Tara U. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services

239 P.3d 701, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 95, 2010 WL 3450568
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 2010
DocketS-13720
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 239 P.3d 701 (Tara U. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tara U. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services, 239 P.3d 701, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 95, 2010 WL 3450568 (Ala. 2010).

Opinions

Order

IT IS ORDERED:1

1. Tara U. is the mother of Molly, born April 2003, and Maggie, born February 20062 The girls' father is deceased. Molly and Maggie were both born with high levels of opiates in their systems. As a result, the State of Alaska Office of Children's Services (OCS) placed each of them directly after birth in the custody of their grandmother, Dalila, who shared a home with Tara. OCS provided Dalila with a care and safety plan after Maggie's birth. The plan specified that Tara was not to reside in the home and was not to have unsupervised contact with the girls, but Dalila did not follow the plan. OCS did not come to the home to follow up.

2. In July 2008 OCS received an unsubstantiated report that individuals in Tara's home were selling Oxycontin. In February 2006 Tara admitted that she was addicted to heroin.

3. On April 23, 2008, Tara was arrested and jailed for dealing heroin out of the home she shared with her children and Dalila. The police placed Molly and Maggie in emer-geney custody. This was the first time Tara's children had been taken into the legal custody of OCS.

[703]*7034. OCS filed an emergency petition for adjudication of the girls as children in need of aid and for temporary custody. In May 2008 the girls were placed with their paternal aunt, Sarah, and OCS gained temporary custody.

5. In June 2008 OCS assigned Stephanie Shields, a permanency social worker, to the case. - Shields worked with a social worker at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center (Hi-land), where Tara was being held, who looked into available substance abuse assessments offered at the jail. Tara chose not to participate in Hiland's assessment because she would have to pay a fee, and she believed she could receive an assessment for free after her release from jail. Shields did not offer for OCS to help pay for Hiland's assessment. - Shields did not look into whether a mental health clinician worked at Hiland beyond asking the Hiland social worker whether services were available.

6. Tara was released from jail on bail to a third-party custodian in September 2008.

7. In an Order of Disposition issued in October 2008, the court committed the girls to OCS custody for up to two years. In February 2009, following a permanency hearing, the superior court determined that adoption was the appropriate permanent plan for the girls.

8. The court held a placement hearing in April 2009. OCS indicated its intention to have the girls adopted by their paternal cousin, Kate. Kate had participated in the girls' upbringing since their birth and hoped to adopt them. OCS planned to transfer the girls to Kate's custody when the school year ended. The aunt with whom the girls had been living chose not to be an adoptive placement because of her advanced age. The guardian ad litem (GAL) appointed for the girls testified that they wanted to go back to Dalila's, and presumably Tara's, care but that it was not in their best interests to go back. The court found that it was in the best interests of the children to be placed with Kate.

9. In June 2009 OCS filed a petition for termination of parental rights.

10. Tara returned to jail in July 2009 after allegedly violating a bail condition.

11. A new permanency social worker, Tamara Boeckman, was appointed on August 5, 2009, after Shields went on medical leave. Boeckman spoke with Tara on August 18 at Hiland, and Tara agreed to work a case plan. Boeckman sent Tara a packet for a telephonic substance abuse assessment. She determined that Tara was not eligible for Hiland's mental health assessment and would have to get one after she left custody.

12. The court held a termination hearing on September 3, 2009. At the February 2009 permanency and the September termination hearing, Shields testified that she had not met with Tara since her release from jail the previous September. She testified that she set up two appointments but Tara cancelled both because Tara "knew that her children should come first; however, right now she just needed to concentrate on her criminal case." Shields testified that she could not contact Tara because Tara left no number or address and Dalila claimed not to know how to find her. Shields testified that she chose not to look up the address of Tara's third-party custodian in the court file because Tara was not interested in working a case plan. The only times Shields saw Tara were at court proceedings. She did not attempt to go over Tara's case plan or provide her with referral information at those proceedings.

13. Shields further testified that she wanted Tara to complete a substance abuse assessment and mental health assessment. Tara occasionally called her, at which times Shields would ask Tara if she wanted to work a case plan. Shields testified that she "really wanted to be able to provide [Tara] whatever supports that she needed to be successful to address her needs in order to be able to parent," but that Tara "clearly stated ... that she was not interested in case planning or being part of the case plan." She also testified that OCS would pay for a substance abuse assessment. She further testified:

I kept offering and trying to engage [Taral. But if she continued to say, I'm not interested, I can't force her to work a plan to get her kids back. But I kept making the door open and I kept offering her. [704]*704And any time that she would call and say, hey, I have, you know, this is going on with the visits, I certainly didn't hold that against her. I worked with her on that. So the door was definitely open. I kept, you know, asking if she wanted to work a plan, asking her if she was interested.

14. Tara testified at the termination hearing that initially she contacted Shields frequently but was discouraged by Shields's assertion that she would not get her children back. Tara testified that Shields was not helpful and did not provide her with information about mental health assessments or parenting classes. She testified that if her criminal case was resolved, she would work her case plan.

15. In an October 2009 Memorandum of Decision and Order the superior court, relying on testimony from both the permanency and termination proceedings, found that OCS proved by clear and convincing evidence that the girls were children in need of aid, that Tara had not remedied her conduct placing the children at substantial risk of harm, and that OCS had made reasonable efforts to provide remedial services. In evaluating whether OCS made reasonable efforts, the court took into account only the efforts made after OCS removed the girls from their home in April 2008. The court concluded that it could not take into account OCS's pre-removal actions. Despite Shields's failure to make reasonable efforts, the court found that OCS's overall post-removal efforts were reasonable because of Boeckman's later efforts and Tara's unwillingness to work her case plan.

16, The court made alternate findings that if it were legally able to consider OCS's entire history with the family, pre- and post-removal, then OCS failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that it made reasonable efforts.

17. The court also found that OCS proved by a preponderance of the evidence that termination of parental rights was in the best interests of the children.

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Bluebook (online)
239 P.3d 701, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 95, 2010 WL 3450568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tara-u-v-state-department-of-health-social-services-office-of-alaska-2010.