In Re The Welfare Of: B.d.m.b., Brandon Burns, App v. Dcyf

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 28, 2020
Docket80429-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Welfare Of: B.d.m.b., Brandon Burns, App v. Dcyf (In Re The Welfare Of: B.d.m.b., Brandon Burns, App v. Dcyf) 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 Welfare Of: B.d.m.b., Brandon Burns, App v. Dcyf, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Parental Rights to No. 80429-4-I B.D.M.B., (consolidated with No. 80585-1-I)

Minor Child. DIVISION ONE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES,

Respondent,

v.

KELLI BURNS and BRANDON BURNS,

Appellants.

APPELWICK, J. — After a dependency of more than four years, the trial court

terminated Kelli’s and Brandon’s parental rights to B.D.M.B. Kelli contends the

termination statutes, RCW 13.34.180 and .190, are unconstitutional as applied to

this case. She also contends that the Department did not prove all statutory

elements or that termination was in the best interests of the child. Brandon claims

the Department failed to prove that it offered or provided all necessary services

capable of correcting his parental deficiencies and that he was currently unfit to

parent B.D.M.B. We affirm. No. 80429-4-I/2

FACTS

This appeal concerns B.D.M.B., the middle child of Kelli Burn’s and Brandon

Burn’s three children.1 B.D.M.B. was born in January 2010 and has “seen a lot in

her little life.”

Within the first six years of her life, B.D.M.B. observed her parents

frequently drinking to the point of intoxication, Kelli cutting and stabbing Brandon,

and Brandon breaking Kelli’s nose multiple times. Kelli and Brandon also

subjected B.D.M.B. to acts of physical violence, emotional abuse, and neglect.

During this time, the family had several encounters with law enforcement, had

numerous Child Protective Services referrals, and received various family support

services. These early years of constant chaos and domestic violence caused

B.D.M.B. to suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

In December 2014, the Department of Social and Health Services

(Department)2 removed B.D.M.B. from Kelli’s and Brandon’s care and filed a

dependency petition. B.D.M.B. was initially placed into foster care.

In January 2015, Kelli and Brandon agreed to the entry of a dependency

and dispositional order placing B.D.M.B. in relative care. The parties stipulated to

the facts establishing dependency and the court entered an agreed dependency

order for B.D.M.B.. The court ordered Kelli and Brandon to participate in domestic

1Although the record reveals B.D.M.B.’s siblings share a similar childhood experience, we summarize the facts as related to B.D.M.B. only. 2 As of July 1, 2018, child welfare functions were transferred from the

Department of Social and Health Services to the Department of Children, Youth, and Families. See RCW 43.216.906. We refer to both as “the Department.”

2 No. 80429-4-I/3

violence services, substance abuse treatment, and random urinalysis (UAs). The

court authorized weekly visitation for Kelli and Brandon.

In March 2015, the Department later placed B.D.M.B. with her paternal

grandmother. At that time, the court found both parents were making progress

towards reunification and expanded visitation to include weekend visits.

In August 2015, after Kelli and Brandon successfully completed all court-

ordered services, B.D.M.B. was returned to her parents’ care for a “trial in-home

placement.” But, by December 2015, the parents relapsed into alcohol abuse and

family violence.

In January 2016, B.D.M.B. was again removed from the parents’ care and

placed her with the paternal grandmother. B.D.M.B. remained in this placement

throughout the remainder of the dependency proceedings.

At a February 2016 review hearing, the court ordered Kelli to continue

substance abuse treatment, complete random Urinalysis (UA), attend sober

support meetings, participate in domestic violence service and in a “Parenting After

Violence” class, and continue in family counseling. The court ordered Brandon to

participate in an updated substance abuse evaluation and in an “Effects of

Violence on children” class, complete random UAs and a domestic violence

batterer’s assessment, and undergo individual mental health counseling. The

court later required the parents to complete a Foster Care Assessment Program

(FCAP) to examine reunification barriers, and changed B.D.M.B.’s primary

permanent plan to adoption with an alternative plan to return home to the parents.

3 No. 80429-4-I/4

In September 2016, an FCAP report was completed. According to that

report, Kelli and Brandon denied alcohol abuse during B.D.M.B.’s trial return home.

Relatedly, the report determined: “It will be difficult to see a decrease in

[B.D.M.B.’s] PTSD arousal scores until there is acknowledgement by [the parents]

of the impact of the abuse and their past behavior has had had on their children,

and her permanent placement is determined.” The report also stated in pertinent

part:

Reunification is not recommended. The family has been provided with a significant level of services over time and there are no additional services for the parents that could result in a recommendation for reunification within the mandated time frame for these three siblings. Encourage the parents to relinquish parental rights and adoption by [the paternal grandmother]. If the Court determines that reunification should occur, then Alternatives for Families: a Cognitive Behavior Therapy (AF-CBT) is the evidence- based treatment intervention designed to improve the relationships between children and caregivers in families involved in arguments, frequent conflict, physical force/discipline, or child physical-abuse. [Kelli and Brandon] are not currently good candidates for AF-CBT, because they have continued to deny their behavior.

In October 2016, the Department filed a petition to terminate Kelli’s and

Brandon’s parental rights to B.D.M.B. The petition alleged that the Department

offered numerous services to the parents, including: drug and alcohol evaluations,

substance abuse treatment, random UAs, domestic violence assessment and

treatment, Parenting after Violence class, family counseling, mental health

assessments and services, age-appropriate parenting education, case

management services and monitoring, assisting caregiver services, and facilitating

4 No. 80429-4-I/5

implementation of services. The petition also alleged, despite the Department’s

provision of these services, the parents were not fit to parent B.D.M.B. due to

the following parental deficiencies that have not been corrected and necessitate termination of parental rights as to the parents: history of substance abuse, domestic violence, mental health issue, and a lack of parenting skills. For these reasons, the parents do not understand and are incapable of providing for their child’s emotional, physical, mental and developmental needs. The parent [are] incapable of safely parenting the child.

In December 2016, for the first time, Kelli and Brandon acknowledged their

relapse on alcohol abuse in December 2015. Not only did Kelli and Brandon refuse

to disclose their relapse to their respective service providers for an entire year,

they also maintained that B.D.M.B. was lying about witnessing their relapse and

return to violence during the trial return home.

In March 2017, the assigned Department social worker, Zavtra Adams,

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