San Benito Health & Human Services Agency v. A.S.

244 Cal. App. 4th 327, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 143, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2016
DocketH042339
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 244 Cal. App. 4th 327 (San Benito Health & Human Services Agency v. A.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Benito Health & Human Services Agency v. A.S., 244 Cal. App. 4th 327, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 143, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 58 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

*330 Opinion

GROVER, J.

Mother A.S. challenges the juvenile court’s assumption of jurisdiction over her daughter, K.S., under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300. She also challenges the disposition order continuing jurisdiction and removing K.S. from her custody. Respondent San Benito Health and Human Services Agency (Agency) defends the juvenile court’s orders, and K.S. has not participated in this appeal. Finding no reversible error, we will affirm.

L BACKGROUND

K.S. was removed from an abusive home when she was four. At age five she was placed with A.S. who adopted her a year later. K.S. is a special needs child diagnosed with reactive attachment disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and a learning disorder. Those special needs qualified K.S. for financial assistance through the state’s Adoption Assistance Program.

A.S. (hereafter mother) raised K.S. in Hollister. The first two years after her adoption, K.S. was on mother’s health insurance plan. The closest covered medical facility was in Gilroy and the closest covered pediatric psychiatric clinic was in San Jose, but no one on that staff specialized in reactive attachment disorder. After two years, mother switched K.S. to Medi-Cal (covered by the Adoption Assistance Program) so K.S. would have access to routine medical care and mental health services in San Benito County and to specialized medical care throughout the state. San Benito County Behavioral Health (Behavioral Health), the county’s designated Medi-Cal mental health services provider, became K.S.’s mental health services provider. Behavioral Health did not offer treatment for reactive attachment disorder. Mother, a licensed social worker who had worked as a child protective services social worker, was familiar with residential treatment programs in Monterey and Santa Clara Counties that would address reactive attachment disorder, and she felt K.S. was legally entitled to that specialized treatment.

When K.S. was nine, an Adoption Assistance Program assessment identified problem behaviors such as chronic lying and stealing, aggression, problems with peers, property destruction, enuresis, and sexualized behavior. In seventh grade K.S. brought a knife to school that she claimed to be carrying for protection. K.S. started ninth grade in 2014. In September of that year she was assaulted by an 11-year-old girl, a runaway companion, resulting in a fractured nose. By December of that year she had run away several times. According to mother, K.S. was having difficulty adjusting to high school. A *331 schoolmate was pressuring her to have sex with him, and she was carrying knives for protection. K.S. had also been a suspect in a burglary and theft case.

K.S. ran away Saturday, December 6, 2014, spent the night with a boy in an abandoned house, and returned home the next day with three large knives. On Monday, December 8, school staff contacted mother after finding a note K.S. had written to a friend saying, “When you get this I will be dead!” K.S.’s Behavioral Health therapist was unavailable that day so K.S. was assessed by a crisis counselor and determined not to be a danger to herself or others. 1 Mother disagreed with that assessment. Given K.S.’s at-risk behaviors, she felt K.S. should be placed on a psychiatric hold, and she refused custody of K.S. because she could not ensure her safety. Without the ability to hold K.S., the Behavioral Health treatment team’s only recourse was to discuss a safety plan with K.S. in the event she ran away again. Staff asked K.S. to sign a “No Harm Agreement” and to call her mother every hour if she ran away. Mother felt this plan did not assure K.S.’s safety, and she refused to take her home. Police were called and K.S. was placed in protective custody.

K.S. was in foster care for two months, living in a home in Los Banos with several teenage boys. After the January 2015 jurisdiction hearing, she was placed with her biological aunt in Sacramento.

II. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS

On December 11, 2014, the Agency filed an amended juvenile dependency petition alleging that K.S. came within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivisions (c) and (g). 2 At the December 11 detention hearing mother was still unwilling to take custody of K.S., who had been placed in a foster home in Los Banos. K.S. was detained, the court ordered reunification services, and it set a jurisdiction hearing for January 5, 2015.

On January 5 mother requested that the petition be dismissed because she planned to move with K.S. to Sacramento where K.S. would have extended family support and access to mental health treatment, and she would be removed from the violence and harassment in Hollister. Mother had made *332 arrangements for K.S. to live with her biological aunt in Sacramento until she could relocate. And K.S., who on two previous occasions had told the social worker that she did not want to return to mother’s care, told mother that morning that she wanted to return home. The court continued the matter because mother had not discussed her dismissal request with her attorney.

A. The Jurisdiction Hearing

At a contested jurisdiction hearing held on January 26, mother again asked that the petition be dismissed because she was capable of parenting K.S. with an appropriate safety plan. She testified that she had arranged for K.S. to live with her aunt in Sacramento where appropriate mental health services were available. Mother would relocate to Sacramento as soon as she could obtain a job transfer. In the meantime, she planned to visit and participate in treatment with K.S. every weekend. Mother had obtained referrals to Sacramento mental health services specializing in reactive attachment disorder. K.S.’s aunt had a long-term and supportive relationship with mother, and mother and K.S. were both close with her. Mother intended to give the aunt K.S.’s Adoption Assistance Program grant money and authorize the aunt to obtain needed services. Mother testified that K.S. was not doing well in her current placement — sharing a foster home with five teenage boys. On December 10 mother had provided the Agency with contact information for the biological aunt, but K.S. had remained in the Los Banos placement hoarding knives, being harassed by the boys, and not receiving individual or family therapy.

K.S.’s aunt, who lived with her husband and adult son, testified that her home was open to K.S., and she would work with mother to facilitate K.S.’s treatment and therapy. Although the aunt understood that mother’s plan was to quickly reunite with K.S., if that did not happen the aunt was willing to put K.S. on her insurance plan and, with or without a guardianship, have K.S. live with her until she became an adult. K.S. had been in the aunt’s custody before her placement with mother. K.S. had not visited Sacramento in several years but her aunt had recently visited her in Hollister.

K.S.’s attorney made an offer of proof that K.S. “would like to go to Sacramento and be with her aunt.” K.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 Cal. App. 4th 327, 198 Cal. Rptr. 3d 143, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-benito-health-human-services-agency-v-as-calctapp-2016.