In the Interest of Alison S., No. H12-Cp95-001146-A (Apr. 16, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 4917
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 16, 1999
DocketNos. H12-CP95-001146-A, H12-CP97-004904-A, H12-CP98-005817-A
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 4917 (In the Interest of Alison S., No. H12-Cp95-001146-A (Apr. 16, 1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of Alison S., No. H12-Cp95-001146-A (Apr. 16, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 4917 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Memorandum of Decision CT Page 4918
On September 10, 1997, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) filed petitions to terminate the parental rights of Arthur S. and Sylvia S. to their minor daughters, Alison S. and Dasia S. A consolidated trial of these petitions took place on April 7 and 8, 1999. For the reasons stated below, the court grants the termination petitions.

FACTS

The court finds the following facts and credits the following evidence.

A. The Parents

DCF became involved with Sylvia S., the mother in this case, in 1988, when she gave birth to her second child. Over the next seven years, DCF received reports that the mother was using various forms of cocaine, that the mother missed medical appointments for the children, that the mother was homeless, and that the children were neglected.

In 1995, the mother became pregnant through a nonmarital relationship with the father, Arthur S., who was and remains married to another woman. The mother attended only two prenatal appointments and at the second one tested positive for cocaine. On August 2, 1995, the mother gave birth to Alison at thirty-two weeks gestation. Both the mother and Alison tested positive for cocaine at the time. Alison weighed only two pounds at birth.

On August 22, 1995, DCF obtained an order of temporary custody of Alison, who remained in the hospital until September 2, 1995. With the agreement of the parents, who realized that they were not then capable of rearing Alison, DCF placed Alison with her maternal grandmother. On February 1, 1996, the parents pleaded nolo contendere to a neglect petition, the court committed Alison to DCF custody, and the court entered expectations.

DCF offered unlimited visitation with Alison and supplied the parents bus passes, but the parents did not visit often. A DCF social worker regularly urged the mother to obtain drug treatment, and offered transportation for that as well, but the CT Page 4919 mother avoided the matter. The father tested positive for cocaine on May 6, 1996. Visits by DCF to the parents' home revealed it to be in deplorable condition and the parents to be drinking.

In November, 1996, DCF removed Alison from the grandmother's home because of the grandmother's own drug use and medical neglect. Alison then went to two different foster homes for several months each.

The mother became pregnant again through the father in late 1996. The mother attended only one prenatal appointment and used alcohol daily during her pregnancy. On February 15, 1997, Dasia (called Daisy) was born at twenty-three weeks gestation. The baby weighed only one pound and had significant respiratory problems. The mother tested positive for cocaine at the time.

The parents visited Daisy in the hospital five times during her first twenty-one days. The parents visited sporadically after that until June 10, 1997, when DCF obtained an order of temporary custody. At that time, DCF placed Daisy in the foster home of Vicki and Norman G.2 Two weeks later, DCF placed Alison in the G. home as a result of the disruption of Alison's prior two foster homes. On July 24, 1997, the court adjudicated Daisy to be neglected and committed her to DCF custody.3

The DCF case worker met with the mother in April, 1997 and persuaded her to enter a detoxification program, which lasted thirty days. But the mother failed to follow through with aftercare expectations. DCF referred the mother to parenting classes on several occasions, but the mother did not enroll. The mother visited her children in foster care only once between March and September, 1997. She became transient. As stated, on September 10, 1997, DCF filed for termination.

Since that time, the mother visited Alison and Daisy only on several occasions between April and June, 1998. She has not provided them with gifts or cards on birthdays, holidays, or any other occasions. In 1998, the mother entered several detoxification programs but again failed to participate in recommended aftercare treatment. The mother has contacted DCF sporadically over the years. She failed to appear for trial. DCF's latest information is that the mother, who is now 38, is living with her mother in an elderly housing complex where children are not allowed. CT Page 4920

Between March and early December, 1997, the father did not contact DCF and DCF could not locate him. The father appeared at a court default hearing in December, 1997. At that time, DCF learned that the father had been living in a homeless shelter since September, 1997. As a result of the court hearing, the father received an additional opportunity to regain custody of his two children. The father then visited the children consistently until about a month before trial, at which point he missed three of the next four visits. Also during 1998, the father completed a parenting class and a drug treatment program, and obtained a full time job. On the other hand, the father did not maintain a support network with the drug treatment center and tested positive for cocaine in October, 1998. The father failed to attend a second drug evaluation. He did attend a third evaluation and tested negative. He also failed to attend birth control counseling as required by court expectations. See note 4infra.

In mid-March of this year, the father left the shelter and moved back with his wife, Leatha M.-S, after a five year separation. Leatha has a three bedroom apartment with seven children. DCF has been involved with this family since November, 1997 and apparently now monitors the children under a disposition of protective supervision. Two of the children are the father's, four of them stem from Leatha's relationships with two other men, and the seventh child is Leatha's niece.

The father, now 43, has not been working, although he claims to be in job training. He does not give the children there a great deal of attention. Leatha has a history of drug and alcohol abuse. For that reason, and because of behavioral problems with one child and missed medical appointments for another, DCF has moved to modify the disposition in favor of commitment. The father nonetheless proposes that Alison and Daisy be returned to him so that he can rear them in this home.4

The mother, father, and the two children attended a psychological evaluation by Dr. David Mantell, a clinical psychologist, in May, 1998; all but the mother attended subsequent sessions in February, 1999. Although the parents were appropriate and affectionate with the children, the children did not smile, laugh, or engage in play with them. A mental evaluation of the mother revealed her to be functioning at a low level intellectually, immature, and possibly suffering from a mental disorder, in addition to a history of substance abuse. The CT Page 4921 father also has a low intellectual capacity, a simplistic view of the world, and a history of substance abuse and criminal arrests.

B. The Children

Soon after Daisy arrived at the foster home of Vicki and Norman G. as a tiny baby, she developed difficulty breathing, became lethargic, and would exhibit projectile vomiting. In October, 1997, Daisy was diagnosed as having hydrocephalus and doctors placed a shunt in her brain to draw away fluid. Since that time, Daisy has become very active and now, at age two, she sees and speaks well. Daisy receives assistance from Birth to Three for motor skills and upper body stiffness. The foster parents still monitor Daisy closely for problems with her shunt.

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1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 4917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-alison-s-no-h12-cp95-001146-a-apr-16-1999-connsuperct-1999.