In the Matter of the Welfare of the Children of: S. S., Parent.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 22, 2016
DocketA16-270
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Welfare of the Children of: S. S., Parent. (In the Matter of the Welfare of the Children of: S. S., Parent.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota 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 the Children of: S. S., Parent., (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A16-0270

In the Matter of the Welfare of the Children of: S. S., Parent

Filed August 22, 2016 Affirmed Larkin, Judge

Ramsey County District Court File No. 62-JV-15-1265

Joanna Woolman, Child Protection Clinic, Ruta Johnsen (certified student attorney) Mitchell Hamline School of Law, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)

John J. Choi, Ramsey County Attorney, Kathryn Eilers, Assistant County Attorney, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)

Dorothy Gause, Dorothy M. Gause, LLC, Stillwater, Minnesota (for guardian ad litem Jan Biebel)

Considered and decided by Larkin, Presiding Judge; Smith, Tracy M., Judge; and

Klaphake, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

LARKIN, Judge

Appellant-mother challenges the district court’s termination of her parental rights,

arguing that a statutory basis for termination was not established by clear-and-convincing

 Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10. evidence, that reasonable efforts were not made to reunify her family, and that termination

is not in her children’s best interests. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant-mother S.S. is the biological mother of M.H.S., born in 2008, and K.S.,

born in 2010.1 In April 2014, respondent Ramsey County Community Human Services

Department (department) filed a petition alleging the children were in need of protection

or services (CHIPS) and requesting that the children be placed in emergency protective

care. The CHIPS petition alleged that in November 2013, M.H.S. missed the school bus

and a resident of the apartment building where mother and the children lived informed

security that M.H.S. was missing. Another resident of the apartment complex found

M.H.S. and took her to school. Afterwards, mother told security that she had told M.H.S.

to go to S.J.’s apartment, who was mother’s boyfriend at the time. Later that month, the

department received a report that the children were locked in a bedroom while in S.J.’s

care. Mother told security that she told S.J. to lock the children in her bedroom if he left

the apartment. When security entered the apartment, they found the children alone and

unsupervised. Mother signed a Ramsey County family working agreement, agreeing that

she would not leave her children in S.J.’s care. Nonetheless, in April 2014, K.S. was at

S.J.’s apartment, and mother admitted to a department representative that both children go

to S.J.’s apartment to play.

1 The district court terminated the parental rights of M.H.S.’s adjudicated father by default on June 18, 2015. K.S. does not have a legal father.

2 The CHIPS petition also alleged that in April 2014, mother contacted the St. Paul

Police Department and reported that M.H.S. had been sexually abused by M.H.S.’s adult

male cousin. Mother told the department that the children spent weekends at this relative’s

home so mother could have a break. M.H.S. had been sexually abused two additional times

in the two preceding years: once by a babysitter’s adult son and once by a friend’s father

when she spent the night at his home. After the most recent sexual abuse, staff at Midwest

Children’s Resource Center (MCRC) expressed concerns about mother’s failure to enroll

M.H.S. in therapy despite recommendations that she do so, as well as mother’s failure to

provide consistent care for M.H.S.’s eczema and follow through on a recommended

dermatology appointment.

Mother admitted the CHIPS petition, and the district court adjudicated the children

in need of protection or services. The child-protection worker assigned to work with

mother referred her to REM Parenting for in-home parenting services. Mother’s in-home

parenting worker met with mother and her children weekly for 17 months. The main goals

of mother’s parenting education were for mother to exhibit protective capacities, identify

appropriate people to be around her children, and display parenting skills tailored to her

children’s mental-health needs.

The parenting worker reported that she observed an improvement in mother’s use

of disciplinary techniques but expressed concerns regarding mother’s use of inappropriate

language around the children. For example, mother called one of the children a “pussy”

during a visit. In addition, mother often required prompting to interact with the children

during visits, brought a friend or family member to visits despite being instructed that such

3 persons could participate in visits only with prior child-protection approval, and heavily

relied on the foster-care provider and parenting worker to plan visits and provide food for

the children during visits. Mother also allowed her children to have contact with S.J. and

introduced the children to other men during visits. After the parenting worker reviewed

mother’s parenting assessment with her, mother threatened to blow up the building where

the parenting assessor worked, with the parenting assessor in it. REM’s last progress report

regarding mother states that “[mother] has reached a point at which she is not retaining

new information and continues to demonstrate the same behavioral lack of progress that

she has demonstrated since the beginning.”

Most of mother’s visitation with the children was supervised. It generally occurred

in parks and at a restaurant near mother’s home. Supervised visits were attempted in

mother’s home, but M.H.S. did not want to visit there because M.H.S. was afraid of being

locked in a bedroom again. Several aspects of mother’s home environment also deterred

the department from having visits there. For example, a couple lived in mother’s home for

an extended period of time after child protection became involved. Mother’s friends and

their children also stayed in mother’s home for shorter periods. It took repeated

encouragement by the children’s guardian ad litem (GAL) to get mother to remove these

people from her home. The GAL also repeatedly asked mother to remove a stick of burnt

incense that was sticking out of a wall of the home because it was a potential fire hazard.

In addition, mother’s home contained graffiti that included inappropriate language and

content related to a friend’s death. Mother did not cover this graffiti until nearly a year

after the GAL and her parenting worker repeatedly asked her to do so.

4 In April 2015, the department petitioned to terminate mother’s parental rights to the

children, alleging that mother’s “mental health issues, lack of protective capacity and

insufficient progress in demonstrating appropriate parenting skills” had significantly

impacted her ability to meet the parenting needs of the children and that mother “lacks the

necessary parenting skills, consistent care giving and protective capacity that [the children]

need at this time.”

In October 2015, the district court granted mother unsupervised visitation with the

children. Mother allowed two men that the children did not know to be present during one

of the unsupervised visits at her home. Mother had met one of the men, J., on a dating

website, did not know his last name, and had only seen him four times in person prior to

the unsupervised visit. During the visit, J. tried to bite mother, slapped her buttocks, and

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