FILED
JUNE 4,2015
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
In re the Welfare of: ) No. 32437-1-111
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B.P. )
(DOB: 7/8/11) )
) PUBLISHED OPINION
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BROWN, J. - H.O. appeals the termination of her parental rights over B.P. H.O.
contends sUbstantial evidence does not support the court's findings that (1) all
necessary services were expressly and understandably offered or provided her, (2) little
likelihood existed to remedy conditions so B.P. could be returned to her in the near
future, (3) her continued parent-child relationship diminished B.P.'s prospects for early
integration into a stable and permanent home, (4) terminating her parental rights was in
B.P.'s best interests, and (5) she was unfit to parent B.P. We disagree and affirm.
FACTS
Soon after B.P.'s birth on July 8,2011, the Department of Social and Health
Services (Department) became involved with her and her family. The Department had
previously been involved with the mother and her three other children who are no longer
in her care. A hospital hold was placed on B.P. at birth because she was withdrawing
No. 32437-1-111
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from methamphetamine, which H.O. exposed her to during pregnancy. The mother has
been a long time user of illegal substances, including heroin and methamphetamine.
On July 13, 2011, the Department petitioned for dependency, alleging parental
deficiencies based on substance abuse, domestic violence, mental health, and
parenting skills. The Department then removed B.P. from the mother's care, and after a
shelter care hearing, B.P. remained in foster care. The mother agreed to participate in
random drug and alcohol testing, hands-on parent training, and mental health treatment.
Later, H.O. entered inpatient treatment at Isabella House, a six-month inpatient
program incorporating parenting services. Isabella House permits the placement of
children with their mothers at the facility. Initially, the mother entered Isabella House
without B.P., but based in part on the mother's progress while there, B.P. was allowed
to stay with H.O. on September 27,2011.
While H.O. was at Isabella House, the Department referred her to Carla Paullin
for individual counseling. Ms. Paullin indicated she learned the mother had a traumatic
childhood, an extensive criminal record, a lengthy history of substance abuse and
relapse, and failed to parent her children for quite some time. Ms. Paullin concluded the
mother presented symptoms consistent with personality disorder that exacerbated the
mother's impulsivity, inability to cope, and poor decision-making. Further, Ms. Paullin
believed the mother was extremely institutionalized, making her ability to improve and
stay sober largely contingent upon her presence in highly-structured settings.
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In February 2012, H.O. completed inpatient treatment at Isabella House. Then,
she and B.P. moved to a transition home where women who have completed the
inpatient program can live while they are looking for permanent housing if they follow
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certain rules. Isabella House evicted H.O. from the transition home in June 2012 when
~ H.O. relapsed, causing the court to remove B.P. from H.O.'s care.
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Into the fall of 2012, .H.O. continued to use methamphetamine. H.O. had not
1• been engaging in services and had been sporadically visiting B.P. H.O. admitted she
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I had been high during those visits.
1 In May 2013, a pregnant H.O. reentered Isabella House. She gave birth in June
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f, 2013 to A.O. That summer, the mother began working with a new individual counselor,
J Sandra Gorman-Brown. Treatment focused on the mother's capacity to process
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traumatic events from her past. H.O still had unresolved emotional issues directly
related to her past, which has been and continues to be a significant barrier to her
I recovery as it has caused her maladaptive coping strategies. According to her
I individual counselor, the mother struggles to "feel her feelings," which has made her
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unable to have empathy-a significant skill needed to parent children. Clerk's Papers at
i 168.
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H.O. graduated from Isabella House in December of 2013. She began outpatient
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1, treatment with Partners with Families and Children, which provides a full range of
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services for children who have suffered abuse and/or neglect as well as provides mental
health and chemical dependency treatment for parenting individuals and their family
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members. At the time of trial, H.O.'s Partners counselor testified H.O. had missed some
support group meetings and thus was noncompliant with her outpatient treatment.
In August 2013, the court ordered supervised visits between H.O. and B.P. Lori
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I Eastep, a family therapist, supervised. Between October 2013 and February 2014, Ms.
Eastep had 22 therapeutic visits with H.O. and B.P., with each visit lasting two hours.
The main focus was B.P.'s complete disconnect from the mother created by the
mother's absence from B.P.'s life. As Ms. Eastep opined, children are just beginning to
attach to their caregivers at this critical stage. Due to H.O.'s choices, B.P. had to
endure multiple placements that not only inhibited B.P.'s attachment to her mother but
complicated B.P.'s capacity to attach generally. Ms. Eastep believed B.P. would never
be able to form a real attachment to the mother and that forcing B.P. to do so would
significantly injure B.P.'s mental health.
In November 2013, H.O., B.P. and A.O. met with Carol Thomas for a parenting
assessment. Regarding healthy attachment, Ms. Thomas indicated the window
essentially closes after the first year of life. Having healthy attachment is critical to an
individual's mental health. Ms. Thomas observed no evidence of attachment between
B.P. and the mother; at best. any connection between mother and child was
characterized as a developing social relationship. Ms. Thomas reviewed B.P.'s
placement history. Given B.P.'s age and the number of disruptions in placement she
had experienced, Ms. Thomas felt B. P. would struggle with forming healthy attachments
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I more than average children, and any further disruptions in placement would increase
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I! the likelihood B.P. would never be able to form a healthy attachment.
At the termination trial, Ms. Eastep described H.O.'s relationship with B.P. as a
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I social relationship with an emerging emotional aspect. She further noted an individual's
own mental and emotional well-being were fundamental to meet a child's needs. Here,
j the mother was not able to do that for B.P.
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H.O.'s current counselor, Ms. Gormon-Brown also testified to her .concerns about
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I B.P returning to H.O.'s care and noted H.O. could not be emotionally available to B.P.
1 B.P.'s guardian ad litem Karen Schweigert testified B.P. was in H.O.'s care "from
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September 2011 to June 2012 and B.P. did fairly well. She testified the relationship
j between H.O. and B.P. initially was remarkable and "[w]hen [H.O.'s] sober, she is a
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Ij really good mother." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 240. Ms. Schweigert admitted she
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j has not seen H.O. and B.P. together since their visits resumed in August 2013. She
1I described B.P. as a happy, healthy, and outgoing girl. Ms. Schweigert testified B.P.
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j "still has some issues as far as adjusting to disruptions in her schedule." RP at 230-31.
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~ She acknowledged that although it took B.P. some time to get used to the visits with
I H.O., B.P. adapted.
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Ms. Schweigert testified to her concerns about H.O.'s ability to put B.P.'s needs
ahead of her own. She acknowledged her concerns about H.O.'s decision making
based primarily from information she received from B.P.'s current foster parents. When
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asked to identify H.O.'s parenting deficiencies, Ms. Schweigert testified H.O. had not
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had an opportunity to parent by herself outside of structured settings. Ms. Schweigert
testified she does not think B.P. can be reunified with H.O., because B.P. is attached to
her then current placement. She stated her significant concern for B.P. is her lost
attachment to H.O. Lastly, Ms. Schweigert testified termination of H.O.'s parental rights
is in B.P.'s best interests.
The trial court determined the Department satisfied its burden under RCW
13.34.180. The trial court issued an oral ruling and later entered written findings of fact
and conclusions of law. The trial court specifically found the Department had
established each element of RCW 13.34.180 by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence.
It expressly found H.O. was currently unfit to parent and that termination of the mother's
parental rights were in B.P.'s best interest. H.O. appealed.
ANALYSIS
A. Necessary Services
The issue is whether the trial court erred by finding that all necessary services
were expressly and understandably offered or provided. H.O. contends substantial
evidence does not support this finding and specifically argues the Department failed to
offer attachment therapy to her.
Parents have a fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody, and
companionship of their children. Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753, 102 S. Ct.
1388,71 L. Ed. 2d 599 (1982). As such, the State may interfere with parents' rights
"only for the most powerful of reasons." In re S.J., 162 Wn. App. 873, 880,256 P.3d
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470 (2011) (quoting In re Welfare of AJ.R., 78 Wn. App. 222. 229,896 P.2d 1298
(1995». When the parental actions may cause harm or a risk of harm to the child, the
State has a right and responsibility to protect the child. AJ.R., 78 Wn. App. at 229; In re
Custody of Smith, 137 Wn.2d 1,18,969 P.2d 21 (1998). Therefore, "reunification must
be balanced against the child's right to basic nurture, physical and mental health, and
safety; ultimately, the child's rights and safety should prevail." In re Welfare of AG.,
155 Wn. App. 578,589,229 P.3d 935 (2010).
Washington courts use a two-step process to determine whether to terminate
parental rights. RCW 13.34.180(1); In re Welfare ofAB., 168 Wn.2d 908, 911, 232
P.3d 1104 (2010). The first step focuses on the adequacy of the parents and requires
the State to prove the six statutory elements of RCW 13.34.180(1) by clear, cogent and
convincing evidence. RCW 13.34.190(1)(a); In re AB., 168 Wn.2d at 911. The six
statutory elements required by the first step are as follows:
(a) That the child has been found to be a dependent child;
(b) That the court has entered a dispositional order pursuant to RCW 13.34.130;
(c) That the child has been removed or will, at the time of the hearing, have been
removed from the custody of the parent for a period of at least six months
pursuant to a finding of dependency;
(d) That the services ordered under RCW 13.34.136 have been expressly and
understandably offered or provided and all necessary services, reasonably
available, capable of correcting the parental deficiencies within the
reasonable future have been expressly and understandably offered or
provided;
(e) That there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child
can be returned to the parent in the near future. A parent's failure to
substantially improve parental deficiencies within twelve months following
entry of the dispositional order shall give rise to a rebuttable presumption that
there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child can
be returned to the parent in the near future.
