In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.A.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 23, 2021
Docket37601-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.A. (In the Matter of the Welfare of: C.A.) 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 the Matter of the Welfare of: C.A., (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 23, 2021 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In the Matter of the Welfare of ) No. 37601-0-III ) ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION † C.A. ) ) )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. — S.D. appeals after the trial court terminated her parental

rights to her son, C.A. She argues the Department of Children, Youth, and Families

(Department) did not provide her the necessary court-ordered services, it failed to prove

that termination was in C.A.’s best interest, the termination statute is unconstitutional as

applied, and various findings of fact should be vacated. We disagree and affirm the

termination order.

† To protect the privacy interests of the minor, we use initials to refer to him and his mother throughout this opinion. Gen. Order for Court of Appeals, In Re Changes to Case Title (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 22, 2018) (effective Sept. 1, 2018), http://www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts. No. 37601-0-III In re Welfare of C.A.

FACTS

In March 2017, S.D. contacted the Department and requested an out-of-home

placement for her eight-year-old son, C.A. The Department responded by providing

voluntary services to the family, including a parenting program and Intensive Family

Preservation Services. At the time, S.D. was already engaged in individual mental health

services with Leah Parker at the Children’s Home Society.

The Department learned C.A. was missing school. It also learned C.A. was acting

out, destroying property, and running away from home. As punishment, S.D. would lock

C.A. out of their apartment, which forced him to sleep in the laundry room of the

apartment complex.

In November 2017, C.A. reported that his mother choked him and threatened to

kill him. Law enforcement took C.A. into protective custody. The Department

investigated, determined that the report was unfounded, and attempted to return C.A. to

S.D. with voluntary supportive services. S.D. refused and said she had “dealt with him

long enough” and “the Department can deal with him now.” Report of Proceedings (RP)

at 88.

The Department filed a dependency petition on November 27, 2017. S.D. agreed

to a finding of dependency as well as to an order authorizing out-of-home care for C.A.

2 No. 37601-0-III In re Welfare of C.A.

S.D. further agreed to participate in a psychological evaluation, a parent/child assessment,

mental health counseling, and family therapy.

Psychological evaluations

S.D. completed two psychological evaluations over the course of the case, one

with Dr. Scott Mabee and one with Dr. Noelle Turner. Dr. Mabee recommended six

months of counseling to build skills necessary for coping with depression and anxiety and

to become less avoidant and reactive. He further recommended medication management,

a parenting program such as the Positive Parenting Program, the Behavioral and

Educational Skills Training (BEST) program for C.A., and an in-home family

preservation service if C.A. returned to live with his mother. Dr. Turner diagnosed S.D.

with major depressive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder.

Mental health counseling

S.D. worked with two different mental health providers during the dependency.

She worked with Leah Parker at the Children’s Home Society for two years beginning in

September 2017. Ms. Parker provided S.D. with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to

help with emotion regulation to provide more consistent parenting. Ms. Parker believed

that S.D. was making progress in regulating her emotions. However, she also felt that

3 No. 37601-0-III In re Welfare of C.A.

S.D. needed more assistance and referred S.D. for other services including medication

management, psychological testing, and peer support, as well as talking with S.D. about

intensive outpatient mental health treatment that would have included Dialectical

Behavior Therapy (DBT). She recommended DBT because that type of therapy would be

“useful in helping someone regulate their emotions and have interpersonal effectiveness,

which were a struggle for [S.D.].” RP at 159.

Ms. Parker would have made the referral for intensive outpatient treatment and

DBT to Frontier Behavioral Health because Frontier provided the most extensive

services, but S.D. refused because she had a history with Frontier and did not want to

return there. S.D. did not request a different provider or show interest in the services

offered.

Following a disagreement between S.D. and Ms. Parker, S.D indicated that she

wanted to close the service. Ms. Parker provided a discharge summary to S.D.,

recommending intensive outpatient treatment and additional parenting skills training. The

summary included instructions for requesting the recommended services.

S.D. had three sessions with counselor Mary Anne Sacco beginning in November

2019. After a series of starts and stops, Ms. Sacco felt that S.D. needed a different level

of mental health treatment and recommended DBT because a DBT therapist would be

4 No. 37601-0-III In re Welfare of C.A.

available for S.D. to call or text for help in a crisis. Ms. Sacco offered referrals for DBT

and additional services through Frontier or an alternative provider, but S.D. declined.

The Department offered a referral to a third counselor, Carla Paullin, who could

have offered Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, but S.D.

declined.

C.A.’s placements and behaviors

Meanwhile, C.A. went through nine different placements and two psychiatric

hospitalizations before ending up in a foster home in Yakima. During the various

placements, C.A.’s behavioral issues continued, including damaging property, running

away, assaulting staff, and other disruptive behaviors. These behavioral issues stabilized

once C.A. was placed in the Yakima foster home.

Parenting assessment and parent-child interactions

S.D. completed a parenting assessment with Caitlin Soriano on February 14, 2018.

Ms. Soriano found that S.D. and C.A. had a significant relationship but that they had “a

difficult time communicating with each other and working through difficult situations.”

RP at 337. Ms. Soriano recommended family therapy for the two of them, as well

as a psychological evaluation for S.D. and individual counseling for S.D. and C.A.

S.D. and C.A. began having therapy sessions together, but the two often had issues with

5 No. 37601-0-III In re Welfare of C.A.

one another during the sessions. In August 2018, S.D. suddenly ended the therapy

sessions because she was upset that Ms. Soriano had not returned a telephone call and

because of a dispute about C.A. receiving a Game Boy, leading S.D. to believe that Ms.

Soriano did not care about her.

Family therapy and parent-child interactions

The Department next referred S.D. to Kristin Kempf for additional family therapy;

however, this service ended abruptly during introductory sessions when S.D. refused to

accept Ms. Kempf’s ground rules for therapy and when S.D. called Ms. Kempf a “bitch.”

RP at 456.

In May 2019, the Department filed a petition to terminate S.D.’s parental rights.

C.A.’s foster parents offered S.D. an open adoption plan so as to preserve a relationship

between C.A. and S.D., but S.D. refused the offer.

Around this time, S.D. and C.A.

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