In Re The Dependency Of N.p. Kate Daniels v. Dshs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 8, 2019
Docket78350-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Dependency Of N.p. Kate Daniels v. Dshs (In Re The Dependency Of N.p. Kate Daniels v. Dshs) 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 N.p. Kate Daniels v. Dshs, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Dependency of ) No. 78350-5-I consolidated with ) No. 78351-3-I N.P., DOB: 02/28/2013, ) ) Minor Child. ) ) STATE OF WASHINGTON ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND ) HEALTH SERVICES, ) ) DIVISION ONE Respondent, ) v. ) ) FILED: July 8, 2019 KATE DANIELS, ) Appellant.

MANN, A.C.J. — Kate Daniels appeals the trial court’s order granting the

Washington Department of Social and Health Services’s petition to terminate her

parental rights to N.P. Because the Department demonstrated that it provided Kate

Daniels with all reasonably necessary services capable of correcting her parental

deficiencies, that Daniels was currently unfit to parent NP., and that it was unlikely that

N.P. could be returned to Daniels’s care in the near future, we affirm. No. 78350-5-1/2

Daniels is the biological mother of NP. who was born in 2013. When Daniels

was pregnant with N.P., she was diagnosed with Huntington’s disease. Huntington’s

disease is a degenerative and debilitating disease with symptoms including loss of

mobility, reduced cognition, delusions, and paranoia. While the psychiatric symptoms

are potentially treatable through medicine, there are no remedies for the other

symptoms. Huntington’s disease is 100 percent fatal. Daniels began treatment at the

University of Washington Huntington’s Disease Clinic (UW clinic) in 2013.

In 2014, Daniels had her second child, M.K.P. Daniel’s medical team reported

that she was having challenges caring for both children. The Department filed

dependency petitions as to both children. Daniels agreed that her executive functioning

and physical functioning were negatively impacted by Huntington’s disease. M.K.P.

was placed in foster care. Daniels relinquished her parental rights to M.K.P. in 2016.

In the 2014 dependency, N.P. was placed in the care of Daniels on the condition

that she lived with her parents. Daniels was ordered to participate in a

neuropsychological evaluation and follow recommendations, a parenting assessment

and follow recommendations, and an in-home support service. Dr. Paul Connor

conducted a neuropsychological evaluation of Daniels. Daniels’s testing “showed slow

processing speed, impaired response time, and her learning recall was severely

impaired.” Further, she “demonstrated persisting attentional difficulties, and impaired

ability to react quickly to address situations.” Dr. Steve Tutty also conducted a

comprehensive parenting evaluation of Daniels. Dr. Tutty reported that Daniels had a

“dependent attitude towards life . . . that she significantly underestimated her true

-2- No. 78350-5-1/3

psychological challenges. . . [and] she had difficulty processing and responding to the

demands of [N.P.J.” Dr. Tutty reported that Daniels did not engage, guide, or set

boundaries with N.P. and that lack of insight is often associated with Huntington’s

disease.

Daniels divorced N.P.’s father and remained living with her parents.1 The

Department dismissed the dependency in October 2015. In February 2016, Daniels

began to exhibit signs of paranoia and became episodically delusional. Daniels

believed her former nurse at the UW clinic had conspired with her parents in an attempt

to murder her. She believed that bugs were crawling all over her skin and out of her

mouth. She also accused her parents and other adult family members of sexually

assaulting NP. Daniels reported her concerns to the police and fled her parents’ home

with N.P. Daniels’s parents decided that she could no longer live in their home.

Daniels began residing in shelters with N.P. The Department developed a

detailed safety plan for N.P. to remain in Daniels’s care. Daniels followed the safety

plan for several days but then stopped staying in shelters. On March 14, 2016, the

Department filed a second dependency petition. The trial court placed N.P. in Daniels’s

care under a shelter care order. The order required that Daniels regularly participate at

the UW clinic, that N.P. “shall not be left unattended at any time while in [Daniels’s]

care,” and that Daniels must keep in regular contact with the Department. The UW

clinic was able to provide Daniels with housing resources, assistance with social

security income, mental health services, nutritional services, and medication

management. The UW clinic was also able to provide medication for psychiatric

1 NP’s father, Fauniteni Pauni’s parental rights were terminated by default and are not at issue in

this appeal.

-3- No. 78350-5-1/4

symptoms. The registered nurse that worked with Daniels testified that medications

were “offered and offered” to Daniels, but that she did not want to take them.

The Department arranged for mental health counselor J. Chalice Bailey to work

with Daniels beginning in May 2016. In May 2016, Daniels was living at a shelter

named Mary’s Place. Bailey provided Daniels with intensive family preservation

services, a type of in-home service designed to maintain a child safely in the child’s

current placement. Bailey came to Daniels in the shelter and worked with her on her

organizational skills and the ability to follow through on tasks. Daniels had a voice mail

box that was full and a stack of unopened mail. She did not realize that the she had

$10,000 worth of back payment for social security benefits that needed to be collected.

Bailey also helped Daniels apply for COPES,2 a program that provides disabled

individuals with intensive in-home care such as getting groceries, cooking, cleaning, and

transportation. Daniels did not follow through with her COPES appointments.

Social worker Rob Credle was driving Daniels and NP. to and from the overnight

Mary’s Place shelter in Seattle to the Mary’s Place day center in Shoreline. Credle did

this three to five times a week. Credle also provided Daniels with an ORCA card to

assist with their transportation needs.

In June 2016, Daniels stopped contacting Credle and the UW clinic social

workers. The Department was unable to locate Daniels. As a result, the trial court

ordered that N.P. be removed from Daniels’s care and be placed with Daniels’s parents.

The court also ordered a writ of habeas corpus and a warrant in aid of the writ of

habeas corpus to help locate Daniels and N.P. Daniels did not appear for her five-day

2 Community Options Program Entry System.

-4- No. 78350-5-1/5

contested dependency trial in July 2016. On July 26, 2016, N.P. was then declared

dependent, based on Daniels’s inability to “adequately [care] for the child, such that the

child is in circumstances which constitute a danger of substantial damage to the child’s

psychological or physical development.” RCW 13.34.030(6)(d). The trial court ordered

Daniels to participate in an updated neuropsychological evaluation with a parenting

component and to comply with the treatment recommendations of her medical provider.

Daniels and N.P. were eventually located in Texas. Daniels’s parents flew to

Texas to retrieve NP. and bring him back to Washington. N.P. has remained in his

grandparents’ care ever since. Daniels returned to Washington from Texas in

September 2016. Brenda Vicars and a social worker from the UW clinic met with

Daniels in October 2016 to arrange resources for her.

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