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(f) That continuation of the parent and child relationship clearly diminishes the
1 child's prospects for early integration into a stable and permanent home.
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RCW 13.34.180(1). H.O. first challenges the court's findings regarding (d).
We review the court's findings of fact under RCW 13.34.180(1) for substantial
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evidence from which a rational trier of fact could find the necessary facts by clear,
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cogent and convincing evidence. In re DependencyofK.S.G., 137 Wn.2d 918,925,
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976 P.2d 113 (1999). Evidence is substantial if it is sufficient to persuade a fair-minded
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person of the truth of the matter asserted. S.J., 162 Wn. App. at 881. Clear, cogent
and convincing evidence exists when the ultimate fact at issue is "highly probable."
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!I K.S.G., 137 Wn.2d at 925. We defer to the trial court's evidence weight and witness
credibility determinations. In re Welfare of L.N.B.-U., 157 Wn. App. 215, 243, 237 P.3d
I 944 (2010). The party claiming error has the burden of showing a finding of fact is not
supported by substantial evidence. Fisher Properties v. Arden-Mayfair, 115 Wn.2d 364,
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369, 798 P.2d 799 (1990).
Under RCW 13.34.180(1), the Department must offer all necessary seNices,
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i capable of correcting H.O.'s parental deficiencies within the reasonable future.
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Here, the Department referred H.O. to Ms. Eastep to provide family therapy. Ms.
Eastep is a licensed independent clinical social worker with knowledge about
attachment. In August 2013, Ms. Eastep was court ordered to conduct a therapeutic
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contact between B.P. and her mother and eventually conducted 22 sessions with them.
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I Ms. Eastep testified they went from no relationship, to a social relationship to an
emerging emotional connection. She opined it would take "hundreds and sometimes
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thousands of contacts for children to establish a secure attachment." RP at 77. The
mother and B.P. went from no relationship, to a social relationship, to an emerging
emotional relationship. This evidences the mother and B.P. were receiving services
specifically tailored to address their relationship and improve it.
H.O. relies on In re the Welfare ofG.S., 168 Wn.2d 51, 225 P.3d 953 (2010) and
In re Termination of S.J., 162 Wn. App. 873, 881,256 P.3d 470 (2011) to support her
argument that not all necessary services were offered. Both cases are distinguishable.
In G.S., the child had special needs which made him difficult to manage. C.S., 168
Wn.2d at 55-56. The foster parent was given training to handle the child, but the mother
was not. Id. at 56. Thus, the Supreme Court held termination was not appropriate as
the parent's ability to manage the child was the only parental deficiency left. Id. Here,
H.O. has mental health issues impacting her ability to parent B.P. The Department
provided H.O. with therapeutic services to address her parenting deficiencies and
strengthen her relationship with B.P. Ms. Eastep opined B.P. would never be able to
form a real attachment to H.O. and that forcing B.P. to do so would significantly injure
B.P.'s mental health. Thus, services were offered to the mother without the desired
success.
In In re S.J., the Department was offering hands on parenting, and the provider
testified she did not ever provide these type of services. Id. at 878. The court found the
lack of bonding and attachment was an issue because it was the Department's removal
of the child that diminished the bond the mother and child had. Id. at 883. The court
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found the Department delayed services to the mother negatively impacting her bond
with her child. Id. at 883-84. Here, the Department was providing services and B.P.
was initially returned to H.O. The mother, however, relapsed and B.P. was removed.
H.O. then disengaged in her services and stopped visiting for over a year. The
disruption in the parent-child relationship was not caused by the Department, but rather
by H.O.'s choices.
Based on the above, the evidence supports the finding that services, specifically
tailored to address the nature of the relationship between H.O. and B.P. were provided
and were briefly successful, but attachment, a necessary element of a parent-child
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relationship, could not be attained within the reasonable future. Attachment was the
goal with the services offered by Ms. Eastep. The evidence shows that H.O. was
I receiving the necessary services but the deficiency could not be corrected in the
reasonable future. Substantial evidence supports the court's finding that all necessary
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services capable of correcting the parental deficiencies had been expressly and
understandably offered or provided. H.O.'s challenge on this issue fails. Accordingly,
I the court did not err in finding that all services were offered to the mother as required
1 under RCW 13.34.180(1)(d).
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B. Remediation of Deficiencies
, The issue is whether the trial court erred by finding little likelihood existed for the
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conditions to be remedied so that B.P. could be returned to H.O. in the near future.
H.O. contends substantial evidence does not support the trial court's finding. H.O.
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argues the trial court's finding was in error because all necessary services were not
offered to correct her parental deficiencies and any additional deficiencies were already
corrected.
Before a court may terminate a parent's rights, the Department must prove "that
there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child can be returned
to the parent in the near future." RCW 13.34.180(1 )(e). Further, "A parent's failure to
substantially improve parental deficiencies within twelve months following entry of the
dispositional order shall give rise to a rebuttable presumption that there is little likelihood
that conditions will be remedied so that the child can be returned to the parent in the
near future." Id. Lastly, "[t]he presumption shall not arise unless the petitioner makes a
showing that all necessary services reasonably capable of correcting the parental
deficiencies within the foreseeable future have been clearly offered or provided." RCW
13.34.180(1)(e). The focus of this factor is whether the identified deficiencies have
been corrected. In re Welfare ofM.R.H., 145 Wn. App. 10,27,188 P.3d 510 (2008).
If the parent is unable to resolve their deficiencies within 12 months after the
child has been declared dependent, the statute's rebuttable presumption applies and it
shifts the burden of production to the parent. In re Welfare of T.B., 150 Wn. App. 599,
608,209 P.3d 497 (2009). The Department must still prove it is highly probable the
parent would not improve in the near future. Id. One factor the court may consider is,
"Psychological incapacity or mental deficiency of the parent that is so severe and
chronic as to render the parent incapable of providing proper care for the child for
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No. 32437-1-111
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extended periods of time or for periods of time that present a risk of imminent harm to
the child, and documented unwillingness of the parent to receive and complete
treatment or documentation that there is no treatment that can render the parent
capable of providing proper care for the child in the near future." RCW
13.34.180(1 )(e)(ii). "A parent's unwillingness to avail herself of remedial services within
a reasonable period is highly relevant to a trial court's determination as to whether the
Department has satisfied RCW 13.34.180(1)(e)." r.B., 150 Wn. App. at 608. Even if
evidence shows the parent may eventually be capable of correcting their deficiencies,
termination is still appropriate where they will not be corrected within the foreseeable
future. In re Welfare of A.G., 155 Wn. App. 578, 590, 229 P.3d 935 (2010).
As discussed, necessary mental health, parenting, and substance abuse
services were offered to H.O. to correct parental deficiencies in the over three years
since dependency. H.O. argues alternatively her parental deficiencies were corrected.
But the record shows H.O. had a long history of substance abuse. She began using
drugs at age 13 and her first attempt at in-treatment was when she entered Isabella
House in August 2011. She relapsed in May 2012 and was expelled from the program
in June 2012. At trial, H.O. had been in out-patient for 2 months but was noncompliant
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j for not attending outside support groups. H.O.'s chemical dependency counselor, Carla
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i Paullin, testified that six months of sobriety could be deemed partial remission and one
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! year to be full remission. However, from her experience of 15 years of chemical
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I dependency treatment, her work with H.O., and her knowledge of H.O.'s use history.
she opined H.O. would need 2 years of sobriety to feel good about her sobriety.
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H.O.'s mental health was an unremedied parental deficiency. H.O.'s counselor,
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Ms. Gormon-Brown, indicated H.O. has an extensive trauma history and struggled to
feel her feelings. Ms. Gorman-Brown testified H.O.'s trauma history was a barrier to
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1 parenting. If a parent cannot feel their own feelings, then they cannot help a child cope
I with their feelings. At trial, the mother was making progress with addressing her own
! feelings, but Ms. Gorman-Brown had concerns about B.P returning to H.O.'s care. She
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was concerned the mother could not be emotionally available to B.P.
