In re the Parental Rights to: T.D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 28, 2017
Docket34587-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Parental Rights to: T.D. (In re the Parental Rights to: T.D.) 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 Parental Rights to: T.D., (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED SEPTEMBER 28, 2017 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Parental Rights to ) ) No. 34587-4-111 T.D. ) ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION )

KORSMO, J. -B.D. appeals from a trial court order terminating her parental rights

to her son, T.D. Because the record supports the trial court's determination that (1) her

parental deficiencies were unlikely to be resolved in a timely fashion, (2) she was an unfit

mother, and (3) termination was in the best interests of T.D., we affirm the trial court.

FACTS

Ms. B.D. was the mother ofT.D., and her live-in partner, D.W., was the alleged

father. Social workers from the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS)

became interested in the couple when D.W. applied for food stamp and medical benefits

for T.D., but did not know the child's name and date of birth. DSHS removed the child

from the couple's home when he was 17 months of age because B.D. often left the child

in the care ofD.W., a convicted sex offender. No. 34587-4-III In re the Parental Rights to TD.

The shelter care hearing required B.D. to undergo a parenting assessment and a

psychological evaluation. 1 She was also granted two visits per week with T.D. The child

reacted negatively to visitation with his mother. In one instance he curled up on a shelf

and did not want to interact with her. It was believed the child had suffered significant

past trauma. An agreed order of dependency entered in December 2014, that

incorporated her prior obligations and, as a result of her parenting assessment, directed

that she receive individual and family counseling and Circle of Security training. Her

visitation was extended to three times a week because she had consistently visited T.D.

Dr. Sean Smitham diagnosed B.D. with a mixed personality disorder and

recommended therapy, parent-training workshops, lifestyle changes, and more stable

housing that did not depend on D.W. At the first review hearing May 30, 2015, the court

directed that B.D. complete mental health treatment and family therapy with Circle of

Security training, but she was reluctant to do so. Instead, she continued with individual

therapy at Frontier Behavioral Health with Kristina Li.

At the second review hearing on August 3, 2015, DSHS notified B.D. that it would

be filing for termination of her parental rights. 2 She then abandoned her reluctance to

attend the Circle of Security training and the family therapy. In December, B.D. tried to

1 She successfully passed a urinalysis and no chemical dependency treatment was required. A second urinalysis the following year also was negative. 2 DSHS subsequently obtained an order of default on D.W. 's parental interest in T.D., as well as an order defaulting anyone other than D.W. as a potential father for T.D.

2 No. 34587-4-III In re the Parental Rights to TD.

take T.D. home from a visitation, going outside in the cold without putting a coat on the

child. A fight with three visitation workers ensued in the parking lot. It took 10 minutes

before B.D. stopped resisting and returned the screaming child. She later admitted that

she had made a mistake.

The termination petition proceeded to trial on May 23, 2016. The court heard

from Dr. Smitham, Ms. Li, caseworker Alyson Gamache, family therapist Heidi

Anderson, and guardian ad litem Jill Leonetti. Ms. Leonetti testified that it was not in the

best interests of T.D. to be placed with his mother. She was concerned about the child's

safety after observing B .D. attempt to interfere with the medication being given to the

child. The court terminated the parent-child relationship and entered lengthy written

findings the following month. Some of those findings that bear on the issues in this

appeal are noted below.

With respect to the mother's parenting deficiencies, the court wrote in its

Finding VI:

There is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child can be returned to [B. D.] in the near future. In coming to this conclusion, the court considered the degree to which Ms. [B .D.] was making progress in the remedial services in which she was engaged.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 96. The court further noted:

As a result of her mental health issues, Ms. [B.D.] had difficulty recognizing and responding appropriately to her child's cues; she displayed poor judgment when it came to assessing the appropriateness and safety of I ! !I !

3 fi

\ No. 34587-4-III In re the Parental Rights to TD.

individuals she allowed to have access to her child; she exhibited an inability to empathize with her child; and she struggled with placing her child's needs above what she perceived as her own needs. Ms. [B.D.'s] prognosis for changing these debilitating personality traits, even with appropriate mental health intervention, was poor to guarded according to Dr. Smitham.

CP at 96. The court recognized that Ms. B.D. 's intellectual difficulties contributed to her

challenges in overcoming mental health issues:

[Ms. Anderson] therefore tailored her instruction methods to take this into account by employing more visual, hands-on instruction techniques. While Ms. [B.D.] seemed during sessions to respond positively to this instructional approach, Ms. Anderson's work with Ms. [B.D.] over time was ultimately unsuccessful: Ms. [B.D.] exhibited an inability to carry over what she had learned from one session to the next and was never able to develop any insight into her parental deficits .... Ms. [B.D.] failed to make any significant progress in addressing her parental deficiencies during the course of the dependency; therefore, a rebuttable presumption exists that there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child can be returned to Ms. [B.D.] in the near future .... It is clear that Ms. [B.D.] does not believe that she has any mental health issues, nor has she gained any parenting skills or insight into her issues during the period of the dependency. This child cannot be returned to her now or at any time in the foreseeable future, given her failure to address her issues in any meaningful way.

CP at 97-98.

The court addressed Ms. B.D.'s ability to parent in Finding VII:

[Ms. B.D.'s] unaddressed mental health issues render her incapable of providing a safe, stable and suitable home for the child at this time. She has no insight into her issues, professing herself to be unaware of why the Department has concerns for her ability to parent and why the Department wants her to participate in services. She believes that the Department's

4 No. 34587-4-III In re the Parental Rights to TD.

motive in removing her child from her care is financial; her proof of this is that the government takes taxes out of her paychecks. She believes that the child's putative father, [D.W.], despite his criminal history and documented risk to children, is an appropriate caregiver for the child. If the child were to be placed in her care at this time, he would be at extreme risk of neglect due to her mental health issues, and at risk of neglect and even abuse due to Ms. [B.D.]'s lack of insight regarding who is a safe and appropriate caregiver for the child.

CP at 98. The following findings addressed the best interest of T.D.:

VIII.

Continuation of parent-child relationship clearly diminishes the child's prospects for early integration into a permanent and stable home ....

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