In Re The Dependency Of K.v.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 2, 2024
Docket86153-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Dependency Of K.v. (In Re The Dependency Of K.v.) 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 Dependency Of K.v., (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Dependency of No. 86153-1-I K.V., DIVISION ONE Minor Child. UNPUBLISHED OPINION S.T.-V., mother,

Appellant,

v.

DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN, YOUTH, and FAMILY SERVICES,

Respondent.

COBURN, J. — S.T.-V. 1 appeals the trial court’s determination that her son, K.V.,

is a dependent child under RCW 13.34.030(6)(c), and his removal from her care under

RCW 13.34.130(6)(c). We hold that substantial evidence supports the trial court’s

dependency determination and disposition order. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

S.T.-V. is a single mother and the primary caregiver of K.V. 2 In July 2022 the

Department of Children, Youth, and Families (Department) responded to a report of

1 We use initials consistent with the mother’s own request in the record to be referred to with a hyphenated surname. 2 Prior to the dependency hearing at issue, a default dependency order had been entered as to K.V.’s father. No. 86153-1-I/2

loud screaming from the mother’s apartment in Kirkland. 3 After multiple unsuccessful

attempts to contact the mother, the Department filed a dependency petition and pick-up

request in August. At the time K.V. was almost four years old.

After temporarily removing K.V. from the mother’s care, the trial court entered an

agreed shelter care order on August 12 and placed K.V. with his mother. The mother

agreed to, among other conditions, engage in mental health services and, with the

Department’s assistance, enroll K.V. in daycare, have him assessed for possible

speech delays, and participate in an in-home evidenced-based parenting support

service. Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator Ashley Whipple testified the

Department’s main safety concern was the mother’s potentially untreated mental health

and the impact of her behaviors on K.V. 4

Whipple testified the mother jumped from topic to topic and her communication

was “really hard to follow.” Whipple testified the mother seemed to mistrust the

Department “as a whole.” Initially, the mother was enrolled with a mental health

therapist, but the Department was not able to confirm the level of her engagement.

Assigned to K.V.’s case starting September 2022, Department social worker Kathleen

Walter testified the mother did not acknowledge she had mental health conditions other

than post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to her past experience with domestic

violence. Walter, who had professional experience and training in mental health,

believed the mother to be experiencing “more mental health issues than just PTSD.”

3 The trial court heard testimony referencing the Department’s prior involvement with the mother when K.V. was a baby, including K.V. being removed from the mother’s care at that time. 4 Whipple testified to the Department’s concern being based on reports, not admitted for the truth of the matter, that neighbors heard the mother screaming and calling K.V. “retarded” and saying “she was going to end him.” 2 No. 86153-1-I/3

Whipple and Walter testified to a distantness between the mother and K.V.

during home visits. During Whipple’s visit, K.V. “was just kind of roaming around the

apartment doing what he wanted, and ... [the mother] was kind of struggling to parent

him at the same time as having to” do other tasks. Whipple testified the mother and K.V.

did not interact often and when they did “they went back to these separate kind of

bubbles.” Similarly, Walter testified K.V. spent most of the time playing on the phone

and was usually alone in his bedroom. Walter described it as a lack of “togetherness,”

“a very separate kind of feeling,” and “not a very close, intimate kind of relationship.”

It is undisputed K.V. has delays in speech and with potty-training. Whipple and

Walter testified to K.V. not speaking in full sentences. Walter testified to K.V. being

“several years behind developmentally” and that generally children at his age are able

to have a conversation with her. In addition to his speech delays, K.V. was not at the

social level of even a two- or three-year-old. Before transferring K.V.’s case to Walter

around late August and early September 2022, Whipple emailed the Lake Washington

School District requesting a screening for preschool and special needs services through

the district’s individualized education plan (IEP), which could include speech therapy,

occupational therapy, and other potentially necessary developmental supports. Starting

in August 2022, the Department repeatedly sent the mother the paperwork required to

start the IEP process. Walter testified the mother failed to fill out the paperwork any of

the times the Department sent it to her.

Although the mother worked with a different provider, Sandbox, to assess K.V.

for speech therapy around the end of 2022, she did not provide the assessment or any

3 No. 86153-1-I/4

visit documentation to the Department. 5 Walter also contacted Sandbox, but did not

hear back from them. In February 2023 the Sandbox office shut down and alternatively

offered virtual speech therapy, which the Department agreed was not appropriate for

K.V.’s age. To Walter’s knowledge, the mother did not look for replacement providers.

At times the mother asked Walter if the Department would pay for swimming lessons or

horse therapy to “cure [K.V.’s] … speech therapy,” because K.V. “couldn’t scream if he

was swimming,” and the mother had been a horse trainer and knew it would help K.V.’s

speech. Despite Walter’s own search efforts, she was unable to locate any in-home or

community-based speech therapy providers. Walter explained that at K.V.’s age,

speech therapy is provided “through the school district.”

Since January 2023, Walter testified K.V. had not shown improvements in his

speech the way a typical child should. K.V. had also not been enrolled in daycare or

preschool 6 since January after being asked to leave two providers due to his behaviors.

One provider discharged him in part due to his poor attendance. Walter testified the

mother went days and sometimes weeks without bringing K.V. and was frequently late.

After Walter unsuccessfully tried to schedule an April visit with the mother, the

Department filed a motion to compel visits and the mother’s follow-through with

services. In May the Department also filed a motion to remove K.V. from the mother’s

5 Walter testified she did not see the assessment until the guardian ad litem sent it to her. The guardian ad litem testified to being assigned to K.V.’s case on August 31, 2023. Walter testified she shared the assessment with the Lake Washington School District, but it was not as thorough as possible because the mother failed to complete paperwork the provider sent to her before the provider assessed K.V. 6 As stated above, the trial court ordered the mother, among other conditions, to enroll K.V. in daycare. The record and parties’ briefing seem to refer to daycare and preschool interchangeably, at least in terms of the mother’s ability or willingness to establish services for K.V.’s needs. We refer to the settings consistent with the terminology used in the record. 4 No. 86153-1-I/5

care after Walter received a “rambly” and “tangential” voicemail from the mother

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