In Re Maryia, (Apr. 1, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 4208
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 1, 1997
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 4208 (In Re Maryia, (Apr. 1, 1997)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Maryia, (Apr. 1, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 4208 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action for the termination of the parental rights of Iris P. and Alfred R., Sr., the unmarried, biological parents of three minor children. The children are Maryia R., born on July 14, 1992; Alfred R., Jr., born on June 18, 1993; and Michael P., born on June 11, 1994. The court finds that service has been made in accordance with the Practice Book, counsel have been appointed for both the respondent mother (mother) and respondent father (father), and a guardian ad litem has been appointed for the father. The mother did not appear in court for any of the trial days. The father did appear each day with his counsel and CT Page 4209 guardian ad litem.

The court finds that there is no action pending in any other court affecting the custody of these children. The court further finds that reasonable efforts were made to prevent the removal of these children from the home of the parents and, subsequent to their removal, reasonable efforts have been made to reunify the family.

The court, having carefully considered the verified petition, the social study, the psychological evaluation and other documents admitted into evidence, together with the testimony of the various witnesses, makes the following findings.

The summary of facts which was attached to the petition contains seventy four (74) allegations regarding the care and treatment of these children and the services that were offered to the parents in an attempt to obtain reunification. The social study, Petitioner's Exhibit # 13, is a most comprehensive and thorough sixty two (62) page presentation of the facts, the services offered, and the degree of compliance by the mother and the father. The court places great credence upon the factual recitations contained in that social study. Indeed, the mother did not appear and her attorney was, predictably, unable to controvert any of the findings and representations made in the social study. While the father did appear through counsel and with a guardian ad litem, the focus of their disagreements are not principally with the factual recitations contained in the social study, but rather with the issue of reasonable efforts made to obtain reunification and the degree to which the services offered complied with the Americans With Disabilities Act (the ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12132 (1).2

The mother does not take issue with the recitation of the facts by the DCF contained in the social study. She admits in her brief that "visitation has not been satisfactory, nor does the evidence indicate that mother has rehabilitated herself. Further, the evidence indicates that the Department has offered her a wide range of services." Instead, the mother's argument relates to the "sequential way in which services were offered." The mother claims that DCF should not have offered her all of the services one service at a time, but rather all at the same time. However, the mother provides no social services authority or legal authority for that proposition. The court finds that the services offered to her were "adequate, available, accessible and CT Page 4210 relevant.3 REUNIFICATION EFFORTS

The father claims that reasonable efforts were not made to reunify him with his children.

It is undisputed that on or about June 14, 1994 a petition of alleged neglect was filed by DCF in the Superior Court for Juvenile Matters in Waterbury. The petition alleged that the children were being denied the proper physical, educational, emotional and moral care and attention, and were being permitted to live under conditions, circumstances or associations injurious to their well-being. Specifically, the petition alleged that the mother was medically and physically neglecting the children; that the children had inadequate food; that there was no prenatal care for the infant Michael P.; that mother was seemingly indifferent to being evicted from her apartment when she went to the hospital to give birth to the infant Michael P.; that both mother and the child tested positive for cocaine on June 11, 1994; and that there was minimum bonding between the mother and child. The allegations further indicated that mother had very limited parenting skills and appeared to be very intellectually limited. With respect to the father, the petition alleged that he had not been involved in the primary care of the children since October 1993 and had no recent contact with the mother or the children. Based upon the allegations contained in the petition, an adjudication of neglect was made as to the children on July 8, 1994.

From the social study and testimony in court it is also clear that the case worker first contacted the father when he was incarcerated at the New Haven Correctional Facility on June 30, 1994. On the same date the social worker contacted the Waterbury City Welfare Department and found that the father received financial and medical assistance. Also on that same date, a check with the Superior Court in Waterbury revealed that the father provided his address.

When the case was first instituted, the mother indicated that she believed that the father resided at. Service was attempted at that address. The affidavit regarding diligent search for the father, filed by the DCF social worker on June 27, 1994, indicated that the social worker made attempts to locate him through city welfare, state welfare, the Dept. of Corrections, CT Page 4211 St. Mary's Hospital, Waterbury Hospital and the child support office. In addition, the case worker consulted the Waterbury phone directory. In addition to making diligent inquiry, the court ordered publication in the Waterbury Republican American to provide notice to the father. DCF also had other addresses for the father, including the Osborne Correctional Center in Somers, and 62 Ives Street, Waterbury.

The father was familiar with the DCF and their foster care program. Indeed, on June 21, 1993, the parents both signed a voluntary placement agreement with DCF. There is no indication in the file showing that the father attempted to contact the DCF to find his missing children. There was no claim by the father that he contacted the mother's relatives, by phone or by visit, to even inquire about his children. Neither did his mother, the children's paternal grandmother, make any efforts to locate the children, whose location was known to DCF at all times.

The file indicates that the mother left the father in October, 1993 because of domestic violence. The social study indicates that on January 10, 1994, the father had pulled a knife on the mother, beat her up, and his sister Jackie intervened to stop him. The father threatened to kill the mother if she called the police. Again on March 7, 1994, the mother complained to the social worker that the father still hits her. The record further supports a finding that the father, who represents himself in his memorandum of law as an "interested and active parent," did not see his children from late 1993 or early 1994 until a visit was arranged by DCF in September of 1995 and, then, he only saw the children on two occasions. There is no support in the record for the father's claim that the mother had moved to Puerto Rico with the children. The court finds that the father did not exercise any reasonable efforts to locate his children in nearly two years. During that same two year period the court finds that DCF made reasonable efforts to find the father and, indeed, did find the father in June, 1995 and, thereafter, made arrangements for visitation.

"A parent must maintain a reasonable degree of interest in the welfare of his or her child. `Maintain' implies a continuing, reasonable degree of concern." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) In re Michael M.,

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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 4208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maryia-apr-1-1997-connsuperct-1997.