I The overwhelming evidence shows all necessary services were offered and while
H.O. made progress, she had not made enough progress that her parental deficiencies
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would likely be remedied in the foreseeable future. Substantial evidence shows H.O.
needed several more months of sobriety, individual therapy, and hundreds if not
j thousands of contacts with B.P. to remedy all of her parental deficiencies. When
progress has not been made in 12 months following dependency, a rebuttable
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~ presumption exists that there is little likelihood conditions will be remedied so that the
j child can be returned to the parent in the near future. T.B., 150 Wn. App. at 608.
Because H.O. fails to produce evidence to rebut the presumption, substantial evidence
1 supports the court's finding there is little likelihood that H.O.'s deficiencies could be
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C. B.P.'s Prospects
The issue is whether the trial court erred by finding continuation of the parent and
child relationship diminished B.P.'s prospects for early integration into a stable and
permanent home in the near future. H.O. contends no evidence, let alone no
substantial evidence supports this finding.
Before terminating parental rights, a court must find "continuation of the parent
and child relationship clearly diminishes the child's prospects for early integration into a
stable and permanent home" before parental rights can be terminated. RCW
13.34.180(1 )(f). "The plain language of RCW 13.34.180(1)(f) merely requires the trial
court to find that the continued parent-child relationship diminishes the child's prospects
of integration into a stable and permanent home." In the Matter of K.D.S., 176 Wn.2d
644, 658,294 P.3d 695 (2013). The focus is "on the parent-child relationship and
whether it impedes the child's prospects for integration." Id. (quoting K.S.C., 137 Wn.2d
at 927).
One way to satisfy RCW 13.34.180(1 )(f) is evidence of the parent-child
relationship causing harm to the child. K.S.C., 137 Wn.2d at 932. "While a detrimental
personal relationship would not be irrelevant, this factor is mainly concerned with the
continued effect of the legal relationship between parent and child." In re P.P. T., 155
Wn. App. 257, 268, 229 P.3d 818 (2010).
Substantial evidence in the record shows B.P. needs permanence and is at risk
of forming an attachment disorder. Ms. Eastep testified B.P. was a child in need of
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permanence. Going between H.O. and her foster home was confusing, and after being
in the system her entire life, B.P. needed to know what her world was going to look like.
H.O. argues the need for permanency was not established because H.O. and B.P. were
visiting and trying to build a relationship, but the evidence in our record shows B.P.
would not be able to attach to her mother based on the H.O.'s parental deficiencies.
Another disruption in placement could cause long term emotional harm to B.P. The
testimony shows B.P. needed permanency that should could not receive with H.O.
Accordingly, continuation of the parent and child relationship clearly diminished B.P.'s
prospects for early integration into a stable and permanent home.
D. Best Interests
The issue is whether the trial court erred by finding that it was in B.P.'s best
interests to terminate her mother's parental rights. H.O. contends the record lacks
substantial evidence to support this finding.
In addition to the first step of finding the six elements of RCW 13.34.180(1) by
clear, cogent and convincing evidence, the trial court must find by a preponderance of
the evidence that termination is in the child's best interest. RCW 13.34.190(2}. "Only if
the first step is satisfied may the court reach the second." A.B., 168 Wn.2d at 911. We
afford a trial court broad discretion in making the "best interests" determination, and its
decision receives great deference on review. In re Welfare of Young, 24 Wn. App. 392,
395,600 P.2d 1312 (1979). Whether termination is in a child's best interests is based
on the particular facts and circumstances of each case. In re Dependency of A. V.D., 62
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Wn. App. 562, 572, 815 P.2d 277 (1991). When a parent has failed to rehabilitate over
a lengthy dependency period, a court is fully justified in finding termination to be in a
child's best interests rather than leaving the child '''in the limbo of foster care for an
indefinite period'" while the parent seeks further rehabilitation. In re Dependency of
TR., 108 Wn. App. 149, 167,29 P.3d 1275 (2001) (quoting In re Dependency of A. W,
53 Wn. App. 22, 33, 765 P.2d 307 (1988».
Here, the evidence is overwhelming that termination is in B.P.'s best interest.
Ms. Eastep testified B.P. needed permanence and opined B.P. needed no significant
change in her life. Ms. Schweigert, B.P.'s guardian ad litem, had concerns about the
mother's ability to place B.P.'s needs ahead of her own. She did not feel that the
mother would be able to parent B.P. She testified termination was in B.P.'s best
interest. Other than H.O., no witness indicated termination was not in B.P.'s best
interest. The court's finding was supported by substantial evidence.
E. Unfitness
The issue is whether the court erred in finding H.O. currently unfit to parent B.P.
H.O. contends the evidence shows she was capable of parenting another child;
therefore, she is capable of parenting B.P.
The Department is held to the higher burden of proving current unfitness in a
termination proceeding by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. RCW
13.34.190(1)(a)(i). To meet its burden to prove current unfitness in a termination
proceeding, the Department is required to prove that the parent's parenting deficiencies
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No. 32437-1-111
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prevent the parent from providing the child with "basic nurture, health, or safety" by
clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. RCW 13.34.020.
Current parental unfitness is implicitly established when the Department proves
all six of the statutory elements. In re Dependency of K.N.J., 171 Wn.2d 568,576-77,
257 P.3d 522 (2011). A court can explicitly make a finding of current parental unfitness.
A.B., 168 Wn.2d at 920-21. Here, the trial court made an explicit finding that the mother
was currently unfit to parent B.P. To meet its burden to prove current unfitness in a
termination proceeding, the Department must prove the parent's parenting deficiencies
prevent the parent from providing the child with "basic nurture, health, or safety" by
clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. In re Welfare of A.B., 181 Wn. App. 45, 61, 323
P.3d 1062 (2014).
H.O. initially reunified with B.P., but when B.P. was 11-months-old, H.O. relapsed
and the child was removed. The mother did not visit her child on any consistent basis
for the next year. By the time the mother resumed contact with B.P. she had developed
the beginnings of an attachment disorder. The mother struggled to feel her own
feelings and had maladaptive coping strategies. In order for B. P.'s needs to be met,
including addressing her attachment issues, her parent would need to be able to cope
with their own feelings in order to help B.P. address her feelings in a healthy way. H.O.
did not demonstrate an ability to do this. Further, H.O. had just begun her sobriety. She
had not demonstrated an ability to remain sober outside of a structured setting. She did
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not acknowledge the emotional damage B. P. suffered with the removal from her care.
She did not demonstrate the ability to place B.P.'s needs ahead of her own.
H.O. points to her ability to parent her youngest child, AO. to support her
argument she is a fit parent. H.O.'s alleged parenting abilities regarding AO. are
unpersuasive in light of this evidence. Moreover, the circumstances between the two
children vary markedly; one child being constantly with H.O. in a structured
environment, while the other was displaced from H.O. for a significant amount of time,
creating attachment differences. A deficiency that experts testified could not be
remedied in the near future. Thus, the court's finding that the mother was unfit to parent
B.P. was supported by substantial evidence.
CONCLUSION
Because substantial evidence supports the court's findings regarding RCW
13.34.180{1 )(d)-(f), the best interests of the child, and the mother's unfitness, the court
did not err in terminating H.O.'s parental rights.
Affirmed.
Brown, J.
I CONCUR:
18
No. 32437-I-III
FEARING, J. (Dissenting) In parental termination cases, the State of Washington
inevitably advances the proposition that the best interest of the child is the court's
primary concern. The State also routinely repeats a corollary mantra that, when the
interest of the parent and the child conflict, the child's interests prevail. Unfortunately,
the State's dogma ignores the principle that the paramount goal of child welfare
legislation is to reunite the child with his or her legal parents, if reasonably possible. In
re Dependency ofK.NJ, 171 Wn.2d 568, 577, 257 P.3d 522 (2011). Sometimes
reuniting the parent and child is reasonably possible despite reunification harming the
child's best interests. The State's creed also ignores the constitutional principle that a
child holds a right to the companionship and support of a parent. An adult has a
corresponding constitutional right to the care, custody, and control of her child unless
proved unfit as a parent. Many of our state's citizens deem these birthrights to be
foreordained by God.
