In re S.N.L.

2022 Ohio 698
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 2022
Docket110990
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ohio 698 (In re S.N.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re S.N.L., 2022 Ohio 698 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as In re S.N.L., 2022-Ohio-698.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

IN RE S.N.L. : : No. 110990 A Minor Child : : [Appeal by D.L., Mother] :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: March 10, 2022

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Juvenile Division Case No. AD-20-909256

Appearances:

Michael E. Stinn, for appellant.

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Joseph C. Young, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee.

MARY J. BOYLE, J.:

Appellant, D.L. (“Mother”), appeals from the juvenile court order

awarding permanent custody of her son, S.N.L., to the Cuyahoga County Division of

Children and Family Services (“CCDCFS”). For the reasons set forth below, we

affirm. On October 28, 2020, CCDCFS filed a complaint in the juvenile court,

alleging that S.N.L. (d.o.b. 09/30/2020) was dependent and requesting

predispositional temporary custody. The complaint alleges, among other things,

that Mother has a substance abuse problem; Mother used drugs and alcohol while

pregnant; Mother has a mental condition (schizophrenia) and has failed to address

this condition; Mother lacks stable housing and is homeless; Mother and alleged

father (“Father”) have a physically violent relationship; alleged Father lacks stable

housing and is homeless; alleged Father has a substance abuse problem; and alleged

Father failed to provide support for the child. After a hearing on November 10,

2020, the juvenile court granted the request for predispositional temporary custody

to CCDCFS. S.N.L. was just over one month old at the time.

At a subsequent hearing, S.N.L. was adjudicated dependent, and

following the dispositional hearing, was committed to the temporary custody of

CCDCFS. A case plan was developed that included mental health and substance

abuse assessment and treatment for Mother and provision for housing and basic

needs, with the goal of reunification with S.N.L.

On June 2, 2021, CCDCFS filed a motion to modify temporary

custody to permanent custody. The court held a hearing on the motion on October

6, 2021, at which the following evidence was adduced.

CCDCFS caseworker Andrea Flynn (“Flynn”) testified she was

assigned to the case in November 2020. CCDCFS received a referral from the

hospital because Mother reported cocaine use one week prior to giving birth to S.N.L. and that she had a history of mental illness, specifically schizophrenia.

Mother also reported using alcohol. J.B. is alleged to be S.N.L.’s father. All

CCDCFS’s efforts to reach alleged Father were unsuccessful, and he had no contact

during the pendency of the proceedings.

At the time of the S.N.L.’s birth, Mother was homeless and living in a

shelter. S.N.L., who was one year old at the time of the hearing, was committed to

agency custody on November 10, 2020, when he was just over a month old, and has

remained in continuous agency custody since that time. Flynn testified that

CCDCFS implemented a case plan, which included services to address Mother’s

issues relating to mental health, substance abuse, and provision of housing and basic

needs. Under the case plan, Mother was required to complete an updated mental

health assessment, actively participate in mental health services, and follow

recommendations; obtain housing and demonstrate the ability to provide basic

needs; and complete a substance abuse assessment, follow all treatment

recommendations, and submit to random drug screenings.

Mother was referred to the Board of Developmental Disabilities based

on her reporting that she had a history of schizophrenia and “DD” (developmental

disabilities). Flynn further testified that Mother explained that “she receives [social

security disability] income from being delayed and her father was her payee [and

she] wasn’t able to maintain her own financial means.” Mother was also referred to

mental health services. Flynn testified that Mother never completed the mental

health services nor the “DD” services. With regard to visitation, Flynn testified that Mother has a weekly

visitation plan. At the time of the hearing, her visits were one hour in duration. Her

initial visits were two hours in duration, which Mother had with S.N.L. when he was

first discharged from the hospital. Flynn testified that Mother was then missing for

several months, from November 2020 through approximately February or March

2021. Flynn testified, “we couldn’t find her. We did everything we could to locate

her. Went to the shelter, going to places where we were told she would hang out.

We even went to her boyfriend’s treatment center looking for her at that time. We

couldn’t find her.” Mother subsequently reengaged in her visits with S.N.L. after she

was admitted to the Hitchcock Center for Women. Flynn testified that the visits

were for two hours, but then were reduced to one hour at Mother’s request “because

[Mother] was bored with two hours of sitting with [S.N.L.].”

During her visits with S.N.L., Mother was always excited to see him.

Flynn testified that sometimes Mother “can be uncomfortable holding him. If he

moves while she’s holding him, she’s uncomfortable and she hands him to whoever

is next to her. [Mother] needs to be redirected after he eats not to bounce him or

she needs to be reminded to burp him.”

Mother’s case plan also included substance abuse services due to her

history of substance abuse relating to alcohol, cocaine, and “ice,” which Flynn

described as a homemade synthetic drug made with different chemicals that has a

heroin-like opiate effect. Mother was initially referred to services at Moore

Counseling but was unsuccessfully discharged from that program. Consequently, she was “referred for a higher level of care, which led her to the Hitchcock Center for

Women.”

At time of the hearing, Flynn testified that Mother had completed the

Hitchcock Center’s inpatient and outpatient services for substance abuse but has not

complied with random drug screens to demonstrate ongoing sobriety. Mother had

not submitted to the requested screens since January 2021, despite CCDCFS’s

requesting such screens on an almost weekly basis during that time and providing

her with bus tickets to facilitate compliance with the requests. As a result, Flynn

could not verify if Mother was maintaining her sobriety at the time of the hearing.

In addition, even though Mother had worked through the step-down program at the

Hitchcock Center from inpatient to outpatient treatment, Flynn expressed concerns

that Mother has not understood the lifelong commitment required to maintain

ongoing sobriety, as well as the fact that Mother “has not been willing to engage in

drug screens to prove that she’s sober.” Flynn further testified that Mother failed to

complete her applications to obtain and maintain appropriate housing despite

having the means to do so, even after receiving housing assistance from the agency.

Following S.N.L.’s placement in agency custody, S.N.L. was engaged

in services with a neurologist as well as in physical and occupational therapy because

he was born with a portion of his brain undeveloped. Flynn testified that S.N.L. was

utilizing occupational therapy because he is not walking yet. Flynn further testified

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Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-snl-ohioctapp-2022.