J.S. v. Ohio Dept. of Job Family Serv., Unpublished Decision (5-25-2006)

2006 Ohio 2611
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 2006
DocketNo. 05AP-1145.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2006 Ohio 2611 (J.S. v. Ohio Dept. of Job Family Serv., Unpublished Decision (5-25-2006)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.S. v. Ohio Dept. of Job Family Serv., Unpublished Decision (5-25-2006), 2006 Ohio 2611 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Appellants, "J.," "Q.," and "O." S., through their adoptive parents, Homer and Charlene S., appeal from the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas. That judgment affirmed the decision of appellee, Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, that Franklin County Children Services ("children services") negotiated with appellants in good faith and made reasonable and sufficient offers regarding appellants' request for increased adoption assistance.

{¶ 2} Homer and Charlene adopted J., Q., and O. in April 2002, after having provided a foster home for the children. The children are siblings with special needs due to emotional and behavioral problems. Because the children have special needs, appellants received adoption assistance of $500 per month for Q., $700 per month for O., and $500 per month for J. Appellants also received Medicaid for each child and $720 per year per child for respite needs.

{¶ 3} Subsequently, appellants sought increased adoption assistance. Appellants explained the request for each child in three separate letters dated March 14, 2004. In the letters, appellants noted that after the adoption "it became necessary for [Homer] to seek employment to help `make ends meet.'" Appellants also indicated that Homer had only been able to find a part-time, grant-funded job "that could end at anytime[.]" Next, appellants described that the children's behavioral problems at school created times where either Homer or Charlene would have to leave work and come to the school to intervene. Appellants likewise stated that one of them would consistently have to miss work in order to stay with one child who had been suspended from school. Because of such circumstances, according to appellants, Charlene had "received counseling by her supervisor warning that continued loss of time from her job will result in her dismissal." Therefore, appellants indicated that:

* * * Through much deliberation[,] * * * [Charlene and Homer] have concluded that the need for one of [them] to [quit] [his or her] job now exists. [Homer and Charlene] further agree that [Homer] should be the one to [quit his] job; therefore [appellants] are respectfully requesting an increase in subsidy of $1,000.00. * * *

{¶ 4} In the March 14, 2004 letters, appellants further stated that the increased adoption assistance would allow appellants to explore "other avenues of assistance" such as "frequent and [consistent] counseling, alternative educational services, and camps designed to meet the needs" of the children.

{¶ 5} On March 17, 2004, children services requested that appellants submit a letter "stating your specific request" and "professional documentation supporting the services you are requesting." Children services also requested that appellants provide information regarding their finances.

{¶ 6} On March 29, 2004, appellants submitted three separate letters detailing their amended adoption assistance request for each child. In the letters, appellants cited a rise in costs of living and a rise in overall costs of the children's daily living expenses, i.e., shoes, clothing, haircuts, hygiene, school lunches, and fuel needed to drive the children to and from various doctor appointments and to drive to and from school when the children exhibited "inappropriate behavior[.]" Appellants also submitted three separate professional statements of need from a physician indicating that each child would benefit from a therapeutic camp, and appellants noted that the camp costs $1,000 per child.

{¶ 7} Appellants also submitted a financial statement that indicated that Homer had made $640 per month in gross pay and $527.42 per month in net pay. The statement also included Charlene's full-time salary.

{¶ 8} Thereafter, on May 11, 2004, children services sent appellants a letter that denied appellants' request for amended adoption assistance. Children services stated:

* * * In order for [a]doption [a]ssistance to be increased the rationale must be based on the child's special needs. According to [children services'] policy, the [a]doption [a]ssistance will not be increased for the basic needs of the children, which include food, clothing, shelter, daycare, and extracurricular activities. Increases to the monthly stipend can be made in situations where your Insurance, Medicaid, or other resources are not available for your child's special needs.

{¶ 9} However, appellants and children services later continued negotiations, and the parties discussed the children's behavioral problems and discussed Homer having to quit his job to be available for the children. Eventually, children services made two offers. The first offer would have increased the adoption assistance by the amount of monthly net income that Homer lost when he quit his job, $527.42. Children services would have divided the amount by three and would have provided an increase of $175.81 per child per month. The second offer would have made no increases in adoption assistance payments, but would have paid for monthly therapeutic services at $110 per child per hour. Children services would have paid for the therapeutic services for 12 months and then would have re-assessed the situation.

{¶ 10} Nonetheless, appellants rejected both offers. Next, children services made another offer that combined the above two offers. Through the amended offer, children services would have increased the adoption assistance by $175.81 per child per month and would have also paid for the therapeutic services. Again, appellants rejected the offer and amended their position by stating that they wanted a total of $1,200 per month per child, an amount equal to the amount they received when they provided a foster home to the children.

{¶ 11} After the impasse, appellants pursued an administrative appeal. Before the administrative appellate hearings, children services submitted a September 10, 2004 appeal summary. In the summary, children services confirmed that it first denied appellants' amended adoption assistance request because of children services' policy not to increase adoption assistance for the "basic needs of the family." Children services also indicated in the appeal summary that it told appellants that "if any additional services were not covered by Medicaid or private insurance they could contact the agency for consideration for Special Needs Assistance through our county funding." In noting as such, children services referenced a policy guide that states:

Increases to the monthly stipend can be made in situations where your Insurance, Medicaid, or other resources are not available for [the] child's needs. Increases will not be granted for the basic needs of the child, which include[:] food, clothing, shelter, daycare and extracurricular activities. * * *

{¶ 12} However, children services stated that it eventually made the above-noted amended adoption proposals after reviewing the negotiations and the documentation that appellants submitted. Children services stated that it offered to cover Homer's lost income because he "quit his job to be available for the" children.

{¶ 13} A state hearing officer conducted a hearing on appellants' administrative appeal. On September 29, 2004, the hearing officer rendered a decision and held that "the offers made by [children services,] i.e.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 Ohio 2611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/js-v-ohio-dept-of-job-family-serv-unpublished-decision-5-25-2006-ohioctapp-2006.