The State of Washington must not become an authoritarian nation or a platonic
I utopia wherein the government may remove a child from a birth parent and deliver the
child to other parents to permanently raise because the birth parent is not the choicest of
1
J
II parents and the child is better served by other parents. The State's action in this unique
i
1
No. 32437-I-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
case involves such a removaL
This case's circumstances are rare. The State impliedly concedes and the trial
court found that H.O. is fit to parent her one-year old daughter. Nevertheless, the State
argued and the trial court agreed that H.O.'s rights to a two-year-old child should be
terminated because of a lack of bonding. H.O. should not lose her parental rights since
an absence of bonding is not a statutory ground for termination, termination on this basis
violates H.O. 's constitutional rights, and ending parental claims for want of bonding
lacks a firm foundation in science and psychology. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from
the termination ofH.O. 's parental rights.
My dissent also springs from frustration resulting from vacuous standards found in
parental termination law, despite the grave consequences of termination proceedings.
Parental termination can be likened to the death penalty. The parent is no more.
FACTS
The following recitation of facts provides a chronological outline of important
events in the life ofB.P. The recitation then reviews testimony of the termination trial's
eleven witnesses.
Chronology
July 8, 2011
H.O. gave birth to B.P. The hospital placed a hold on B.P. at birth due to her
withdrawal from methamphetamine which H.O. used while pregnant.
2
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
July 13,2011
The State of Washington Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS)
removed B.P. from H.O.'s care and filed a dependency petition.
August 10,2011
H.O. entered Isabella House's inpatient treatment chemical dependency program.
August 26, 2011
The trial court entered an order of dependency for B.P.
September 27, 2011
B.P. returned to H.O.'s care, and the two resided at Isabella House.
February 12,2012
H.O. graduated from Isabella House inpatient program. H.O. moved with B.P. to
Isabella House's transition home.
May 2012
H.O. began methamphetamine use again.
June 2012
Isabella House's transition home expelled H.O.
June 27,2012
The trial court entered an order removing B.P. from H.O.
July 3, 2012
3
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
H.O. voluntarily returned B.P. to DSHS. B.P. first went to foster care with a
stranger. B.P. irregularly visited H.O.
October 31,2012
DSHS suspended visitation between B.P. and H.O.
November 2012
DSHS placed B.P. in foster care with relatives.
May 7, 2013
H.O. used methamphetamine for the last time.
May 9, 2013
A pregnant H.O. returned for the second time to Isabella House. H.O. has been
sober since.
June 18, 2013
H.O. gave birth to B.P.'s sister, A. A. has always lived in the care and custody of
H.O., including when H.O. resided at Isabella House.
August 14,2013
Visits between H.O. and B.P. resumed. Social worker Lori Eastep supervised the
visits.
November 8, 2013
Carol Thomas, a child therapist, performed a parent-child evaluation of H.O. and
B.P. at the request ofDSHS. Thomas recommended increased contact between H.O. and
4
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
B.P.
December 3,2013
H.O. graduated again from Isabella House.
December 4, 2013
H.O., with A., moved to Hearth House. H.O. and A. continued to visit with B.P.
until trial.
January 1,2014
H.O. and A. moved to St. Margaret's home.
February 10,2014
Parental termination trial began.
Witnesses
Carla Paullin
Trial witness Carla Paullin holds a master's degree in psychology. She is a
licensed mental health and chemical dependency counselor. She has a contract with
DSHS, and, at H.O.'s social worker's request, she provided individual mental health
counseling to H.O. at Isabella House beginning on October 3, 2011. H.O. regularly
attended counseling with Paullin. According to Paullin, H.O. was highly motivated in
treatment. Paullin assisted H.O. with emotional problems arising from H.O.'s
relationship with her mother. H.O.'s mother encountered mental health problems and
drug use that interfered in her care for H.O. According to Paullin, H.O. wishes to parent
5
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
better than her mother did. Paullin last saw H.O. on July 3, 2012.
Marcey Monahan
II Witness Marcey Monohan obtained a bachelor's of science degree in psychology
I
I and a master's of social work. She works for DSHS' Division of Children and Family
I• Services. On February 16,2012, DSHS assigned her to monitor B.P.'s case. B.P. then
lived with her mother at Isabella House's transition home. Upon A. 's birth, DSHS
assigned Monohan as the social worker for A.'s case.
I Marcey Monohan worries about H.O. parenting B.P. because ofH.O.'s past
substance abuse and missing contact for months with B.P. According to Monohan, H.O.
j
needs 18 months of sobriety and needs to understand the harm she caused B.P. before the
I mother and daughter are reunited. An attachment between H.O. and B.P. will not occur
J
j until forced. Monahan conceded that, in August 2013, DSHS opposed the contact which
t
, the trial court ordered.
I According to Marcey Monohan, H.O.'s parenting of A. is different. A. is
I
acclimated to her mother. A. is cute, happy and, expressive. A. smiles, giggles, and
coos. She is on target developmentally.
i
I Marcey Monohan has observed H.O. and A. on a monthly basis. H.O. meets A. 's
I
J
needs. Monohan has no concerns with H.O. parenting A. as long as H.O. remains sober.
Monohan also observed H.O. with B.P. B.P. looks "good" with H.O. Monohan observed
I
I
1! H.O. redirecting B.P. when she displayed aggression. DSHS reduced family therapy with
6
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
therapist Lori Eastep to once a week because of progress in H.O.'s parenting ofB.P.
Paige Beerbohm
Witness Paige Beerbohm worked as the primary counselor for H.O. at New
Horizon Care Center at Isabella House, when H.O. returned to the home on May 9, 2013
and through December 2013. She is a licensed chemical dependency professional.
According to Beerbohm, H.O. progressed very well in substance abuse recovery. H.O.
was positive and inquisitive about treatment and relapse prevention. H.O. also
participated in mental health counseling at Isabella House in 2013. During H.O.'s stay at
Isabella House in 2013, H.O. had no positive urinalysis. H.O.'s relapse prevention
program includes written assignments, collages, identifYing triggers and relapse warning
signs, recognizing healthy coping skills, and identifYing her support network. Her father
and grandmother are in her support network. Beerbohm, the expert on chemical
dependency, had no opinion as to how long H.O. must be in a structured setting to retain
sobriety.
When H.O. was at Isabella House, Paige Beerbohm recommended to DSHS that
H.O. have visits with B.P. DSHS ignored Beerbohm's recommendation.
Sandra Gorman-Brown
Sandra Gorman-Brown is a licensed clinical social worker, who performs family
and individual therapy with Grass Roots Therapy Group. She holds a master's degree in
social work. On July 26, 2013, Marcey Monohan, H.O.'s social worker, referred H.O. to
7
1
I .~
No. 32437-1-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
IJ
Gorman-Brown for individual therapy. H.O. then had unresolved issues related to trauma
II as a child. H.O. eagerly sought the therapy. According to Gorman-Brown, H.O.
progressed with regard to development of her trauma narrative, although H.O. needed
I Ij
further resolution of the trauma. H.O. needs at least another six months in individual
therapy.
Sandra Gorman-Brown did not know ifH.O. 's unresolved mental health issues
1 posed a risk to parenting. According to her, many fit parents never resolve issues created
f
by childhood trauma. Sandra Gorman-Brown testified that H.O. holds empathy for
others and shows empathy for B.P.
H.O. worked hard and was highly motivated during mental health therapy with
Sandra Gorman-Brown. Gorman-Brown concluded that, as a result of the individual
therapy, H.O.'s mental health is reasonably stable. She opined that no mental health
issue would prevent B.P. from returning to H.O. At the same time, Gorman-Brown
expressed concern about reunification, because she questioned ifH.O. can be emotionally
available to B.P. Gorman-Brown was not asked ifH.O. was emotionally available to A.
Gorman-Brown is available to help form attachment between H.O. and B.P.
Lori Eastep
Lori Eastep operates Grass Roots Therapy Group which contracts with DSHS to
provide services for family preservation. These services include parental assessments
i
i
and individual and family therapy. Eastep holds a bachelor's of sociology and master's
I
8
Ij
l
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare oIB.P. (Dissent)
of social work degrees. She is a faculty member at Eastern Washington University and is
licensed by the Department of Health as a licensed independent clinical social worker.
Lori Eastep oversaw therapeutic visits among A., B.P. and H.D. beginning on
August 14,2013 at Isabella House. B.P. was then two years old. H.D. had not seen B.P.
for eleven months. In advance of the first visit, H.D. worried about diapers and snacks.
During the first visit, B.P. did not recognize her mother, but Eastep did not expect B.P. to
realize H.D. was her mother. B.P. was not traumatized by seeing her mother on August
14. She tolerated the first visit well. At the conclusion of the one hour visit, B.P. ran to
the social worker because she was eager to leave. Eastep supervised another visit on
August 23.
After the initial visits, Lori Eastep recommended no further visitation between
H.D. and B.P. if the termination trial proceeded in September 2013. Visits resumed in
Dctober 2013 because of a trial delay. Eastep oversaw twenty-two visits. The sessions
lasted two hours. They continued until the trial in February 2014. B.P. did not identify
H.D. as her primary attachment figure. H.D. understood the challenges resulting from
missing contact for months. Nevertheless, according to Eastep, H.D. loves B.P. and
viewed B.P. as her child.
