantially undermine, if they do not waive, the agency’s current position on appeal. In opposing Petitioner’s July 28, 1994 “Motion to Intervene” in her biological, yet no longer legal children’s July 25,1994 request for a hearing pursuant to § 5-319, DHHS argued to the circuit court that “the mother already has a right to notice and to further hearing pursuant to Family Law Article, Section 5-319 in the event of specified delays in adoption after guardianship has been granted.” Response to Motion to Intervene, August 9, 1994 (emphasis added).28
[604]*604For all the preceding reasons, we hold that Petitioner did not waive her right to notice under § 5-319. The waiver of the right to notice of further proceedings in the guardianship action and of the right to participate in them, which we held to be incorporated in Petitioner’s failure to object to DHHS’s petition for guardianship, In re Adoption No. 93321055, 344 Md. at 486, 687 A.2d at 694, has no bearing on Petitioner’s right to notice of her children’s status under § 5-319(b). By the same token, that waiver could not impinge upon the right of a natural parent to participate in a status review hearing held pursuant to § 5—319(f).
Conclusion
As a party to any proceedings related to a delay in the adoption of their child(ren), and as persons with a legal interest in their child(ren) “renewed” by the delay in adoption, natural parents who have not waived the right to notice of their child(ren)’s status have standing to request a review hearing, as did Petitioner, or, upon their request, to be informed as to the time, date, and place of such a hearing already scheduled. Moreover, even after the 1987 amendment of § 5-319, natural parents retain the right to be assisted by counsel at a review hearing; the right, if indigent, to be represented by public counsel; and, finally, the right to participate in such a hearing, including the right to testify and present witnesses. If a natural parent who has not waived the right to notice of her child(ren)’s status under § 5-319 attends a review hearing thereunder, none of these rights can be lawfully denied her. Because Petitioner was denied her statutory right to participate at a hearing in which she was present,. we shall remand the case for re-hearing by the circuit court.29
[605]*605Upon remand, the circuit court shall conduct a review hearing pursuant to § 5-319 and shall determine anew, as of the time of that hearing, what progress is being made toward the boys’ adoption, whether their current placement and circumstances serve their best interests, and what is the appropriate action for the court to take. Cf. In re Emileigh F., 353 [606]*606Md. 30, 42-43, 724 A.2d 639, 645 (1999) (remanding case to the District Court of Maryland to conduct review hearing and determine anew as of time of hearing placement for care and custody of child in need of assistance).
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH DIRECTIONS TO VACATE THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY AND TO REMAND THE CASE TO THAT COURT FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS IN THIS COURT AND THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID BY MONTGOMERY COUNTY.