Trevor M. v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services

368 P.3d 607, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 26, 2016 WL 933415
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 2016
Docket7086 S-15913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 368 P.3d 607 (Trevor M. v. State, Dept. 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
Trevor M. v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services, 368 P.3d 607, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 26, 2016 WL 933415 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The 'Office of Children's Services (OCS) took custody of a young girl due to her *608 mother's neglect and substance abuse, The father was incarcerated at the. time, but on his release he made limited efforts to participate in. his case plan. OCS filed a petition to terminate his parental rights, asserting that he had abandoned his daughter, and the superior court granted the petition and terminated his rights. The father appeals, arguing that he did not abandon his daughter and that if he did he was not given enougly time to remedy. the problem. Because the superi- or court's findings are not clearly erroneous, we affirm.

II FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Maya S. is the three-yeal—old daughter of Sarah S. and Trevor M. 1 Trevor's criminal hlstor‘y includes a number of assault charges and domestic violence restraining orders involving different victims; 2 he has also shrug— gled with substance abuse. He testified that he "rarely got to see" Maya while she was a baby because it was up to Sarah to decide "when she felt like bringing [him his] daughter." He also testified, however, that he "always callled] [Sarah] to check on [his] daughter" and that he gave "her money -plenty of times for whatever she needed."

' OCS twice removed Maya from Sarah's custody after receiving reports of neglect-onee in October 2012, when Maya was five months old, and again in December 2018. Each time OCS placed Maya with her maternal grandparents, Dennis S. and Sylvia E. The second time OCS. took custody, Maya had cocaine in her system at such a high level that it was determined she had probably ingested the drug. Trevor was in jail at the time for assaulting Sarah. Since then, Maya has remained with her maternal grandparents.

In February 2014 OCS assigned caseworker Rick Mitcham to Maya's case. Mitcham met with Trevor a few weeks later, after Trevor's release from prlson Trevor sa1d he was willing to participate in anger management classes; also included in his case plan were a substance abuse assessment and regular urinalyses (UAs).

Mitcham and Trevor met again on March 1. Mitcham described Trevor as "receptive to engaging in services" at that time, and after the meeting Mitcham made a referral for supervised visitation. For the rest of the month Mitcham and another OCS worker tried to contact Trevor to follow through with the referral, but Trevor never answered the phone or returned messages. On March 27 Mitcham made an unannounced visit and found Trevor at home; he talked to Trevor "about the case and about .. .' setting up the family contact." According to Mitcham, Trevor still seemed willing to engage with his case plan.

But Trevor failed to show up for an Apr-11 meeting with Mitcham, and they did not meet again until May. At that time they discussed Trevor's case plan again, but Trevor was reluctant to pursue it because he believed he was likely to be 'reincareerated soon, making his efforts pointless, Around this time another OCS worker made a number of attempts by telephone to facilitate visitation, but Trevor's phone was disconnected.

Trevor and Mitcham met again in early June. By this time Trevor had learned he was not going back to jail, and he again seemed willing to follow his case plan and to submit to the required UAs. He signed the plan and records releases for anger management classes and a substance abuse assessment. But after this meeting OCS was again unable to reach him to coordinate a visitation schedule, despite many attempts.

Trevor did attend a substance abuse assessment and another assessment for a bat-tererg' intervention program,. The batterers program met once a week for 86 weeks. Trevor attended two classes in June, three in July, one in August, and two in October, after which he was discharged from the program because of unexcused absences. His *609 experience with substance abuse treatment was similar, He did not follow up on the assessment's recommendations for intensive outpatient treatment; he later testified that he had limited funds to put toward his rehabilitation and chose to spend them on the batterers'- intervention course instead. He testified that he discussed this decision with Mitcham and another OCS employee and they understood his reasoning-though Mite-ham declined to confirm this. Trevor missed most of the scheduled UAs, showing up for only four of 26 appointments and twice testing positive for marijuana.

In late June Trevor gave Mitcham hxs new phone number, and OCS was able to schedule weekly visitation. Trevor visited Maya three times: on July 1, 17, and 31. Regular visitation was then suspended because Trevor started a new job on the North Slope,. Although OCS had instructed him that he would need to call to restart visitation when he returned, it did not hear from him again and was unable to reach him despite continued efforts. (In October OCS petitioned to terminate Trevor's and Sarah's parental rights.

In January 2015 Trevor was again incarcerated. Sarah voluntarily relinquished her rights to Maya, and in March the superior court held a two-day trial on Trevor's parental rights. Trevor participated telephonically from jail. He had.not had any contact with Maya since his last visit in July 2014, seven and a half months earlier,

At trial, two OCS employees described their unsuccessful attempts to contact Trevor and facilitate visitation from March to the end of June 2014; one testified about the further loss of contact following Trevor's three visits with Maya in July, Mitcham testified that he had explained to Trevor when they first met that time was of the essence, and that Trevor appeared to understand. But Mitcham also testified that after he last met with Trevor in June 2014 he was unable to reach him again.

Maya's maternal grandfather, Dennis, testified that he had provided all of Maya's financial support since her birth and that he had never asked for or received any help from Trevor. He testified that Maya never asked about Trevor and that to his knowledge Trevor had spent time with Maya maybe ten times in her life.

Trevor testified on his own behalf, He explained that he had rarely seen Maya when she was. a baby because Sarah limited his access. He testified that participating in his case plan was difficult because he had no driver's lHcense, had started a new job in June 2014, and had trouble paying for classes. He denied that Mitchani had told him time was of the essence. But he acknowledged OCS's offer to provide him a bus pass, which he never picked up, and he admitted that OCS never denied him visitation.

The superior court terminated Trevor's parental rights to Maya, making both oral and written findings,. The court found by clear and convincing, evidence that Trevor had abandoned Maya without justifiable cause, that he had failed to remedy the conduct or conditions that put Maysa at a substantial risk of harm, and that OCS had made reasonable efforts to provide services designed to enable Maya's return to Trevor's custody and care. Finally, the court found by a preponderance of the evidence that terminating Trevor's parental rights was in Maya's best interests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
368 P.3d 607, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 26, 2016 WL 933415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trevor-m-v-state-dept-of-health-social-services-office-of-childrens-alaska-2016.