According to Lori Eastep, an infant forms an attachment at age eleven months. If
a child attaches to another person, a change in attachment to the parent does not come
without forcing the change. Eastep does not know how long it takes to form an
9
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
attachment, once an attachment is disrupted. The risks of multiple attachment disruptions
include difficult relationships with peers, difficulty at school, difficulty in intimate
relationships, high risk adolescent behaviors. Some children react better to attachment
disruptions. Eastep does not know if B.P. is a "resilient" child.
Near trial, B.P. saw her current foster parents interact with H.O. This observation
lessened B.P.'s anxiety and confusion around H.O. Lori Eastep explained attachment
disruptions to H.O. H.O. told Eastep that B.P. is her daughter and she has completed the
steps needed for reunification.
During the months that Lori Eastep supervised visits, the relationship between
B.P. and H.O. had "moments of improvement." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 70. H.O.
came to visits prepared with toys, activities, and snacks for H.O. She asked Eastep good
questions in order to be prepared for visits. H.O. asked Eastep helpful questions
concerning B.P.'s behavior.
During the supervised visits, Lori Eastep assessed B.P.'s relationship with her
sister, A. The relationship between A. and B.P also improved. With A. present at the
supervised visits, B.P. went to Eastep for assistance because H.O. was busy aiding A.
B.P.'s seeking of Eastep for support decreased with time. H.O. did not force hugs or
physical contact that B.P. did not wish.
According to Lori Eastep, H.O.'s relationship with A. is different than the
relationship with B.P. H.O. is A.'s primary attachment. H.O. has parented A. since A.'s
10
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
birth. H.O. was with A. through all of her developmental milestones. H.O. knows A.'s
cues and needs. A. is a very healthy, happy, little girl.
Lori Eastep observed that H.O. worked hard to maintain sobriety. H.O. suffered a
difficult childhood and is not always attuned to her own needs. Eastep also observed
that, with counseling, H.O. improved at expressing her needs. At trial, Eastep could not
identify any deficiency that H.O. encountered in parenting. Eastep holds no safety
concerns with H.O. caring for B.P. Eastep agreed that returning B.P. to H.O. could be a
"very positive thing" for B.P. RP at 98.
Lori Eastep was reluctant to state that her supervised visits resulted in an
"attachment" between B.P. and H.O. Nevertheless, the mother and daughter manifested
an emerging emotional connection. If a child already has a secure attachment with one
person, the child will not attach to another. For B.P. to attach to H.O., B.P. would need
to sever her relationship with her current caregiver.
The State's counsel asked Lori Eastep at trial:
Q. In your opinion with your work with [H.O.] and [B.P.], do you
see [B.P.] being able to return to her mother's care in the near future?
A. Well, I don't think that that's a yes/no question. I think that
[B.P.] needs permanence, and I think that what the Court's going to decide
is that's either with the relatives or that's with [H.O.]. And I think either
way there's going to be consequences to that decision.
RP at 84. Eastep also testified:
Q. So at this time do you have an opinion about whether termination
is in [B.P.'s] best interest?
A. I think permanency is in [B.P.] best interest. This may not be the
11
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
best answer, but I had suggested a guardianship. That's what I thought was
in [B.P.'s] best interest was for [H.O.] to retain her parental rights and be
involved with her child, but that [B.P.] remain with her current placement
because she is attached to them and is doing very well there.
RP at 85.
Carol Thomas
Carol Thomas is a child therapist and evaluator. She holds a bachelor's degree in
sociology and a master's degree in childhood family studies and child development. She
provides therapy to children who experienced trauma. She performs parenting
assessments. Thomas is a licensed mental health counselor.
At the request ofDSHS, Carol Thomas performed a parent-child assessment of
H.O. and B.P. on November 8, 2013. B.P. was then two years and four months old. At
the beginning of the assessment, Thomas saw B.P. and H.O. in the waiting room. B.P.
sat on the social worker's lap and clung to her rather than H.O. When the mother and
daughter went upstairs, H.O. asked B.P. to come to her. B.P. complied and sat on H.O.'s
lap and quickly warmed to H.O. During the three hour evaluation, B.P. made eye contact
with her mom. B.P. approached and engaged her mom. She initiated physical contact
and play with her mom. B.P. told her mother she wanted her to hold and carry her. She
jumped on her mom to play. H.O. expressed affection to B.P., and B.P. accepted the
affection. B.P. smiled and laughed throughout the assessment with her mom.
During the three hour assessment, B.P. went to H.O. or Carol Thomas when hurt
or uncomfortable. B.P. received her mother's comfort and care, but did not use H.O. as
12
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
her sole source of security. B.P. responded to her mother as a parental authority and
complied with H.O. 's directions.
A. attended the parental assessment with Carol Thomas. At first, B.P. kicked A.
and grabbed A. 's toys. H.O. told B.P. that she should not hit or grab A. 's toys. H.O.
redirected B.P, and B.P. complied and cooperated. Later, B.P. became interested in A.
During the evaluation, B.P. declared to Thomas: "[T]hat's [A.]." RP at 116. B.P.
watched A. and brought her toys. She competed with A. for her mother's attention.
According to Carol Thomas, H.O. managed both children well. During the
evaluation, H.O. met both children's physical and emotional needs in a prompt,
consistent, and appropriate manner. H.O. encouraged a relationship between the sisters.
Carol Thomas observed no "attachment" between B.P. and her mother, H.O.
Thomas described the relationship as a "developing ... social relationship." RP at 113.
Thomas agreed the mother and daughter may sustain an emerging emotional relationship.
Thomas knows that B.P. had four placements and three disruptions. B.P. started to attach
to a person and then lost the person. According to Thomas, the more disruptions the
more likely the child will not be able to attach. Twelve months is needed to form and
consolidate an attachment. Thomas agreed she could assist H.O. and B.P. "reintegrate."
As a result of her assessment, Carol Thomas recommended that DSHS increase contact
between B.P. and H.O. with continuing services.
13
1j
I No. 32437-I-II1
, In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
I
~ Amanda Clemons
1
Amanda Clemons is a licensed mental health therapist with a master's degree in
1
I
social work. She specializes in family therapy and attachment services. H.O.'s social
I worker asked Clemons, in October 2013, to observe B.P. with her aunt and uncle, the
i] current foster parents. Clemons observed that B.P. has a secure attachment with the
foster parents. According to Clemons, B.P. needs stability. She worries about B.P.
II developing an "attachment disorder." According to Clemons, B.P. should not experience
another disruption in care. Clemons met H.O. once, but B.P. was not present during the
I1
meeting.
! Kolleen Seward
I Kolleen Seward holds a Bachelor of Science in psychology and minor in alcohol
and drug studies. She works for Partners with Families and Children as the supervisor for
a chemical dependency program. Partners provides intensive outpatient chemical
dependency programs.
H.O. began an intensive outpatient program with Partners for Families and·
Children in December 2013. A participant in the program meets three days a week in a
group, engages in one to two individual sessions a month, and attends two outside
support groups each week. Kolleen Seward testified that H.O. failed to verify
participation in outside groups, although she has attended all meetings at Partners. H.O.
has done well with individual and group visits at Partners.
14
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
Kolleen Seward has "no concerns" about H.O.'s recovery. RP at 174.
Nevertheless, Seward recognizes H.O. as a risk for relapse if she does not build support
groups.
Karen Schweigert
Karen Schweigert is a licensed attorney. In July 2011, the trial court appointed
Schweigert as B.P.'s guardian ad litem. The court also later appointed Schweigert as the
guardian ad litem for sister A.
Karen Schweigert observed the interaction between B.P. and H.O. when the two
lived together in late 2011 and early 2012 at Isabella House, before H.O.' s relapse. The
relationship was then "remarkable." H.O. focused attention on B.P. H.O. nursed B.P.,
"which took an unbelievable amount of dedication and patience." RP at 223. B.P.
treated H.O. as the center of her universe. B.P. giggled.
Karen Schweigert believes termination ofH.O.'s parental rights is in the best
interest ofB.P. Schweigert has not seen H.O. and B.P. together since visitation resumed
in August 20l3.
Amber Eggert
Amber Eggert is the case manager for H.O. at St. Margaret's, the structured living
facility where H.O. and A. lived at the time of trial. The two moved to St. Margaret's on
January 1, 2014. Eggert monitored H.O.'s compliance in the program and contacted
other service providers. Pursuant to house rules, H.O. obeyed an 8:30 curfew, performed
15
I
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
house chores, and supervised A. at all times. H.O. successfully underwent random
urinalyses. H.O. has complied with St. Margaret's program and rules.
