In Re Dep Of: G.g. Dob: 12/19/02 Joel Garcia App. v. Dshs, Resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 29, 2013
Docket68704-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Dep Of: G.g. Dob: 12/19/02 Joel Garcia App. v. Dshs, Resp. (In Re Dep Of: G.g. Dob: 12/19/02 Joel Garcia App. v. Dshs, Resp.) 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
In Re Dep Of: G.g. Dob: 12/19/02 Joel Garcia App. v. Dshs, Resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED COURT Of APPEALS D!V I STATE OF WASHINGTON

2013 APR 29 AM 10: 17

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

In the Matter of the Dependency of No. 68704-2-I consolidated with G.N.G., dob 12/19/02, and No. 68705-1-1 A.N.T., dob 08/03/00,

Minor Children.

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES,

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION JOEL SALAS GARCIA, FILED: April 29, 2013 Appellant.

Verellen, J. — Joel Garcia appeals from the trial court order terminating his

parental rights to two of his children. He argues that the State failed to offer or provide

services capable of correcting his parental deficiencies by not adequately tailoring their

efforts to his cognitive ability. But the record amply supports the trial court's

determination to the contrary and demonstrates that Garcia would not have benefited

from further services due to his minimization of the concerns that prompted the State's

intervention, refusal to participate in services offered, and inability to address No. 68704-2-1/2

circumstances that jeopardized his children's well-being. His argument that termination

of his parental rights was not in the children's best interests is similarly unpersuasive.

We affirm.

FACTS

The following facts were found by the trial court and are unchallenged on appeal.

Joel Garcia is the father of G.N.G. (born 12/19/02) and A.N.T. (born 08/30/00). The

children suffered from chronic neglect. The home they lived in was very dirty. They

experienced difficulty emotionally and academically at school. Garcia exhibited

cognitive limitations, as well as chronic mental health conditions. The mother's rights

were previously terminated, and she is not a party to this appeal.

The children and Garcia received services through Renton Area Youth Services

(RAYS) for over a year and a half before the dependency petition was filed in December

of 2009. Sarah Ramstad, the family's RAYS counselor, provided in-home counseling,

family sessions with Garcia and the children, and school-based therapy for A.N.T. She

collaborated with teachers to help A.N.T. manage his behaviors. She also provided

hygiene kits and instruction on bathing, teeth brushing, and food handling. Ramstad,

like Garcia, speaks Spanish.

Garcia did not follow through with several services Ramstad attempted to offer or

provide. Although Ramstad referred Garcia to a Spanish-language parenting class that

offered free dinner for the family and homework help for the children while the father

received parent coaching, he chose not to attend. At a psychiatric appointment in June

2009, A.N.T. was prescribed medication for ADHD and scheduled for a follow-up

appointment. Ramstad, recognizing Garcia's cognitive limitations, reviewed the No. 68704-2-1/3

instructions with him and emphasized the importance of A.N.T. taking his medication

every morning. But Garcia failed to ensure that A.N.T. took the medication, and the

follow-up appointment did not occur as scheduled.

On June 11, 2009, Ramstad made a referral to Child Protective Services (CPS)

after she arrived at the home and the father answered the door with marijuana on his

breath. The home was filthy and the children were in his care at the time.

By the fall of 2009, significant chronic neglect had affected the children

physically, emotionally, and psychologically. From the summer of 2009 until he was

placed in out-of-home care in December of 2009, A.N.T. did not receive his ADHD

medication, even though he had been breaking down in school and crying

uncontrollably. The father reported he did not seek medication for A.N.T. because he

thought he was doing well. Garcia also failed to take the children to necessary dental

appointments in the fall of 2009. A.N.T. had untreated cavities. G.N.G. also had

untreated cavities, which resulted in an abscess.

In October 2009, Garcia was evicted from his apartment. For about two months

after the eviction, Garcia and the children lived alternately in a church and in a truck.

Ramstad had tried to help Garcia with housing referrals prior to his eviction, but he did

not follow through with them.

Teachers at G.N.G. and A.NT.'s school became increasingly concerned about

their welfare due to their poor hygiene and troubling behavior. School staff tried to

assist Garcia and the children by offering various meetings, service plans, and

counseling services. A public health nurse was also provided to the family. CPS was No. 68704-2-1/4

again contacted during this time due to concerns for the children's medical and dental

health and inconsistent attendance in counseling at RAYS.

While in the care of their father, the children were very aggressive and fought

with one another. Ramstad and the father observed A.N.T. become very angry, choke

his sister, and throw her to the ground. Ramstad made a second CPS referral on

October 15, 2009 because Garcia did not respond appropriately after A.N.T. choked

G.N.G. and threw her to the ground.

On October 29, 2009, Garcia agreed to a safety plan proposed by CPS social

worker Carmina Chang. He agreed to have the children shower at least every other day

and to send them to school in clean clothes. He agreed to keep the house cleaner, give

A.N.T. his ADHD medication daily, take a parenting class if he was unable to manage

the children's aggression, and to schedule medical and dental appointments for the

children. But Garcia did not follow through with the safety plan.

A dependency petition was filed in December 2009 after Garcia failed to abide by

the safety plan and the identified problems were not remedied despite the services that

were made available. The children were removed from his custody on December 15,

2009. At the time, he was the sole caregiver for the children. An agreed order of

dependency was entered on February 17, 2010.

The dispositional order required Garcia to participate in an alcohol/drug

evaluation and random urinalysis. He was also required to complete a psychological

evaluation and participate in parenting classes. Garcia participated in several different

chemical dependency programs, completing an inpatient program and engaging in

outpatient meetings. He also completed parenting courses. Dr. Alysa Ruddell, the No. 68704-2-1/5

psychologist who evaluated Garcia, found that he had depression and borderline

intellectual functioning.

Supervised visitation was ordered because Garcia's housing was inappropriate

for visits. His visits were consistent and timely, but he lacked engagement with A.N.T.

Garcia showed concern and caring for G.N.G., and G.N.G.'s therapist and the CASA

testified to the bond between G.N.G. and her father.

The State filed a termination petition. After hearing several days of testimony,

the King County Superior Court ordered that Garcia's parental rights should be

terminated.

Garcia appeals.

ANALYSIS

To prevail in a petition to terminate parental rights, the State must prove by clear,

cogent, and convincing evidence: (1) That the child was found dependent; (2) that the

court entered a dispositional order; (3) that the child was removed from the custody of

the parent for at least six months pursuant to a finding of dependency; (4) that services

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