In Re The Dep. Of: E.j.l., Carrie Lehnert, App. v. Dept. Of Social & Health Services, Resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 29, 2016
Docket73444-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Dep. Of: E.j.l., Carrie Lehnert, App. v. Dept. Of Social & Health Services, Resp. (In Re The Dep. Of: E.j.l., Carrie Lehnert, App. v. Dept. Of Social & Health Services, 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 The Dep. Of: E.j.l., Carrie Lehnert, App. v. Dept. Of Social & Health Services, Resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Dependency of DIVISION ONE E.J.L, DOB: 8/24/13, No. 73444-0-I

Minor Child.

CARRIE LEHNERT,

Appellant, UNPUBLISHED OPINION v.

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES,

Respondent. FILED: February 29, 2016

Dwyer, J. - Carrie Lehnert appeals from the trial court's order terminating

her parental rights to her daughter, E.L. Lehnert asserts that the Department of Social and Health Services (Department) did not prove that she is currently unfit

to parent E.L. or that it offered or provided all reasonably available, necessary

services, capable of correcting her parental deficiencies within the foreseeable future. Because substantial evidence supports the necessary trial court findings,

we affirm. No. 73444-0-1/2

Following a three-day trial in March 2015, the trial court terminated Carrie

Lehnert's parental rights to her daughter E.L. The majority of the trial court's

findings of fact are unchallenged and therefore verities on appeal. See In re

Dependency of J.A.F.. 168 Wn. App. 653, 667, 278 P.3d 673 (2012).

Lehnert is the mother of E.L. (born August 24, 2013) and E.L.'s older

brother, A.L (born March 20, 2012). The Department removed A.L. from

Lehnert's care shortly after birth, primarily because of Lehnert's mental health

issues. The dependency petition alleged concerns about Lehnert's obsessive-

compulsive disorder (OCD), including the hoarding of garbage, failure to seek

prenatal care, and sporadic participation in mental health services. The

disposition order required Lehnert to participate in a psychological evaluation,

parenting classes, mental health counseling with an emphasis on OCD and

hoarding, and medication management.

Lehnert did not participate in any of the court-ordered services. She

acknowledged that she was not ready to care for A.L. and voluntarily relinquished

her parental rights in November 2013.

On August 26, 2013, two days after her birth, the Department removed

E.L. from the hospital and placed her with the caregivers who later adopted A.L.

-2- No. 73444-0-1/3

E.L. has remained in this prospective adoptive home since her removal and has

never lived with either parent.1

The trial court entered an agreed dependency order as to E.L. on October

22, 2013. Lehnert stipulated that she needed stable housing, mental health

counseling, and other services to assist with reunification. The court ordered

Lehnert to participate in the same services identified for A.L.'s dependency: a

psychological evaluation, parenting classes, mental health counseling with an

emphasis on OCD and hoarding, and medication management. The Department

also provided Lehnert with contacts for housing assistance. At the time of E.L.'s

dependency order, Lehnert's mental health issues remained essentially

untreated.

Initially, Lehnert did not engage in any ofthe court-ordered services. She began mental health counseling with Compass Health in December 2013. Jane Norberg, Lehnert's therapist at Compass, testified that between

December 2013 and May 2014, Lehnert participated in a total of three counseling

sessions and cancelled two scheduled sessions. Lehnert's treatment plan

included coping techniques for dealing with her depression and OCD. Norberg felt that when Lehnert left Compass in May 2014, she had made "some progress" and had "greater insight" into some of her problems. Norberg estimated that it would be "at least a year or two" before Lehnert could "overcome" her mental

1The parental rights ofE.L.'s father, which the court terminated in December 2014, are not at issue in this appeal. -3- No. 73444-0-1/4

health issues. Lehnert did not participate in available medication management

services.

Lehnert did not begin visiting E.L. until February 2014. Although

frequently late, she then participated regularly in twice-weekly supervised visits

until the termination trial.

In May 2014, Lehnert transferred from Compass Health to Sunrise

Services because it was closer and she intended to schedule more frequent

appointments. At Sunrise, Lehnert attended counseling sessions on a relatively

regular schedule and participated in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)

techniques. Lehnert began medication management in January 2015. In March

2015, just before the termination trial, Lehnert attended the first session of a

dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) group

Lehnert also participated in court-ordered parenting services. The

Department referred Lehnert for the Incredible Years parenting class in January

2013, during A.L.'s dependency, and again in December 2013, during E.L.'s

dependency. In each case, Lehnert failed to participate. The Department

referred Lehnert for a third time in August 2014. She successfully completed the

class in February 2015.

Lehnert participated in one-on-one parent coaching with Marie Preftes- Arenz from February 2014 through December 2014. The coaching sessions,

which usually occurred during Lehnert's visits with E.L., focused on maternal No. 73444-0-1/5

bonding, infant growth and development, and demonstrating appropriate

parenting skills.

Preftes-Arenz testified that, over time, Lehnert demonstrated some

improvement in maternal bonding with E.L. and in her ability to meet the basic

needs of an infant. Although Lehnert was generally able to learn and apply basic

skills in caring for E.L. during the visits, Preftes-Arenz noted that "[tjhere were

repeated prompts to do the same thing often," including the steps necessary to

change diapers and identify appropriate food for a child moving to solid foods.

When the current referral ended in December 2014, Preftes-Arenz felt that

no further coaching sessions were necessary because Lehnert had the skills

necessary to keep E.L. safe during the twice-weekly supervised visits. But

Lehnert continued to struggle with slow response times when addressing E.L.'s

needs, requiring Preftes-Arenz's prompts. Lehnert also had difficulty in

concluding the visits on time. Preftes-Arenz observed that Lehnert would become distracted while packing her belongings into bags, leaving E.L. "toddling

around the visitation location" unsupervised. Lehnert frequently called Preftes-

Arenz to "perseverate on something that happened at the visit or my report to the social worker." On one occasion during a visit, Lehnert engaged Preftes-Arenz

heatedly about a report they had discussed at length the previous evening. Preftes-Arenz eventually had to direct Lehnert to focus her attention on E.L., who

had been wandering around unsupervised. No. 73444-0-1/6

Preftes-Arenz explained that the ultimate goal of her parent coaching was

not just a parent's demonstration of the necessary specific skills, but rather a

"generalization of skills, so that a parent. . . can then apply that same knowledge

to other aspects of parenting that are similar to that particular instance." At the

conclusion of the coaching session, Lehnert was still struggling with certain skills

and was unable to apply those skills to the frequent unexpected situations that

arise during the full-time, unsupervised care of a young child.

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