NO
According to H.O., she received different and better treatment at Isabella House
the second time. She now knows the hurt and confusion she caused B.P. and believes she
is the best one to solve it. She recognizes the difficultly of caring for B.P., but insists that
she is capable. According to H.O., the best place for B.P. is with her mom and sister.
At the time of trial, H.O. underwent outpatient treatment at Partners with Families
and Children three times a week for two hours each time. She also underwent individual
therapy with Sandra Gormon-Brown. She submitted to urinalyses four or five days a
month. She attended life skills classes and a family unification program. She
participated in self-help meetings at St. Margaret's.
H.O. insisted, at trial, that she complied with the requirement to attend meetings
with outside groups. St. Margaret's initially believed otherwise. According to H.O., she
went twice per week to a Celebrate Recovery church service but only turned in one slip.
This misstep explained St. Margaret's questioning of compliance. H.O. testified that she
has many support persons, including her father, aunt, a cousin, and church members.
H.O. testified at trial that she breast feed A. B.P. would then get jealous of her
paying attention to A. H.O. testified that B.P. loves her sister, A. She wants to help with
A. She is protective of A.'s things.
16
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f
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!
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
H.O. testified that, if she had been given more visitation with B.P., the two would
have bonded further. B.P. now runs to H.O. when she is hurt. B.P. wants H.O. to arrange
her hair. She sits on H.O.'s lap, and the two read together. According to H.O., B.P. and
she enjoy an emotional relationship. B.P. now hugs and kisses H.O. B.P. expects
protection and companionship from H.O. now that B.P. trusts H.O. B.P. calls H.O.
"mama [Hr' and her foster mother "mama [S]." RP at 375.
Understandably, H.O. desires B.P. to be with her sister, A. H.O. is grateful for
B.P.'s relatives who served as foster parents and wishes B.P. to continue a relationship
with them.
Trial Court Findings
When terminating the parental rights ofH.O. to B.P., the trial court entered the
following findings of fact, among others:
10. All court ordered services have been expressly and
understandably offered or provided and all necessary services, reasonably
available, capable of correcting parental deficiencies within the foreseeable
future have been offered or provided including: chemical dependency
inpatient treatment, outpatient treatment, UAIBA monitoring, individual
counseling, parenting assessment, parenting services including family
preservation services and therapeutic visits with Ms. Eastep in part to
address the mother child relationship. The services offered were those
needed to remedy [H.O.'s] parental deficiencies. The Department
established RCW 13.34.180(1)(d) by clear cogent and convincing evidence.
CP at 166.
13. . .. Substance abuse will be an issue that the mother has to
address for the rest of her life.
17
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
CP at 167.
22. [H.O.] also had issues with her parental relationship with [B.P.].
[B.P.] was in foster care for the first two months of her life. She then was
placed with her mother until she was II months old. Around 11 months is
the age when a primary attachment is forming and solidifying. It was at
this crucial developmental stage when [H.O.] relapsed and [B.P.] was
removed from her mother's care. [H.O.] then continued to use and was
inconsistent in her visitation with [B.P.]. On October 3 1, 2012, the
dependency court, on its own motion, suspended the mother's contact
pending further court order due to her lack of consistency in visiting and
the harm it was doing to the child. During this time, [B.P.] was in her third
placement in foster care. In November 2012, [B.P.] was moved into her
fourth placement, with paternal relatives.
CP at 169.
28. In November 2013, [H.O.] met with Carol Thomas and both of
her children for the purpose of a parenting assessment. Ms. Thomas
indicated that with attachment, the window to form a healthy attachment
closes after the first year. Having a healthy attachment is critically
important to an individual's mental health. At the time of the assessment,
Ms. Thomas observed no evidence of attachment or attachment formation
between [B.P.] and [H.O.]. At the time there was only a developing social
relationship, which Ms. Thomas expected given there had only been 7
recent visits between the mother and [B.P.], some of which were also
attended by the infant A.
30. There is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that
the child can be returned to the parent(s) in the near future. [H.O.] will
have to deal with substance abuse issues for her entire life. She also still
needed to address her mental health issues. The mother had been involved
in services for nearly 3 years, and her relationship with [B.P.] was such that
there was little likelihood [B.P.] could be returned to her mother in the near
future.
CP at 170.
33. The court was concerned about what attachment services were
offered to [H.O.]. However, the evidence was overwhelming that [B.P.]
18
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
was a child who was in her fourth placement. Her ability to attach was
already compromised. The evidence was clear that to form an attachment
you first had to have contact, then building a social relationship, then an
emotional relationship, then an attachment. [B.P.] was only at a social
relationship with [H.O.] at the time of trial, the emotional relationship was
just emerging. The court finds that the services necessary to build the type
of relationship necessary to meet [B.P.'s] needs would take one year or
more and that is too long.
CP at 171.
35.... [B.P.] is a child in need of stability. At the time of trial,
[B.P.] was at risk of an attachment disorder. These types of disorders cause
learning issues, and social and emotional issues for children.
36. [B.P.'s] foreseeable future is now. [H.O.] is still at the
beginning of her progress. Her sobriety is recent and she has not had any
success living independently. Her parenting of her infant, A., looks
positive, but that is likely because A. has never been out of [H.O.'s] care.
The disruption in placement caused by [H.O.] by her relapse in 2012 cannot
be ignored. The relationship between [H.O.] and [B.P.] is not comparable
to her relationship with A. There is little likelihood that [B.P.] could be
returned to her mother in the foreseeable future. The Department has
established RCW 13.34.180(1)(e) by clear cogent and convincing evidence.
37. Continuation of the parent-child relationship clearly diminishes
the child's prospects for early integration into a permanent and stable home.
Continuation of [H.O.'s] relationship with [B.P.] impedes her ability to be
placed in a stable and permanent home. Without termination, the child
remains in the limbo of foster care indefinitely.
38. [B.P.] is entitled to a family and permanency now. Continuing
to visit with [H.O.] will prolong her anxiety and diminish their prospects
for early integration into a stable and permanent home. [B.P.] is at risk of
developing an attachment disorder. In order to maintain [B.P.'s] mental
health, she needs permanency now. The Department has established RCW
13.34.180( 1)(f) by clear cogent and convincing evidence.
39. [H.O.] clearly loves [B.P.] and wants to parent her. However,
[B.P.] can no longer wait for [H.O.] to remedy her parental deficiencies.
40. It is in [B.P.'s] best interests to terminate the parent-child
relationship. The Department established RCW 13.34.190 by a
preponderance of the evidence.
41. The mother is currently unfit to parent [B.P.]. This element
19
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare 0/ B.P. (Dissent)
requires the court to determine if[H.O.] is able to meet [B.P.'s] needs. The
evidence clearly indicates that she cannot. . .. She does not understand
[B.P.'s] needs for permanency or the risk she faces ifshe develops an
attachment disorder. [H.O.] cannot claim that because A. is in her care, that
she must be fit to parent. [B.P.'s] needs are different and her attachment
issues are the result of her mother's actions. . .. Thus, the Department has
established that [H.O.] is currently unfit to parent.
CP at 172-73.
LA W AND ANALYSIS
I would reverse the termination ofH.O.'s parental rights to B.P. on at least three, if
not four, grounds. First, the State failed to prove that it provided all reasonable and
necessary services to correct H.O.'s parental deficiencies. Second, the State failed to
show that B.P. and H.O. cannot reunite within the near future. Third, the State likely
failed to establish that termination of parental rights was in B.P.'s best interests. Fourth,
the State fell short in proving B.P. is an unfit mother and thereby denied her
constitutional rights by terminating her parental rights. I will address these grounds in
such order.
Necessary Services
Termination of parental rights is a two-step process. In re Welfare o/CB., 134
Wn. App. 942, 952, 143 P.3d 846 (2006). First, the State must show that six statutory
requirements under RCW 13.34.180(1) are established by clear, cogent, and convincing
evidence. RCW 13.34.190(1 )(a)(i). This means the State must show that the relevant
ultimate facts in issue are "highly probable." In re Dependency 0/ K.R., 128 Wn.2d 129,
20
No. 32437-1-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
141,904 P.2d 1132 (1995) (quoting In re Welfare ofSego, 82 Wn.2d 736,739,513 P.2d
831 (1973)). Second, the State must show a termination order serves the best interests of
the child. RCW 13 J4.190( 1)(b). The trial court must find by a preponderance of the
evidence that termination is in the best interests of the child. In re Welfare ofMR.H.,
145 Wn. App. 10, 24, 188 PJd 510 (2008).
One of the six statutory requirements is the State's provision of services needed to
correct deficient parenting skills. When the State seeks to terminate a parent's rights, it
must show, in part, by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence:
(d) That the services ordered under RCW 13.34.136 have been
expressly and understandably offered or provided and all necessary
services, reasonably available, capable of correcting the parental
deficiencies within the foreseeable future have been expressly and
understandably offered or provided.
RCW 13 .34.180( 1) (emphasis added). To meet this statutory burden, the State must
tailor the services it offers to meet each individual parent's needs. In re Dependency of
T.R., 108 Wn. App. 149, 161,29 PJd 1275 (2001). The State must provide all court-
ordered and necessary services to the parent. In re Dependency ofD.A., 124 Wn. App.
644,651,102 PJd 847 (2004).
This dissent will repeatedly emphasize the undisputed facts and implied, if not
express, finding of the trial court that H.O. is a fit parent for A. This apparent
inconsistency begs the question: what is the difference between H.O.'s parenting ofB.P.
and H.O.'s parenting of A.? The trial court answered the question with its finding that A.
21
,
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
has a parental attachment to H.O. missing in the relationship between H.O. and B.P. B.P.
was not in her mother's care at ten or eleven months of age and thus a strong bond never
attached. The State argues B.P. is attached to her foster parents and needs to retain this
attachment, although remarkably the foster parents did not care for B.P. until age sixteen
months, an age after which the State claims is critical for attachment.
The trial court's answer to our question should not end the inquiry. No law
demands that a parent lose rights to a child because of a lack of bonding, let alone a lack
of intense bonding. Science may recognize the importance of bonding with a parent
below the age of one, but science does not support a finding that bonding cannot occur at
a later age. The state and federal constitutions do not permit the rending of a child from a
parent because of a lack of bonding when the parent is not proved unfit.
Counselor Sandra Gorman-Brown testified that she is available to help form
attachments between H.O. and B.P. State expert Carol Thomas also testified that she
could provide services to help H.O. and B.P. form a bond and parent-child attachment.
Thomas agreed she could assist H.O. and B.P. reintegrate. As a result of her assessment,
Thomas recommended to DSHS increased contact between B.P. and H.O. with
continuing services. Instead, the State sought termination of parental rights.
DSHS provided H.O. numerous services. Nevertheless, contrary to the assertion
of the majority, the record is absent of any mention ofDSHS providing attachment
therapyfor H.O. and B.P. The record is also absent of any facts or finding that
22
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
attachment therapy would be worthless. The majority concludes that the mother and B.P.
received services specifically tailored to their relationship. The majority does not
identifY the tailored services. The undisputed facts are that bonding therapy could have
been given but was not. The majority writes that DSHS provided attachment services
designed to help B.P. attach to any parent figure. The record is otherwise. Assuming
such services were provided, they were not tailored to B.P. and H.O.
A controlling decision is In re Welfare ofSJ., 162 Wn. App. 873, 256 P.3d 470
(2011). Because of its parallel facts, including witnesses and institutions, I discuss SJ. at
length. If anything, DSHS established less cause to terminate H.O.'s parental rights than
it established with regard to the mother in SJ. SJ.'s mother lacked the same bonding
with the child that DSHS and the trial court consider crucial in H.O.'s relationship with
B.P. Thus, SJ. dictates a reversal in this appeal. Rarely is a reported decision so similar,
but yet we draw the opposite conclusion in this appeal. In fairness to the majority,
Washington reports are replete with decisions regarding termination rights, and one can
find support for any argument in one of the many cases. Nevertheless, S.J. is this
division's own recent opinion.
In In re Welfare SJ., T.H. appealed the termination of her parental rights to her
son, SJ. T.H. argued that the trial court erred in finding all necessary services had been
offered or provided because DSHS failed to provide timely mental health services or
sufficient attachment and bonding services. We agreed. T.H. gave birth to S.l. in
23
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
November 2002. In April 2005, DSHS removed S.J. and his older half-brother from
T.H.'s care due to allegations of unsanitary living conditions and drug use. Upon entry of
a dependency, the trial court required T.H. to complete a substance abuse evaluation and
treatment, submit to random urinalysis testing, complete a psychological evaluation,
participate in mental health services, join a domestic violence victims' program,
participate in a parenting assessment, and establish a safe, clean, drug-free home.
Between June 2005 and December 2005, T.H. unsuccessfully treated at three inpatient
treatment centers. T.H. discovered she was pregnant in January 2006. T.H. successfully
completed an inpatient treatment program in February 2006. She planned for an
outpatient program and arranged for posttreatment living at the Safe Harbor House and
Maternity Home. In March 2006, T.H. participated in a psychological evaluation with
Christine Guzzardo. Guzzardo diagnosed T.H. with bipolar disorder and borderline
intellectual functioning. T.H. began individual counseling, actively participating in her
sessions and improving her ability to identify symptoms of a bipolar episode and get the
help she needed. In April 2006, T.H. began supervised visitation with SJ. at the YWCA.
In May 2006, she transferred to the YWCA's parenting education program. Despite
making progress in her initially identified parental deficiencies, DSHS decided T.H. had
not secured suitable housing or progressed in her relationship with SJ. In May 2006,
DSHS petitioned to terminate T.H.'s parental rights.
During the pendency of the termination petition in s.J., T.H. successfully
24
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
graduated from the drug treatment outpatient program. At trial, she explained she could
have completed treatment sooner had her mental health issues been addressed at the same
time. T.H. moved into the Safe Harbor House and Maternity Home as planned. T.H. had
her other baby in August 2006. The baby remained in T.H.'s care. In November 2006,
T.H. moved into St. Margaret's women's shelter in order to find housing allowing SJ. to
live with her. While at St. Margaret's, T.H. cared for her newborn.
In December 2006, T.H. and SJ. began therapeutic visitation with Carol Thomas.
Thomas' role was to help create a healthy parent-child relationship. T.H. faithfully kept
the scheduled visitations and applied parenting suggestions. The therapeutic visitation
continued until March 2007, just before trial, when the visits were suspended at Thomas'
urging due to the harmful impact of the visits on SJ. SJ.'s behavior toward T.H. grew
resistant. Thomas theorized SJ. had detached from T.H. and had attached to his foster
parents. SJ. clung to the foster parents when he arrived at visitation and SJ. encountered
stress after visits. At the termination trial, a family preservation therapist testified that
she could provide attachment therapy and that T.H. had requested the therapy.
At trial in s.J., DSHS' social worker testified that T.H. and SJ. lacked bonding.
Nevertheless, he had not referred T.H. for bonding and attachment services, in part,
because T.H. did not request the services and he wanted to save her time traveling on the
bus. The social worker testified he supported the termination despite his
recommendation that the newborn remain with T.H., because T.H. had failed to rectify
25
No. 32437-l-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
her relationship with SJ. and because SJ. had been out of her care for one and a half
years. The social worker opined that SJ. could not wait any longer for T.H. to remedy
her parental deficiencies and that he needed stability.
At trial in S.J., the YWCA parent educator testified that SJ.'s behavior escalated
during the visits. The parent educator opined that T .H. made no progress in her parenting
ofSJ. because she was unable to recognize SJ.'s emotional needs. Carol Thomas noted
that T.H.'s attempts to provide behavior controls and to guide and direct SJ. were
minimal and ineffective. She opined T.H. was unable to supply SJ. with emotional
support, calm SJ., or initiate physical contact with SJ. without SJ. becoming angry.
Thomas opined it was unlikely that a healthy relationship would develop in the near
future due to S J. ' s entrenched perception of his mother and T .H. ' s inability or
unwillingness to parent S.l. effectively. The guardian ad litem testified S.l. encountered
behavior problems including hitting, kicking, harming animals, destroying property, and
other violent behavior. She stated that SJ. could not wait any longer for T.H. to remedy
her parental deficiencies despite T.H.'s success and improvement. In its findings of fact,
the trial court found that, despite numerous services, T.H. failed to repair her relationship
with SJ. The trial court noted Carol Thomas' testimony that T.H. was unlikely to
perceive and cope with S.l.'s behavior problems in the near future.
On appeal in s.J, we reversed the termination ofS.J.'s parental rights. We held
that the trial court erred in finding all necessary services had been provided, despite
26
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
recognizing that our review was limited to determining if substantial evidence supported
the trial court's findings of fact. We noted that the State failed to earlier integrate mental
health services with chemical dependency services. Thus, DSHS failed to tailor T.H.'s
services to her concurrent problems. More importantly, we noted that DSHS failed to
provide necessary bonding and attachment services, even though the State contended that
a lack of attachment and bonding prevented T.H. from caring for SJ. We rejected the
State's speculative argument that T.H. could not benefit from attachment and bonding
services. The record showed T.H. applied the suggested parenting skills and attempted to
control SJ.'s behavior but was met with unusually strong controlling and aggressive
behavior from SJ. DSHS needed to work with SJ. to reduce this unusual behavior. T.H.
did not possess the responsibility to counteract SJ.'s new controlling and aggressive
behavior related to his detachment from T.H. during his bonding with the foster parents
while in State care. To the contrary, DSHS held the responsibility to identify needed
bonding services and to provide them, particularly when DSHS relied on the lack of
bonding in advocating termination. The child's bonding with foster parents was not an
excuse for termination. The record showed T.H. maintained a relationship with her other
child who did not exhibit S.J.'s unusual controlling and aggressive behaviors.
Considering SJ.'s detachment from T.H. while in State care, placing the burden on T.H.
to repair the detachment damage was fundamentally unfair. The trial court erred in
finding that all necessary services had been provided.
27
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
In this appeal, the State blames H.O. for the termination of her parental rights
because H.O. relapsed in substance abuse when B.P. was ten months old, a critical age
for a parent and child to bond. The State seeks to distinguish our ruling in S.J. on this
ground. Although T.H. also lost contact with SJ. at this critical age, the loss resulted
from a relapse related to the State's failure to provide mental health counseling with the
chemical dependency assistance. Nevertheless, in this appeal, testimony shows that
mental health counseling improved the second time H.O. underwent chemical
dependency treatment at Isabella House. Still other reasons demand we follow SJ. in
this appeal.
If one logically extended the State's argument, the State should have terminated
the parental rights at the time ofH.O.'s relapse in May 2012 or at least withheld
additional services from H.O. Upon the relapse, H.O. needed months to recover from
substance abuse, and the services would not be complete before B.P. turned one year of
age. Under the State's theory, B.P. and H.O. could never have bonded because B.P.
would not be within the care ofH.O. as she approached one year of age. Under the
State's theory, services were useless upon H.O.'s relapse. Nevertheless, DSHS never
told H.O. to stop attempting to improve herself so she could regain care ofB.P. Instead
the State teased H.O. and continued to provide services, albeit insufficient services, for
another year and one-half. H.O. engaged in the services so that B.P. would be returned.
All of the provided services met success. Under such circumstances, both the law and
28
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
equity demand a return ofB.P. to her mother.
According to the State, the first year is critical to bonding between the child and
the parent. This lack of bonding is irreparable, at least when the child lives with foster
parents. Therefore, under the State's theory, a parent absent from her child's first year of
life is subject to automatic termination of parental rights. If the State's position were
accurate, the law would need changing. The law does not state that one who has little
contact with a child before the child reaches one year of age must have rights terminated.
The Washington statutory scheme makes no mention of even a presumption that the
parent and child cannot form an attachment after the child turns one year of age.
A presumption that a parent and child cannot later bond also conflicts with
principles of attachment theory as developed and explained by mental health
practitioners. Commentators surveying relevant case law discovered that courts employ
the terms "bonding" and "attachment" "in an all-or-nothing manner-either the child is
bonded or attached or the child is not. They do not acknowledge the spectrum of
intensity in relationships. From a neurodevelopmental point of view, the courts' use of
these terms is imprecise." David E. Arredondo & Leonard P. Edwards, Attachment,
Bonding, and Reciprocal Connectedness: Limitations ofAttachment Theory in the
Juvenile and Family Court, 2 J. CENTER FOR FAMILIES, CHILD. & CTS. 109, 116 (2000).
Commentators urge judges and attorneys to exercise caution when employing any
concept "referring to human relatedness." Arredondo, supra, at 123.
29
No. 32437-I-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
Attachment is not a quantifiable trait, but rather a theory first developed in the
1940s. Attachment theory postulates "that young children attach to their parents, usually
their mothers, and that their later functioning can be explained by the quality of this
attachment." Pamela S. Ludolph & Milfred D. Dale, Attachment in Child Custody: An
Additive Factor, Not a Determinative One, 46 FAM. L.Q. 1,2 (2012). For research
purposes, theoreticians classify attachments into one of five categories: secure, insecure
avoidant, insecure-resistant, ambivalent, or disorganized. Arrendondo, supra, at 110-11.
Nevertheless, these "rigidly defined categories ... are insufficiently subtle to describe in
a forensic setting the rich and complex spectrum of dimensions of human
interrelatedness." Arredondo, supra, at 111.
The limits to which a court should rely on attachment between the parent and child
in a parental termination proceeding comes into focus when considering that only about
60 percent of surveyed American children demonstrate predominately secure attachment.
Arredondo, supra, at 110. Despite this lack of strong attachment, "[it] would not seem
sensible to regard 40 [percent] of infants as showing biologically abnormal
development." Arredondo, supra, at 110 (internal quotation marks omitted). Stated
another way, while secure attachment is the ideal, it is by no means static and is one of
several forms of attachment that children will develop over time. One court observed:
It is usual for an infant to form more than one attachment even in the
first years of life ... [T]he evidence does not necessarily suggest that it is
essential or even optimal for mother and child to form an exclusive dyad.
Indeed, a spreading of attachment relationships over several figures may be
30
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
healthy and may, under some circumstances, prove to be highly adaptive.
In one sense, "multiple" mothering is an insurance against separation
disturbance.
In re Interest ofR.B. W, 192 Ill. App. 3d 477,548 N.E.2d 1085, 1096-97, 139 Ill.
Dec. 529 (1989) (citation omitted).
As the commentators and the testimony of Lori Eastep and other providers
demonstrate, the State's position that H.O. missed her window of opportunity to form a
secure attachment with B.P. is theoretically incorrect in addition to being legally
insufficient to justifY termination. The State could and should have offered attachment
therapy to H.O. and B.P. as their providers recommended.
If I wrote the majority opinion, I would end here because the analysis regarding
failure to provide necessary services would be sufficient to reverse the trial court's order
of termination. I continue with this dissent, however, to identifY and ruminate on other
grounds on which the order should be vacated. A dissent needs to employ all arrows in
its minority quiver.
Remedy ofParental Deficiencies in Near Future
Another of the six statutory requirements for termination of parental rights is the
parent's failure to promptly remedy parental deficiencies. Under RCW 13.34.l80(1)(e),
DSHS must show:
That there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that
the child can be returned to the parent in the near future. A parent's failure
to substantially improve parental deficiencies within twelve months
following entry of the dispositional order shall give rise to a rebuttable
31
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
presumption that there is little likelihood that conditions will be remedied
so that the child can be returned to the parent in the near future. The
presumption shall not arise unless the petitioner makes a showing that all
necessary services reasonably capable of correcting the parental
deficiencies within the foreseeable future have been clearly offered or
provided. In determining whether the conditions will be remedied the court
may consider, but is not limited to, the following factors:
(i) Use of intoxicating or controlled substances so as to render the
parent incapable of providing proper care for the child for extended periods
of time or for periods of time that present a risk of imminent harm to the
child, and documented unwillingness of the parent to receive and complete
treatment or documented multiple failed treatment attempts;
(ii) Psychological incapacity or mental deficiency of the parent that
is so severe and chronic as to render the parent incapable of providing
proper care for the child for extended periods of time or for periods of time
that present a risk of imminent harm to the child, and documented
unwillingness of the parent to receive and complete treatment or
documentation that there is no treatment that can render the parent capable
of providing proper care for the child in the near future; or
(iii) Failure of the parent to have contact with the child for an
extended period of time after the filing of the dependency petition if the
parent was provided an opportunity to have a relationship with the child by
the department or the court and received documented notice of the potential I
consequences of this failure, except that the actual inability of a parent to
have visitation with the child including, but not limited to, mitigating
circumstances such as a parent's current or prior incarceration or service in
the military does not in and of itself constitute failure to have contact with
the child.
The "near future" is a key term in RCW 13.34.180(l)(e). The parental
deficiencies must be remedied such that the child may be returned to the parent in the
"near future." "Near future" is determined from the child's point of view. In re
Dependency ofA.C., 123 Wn. App. 244, 249, 98 P.3d 89 (2004). What constitutes "near
future" depends on the age of the child and the circumstances of the child's placement.
In re DependencyofT.L.G., 126 Wn. App. 181,205,108 P.3d 156 (2005). The cases
32
I
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
support the proposition that the younger the child, the shorter is the "near future." A
matter of months for young children is not within the foreseeable future to determine if
there is sufficient time for a parent to remedy his or her parental deficiency. In re
Welfare of MR.H, 145 Wn. App. at 28 (2008).
The focus of subsection (e) is "whether the identified deficiencies have been
corrected." MR.H., 145 Wn. App. at 27. Even when evidence shows that the parent may
eventually be capable of correcting parental deficiencies, termination remains appropriate
when deficiencies will not be corrected within the foreseeable future. In re A. w., 53 Wn.
App. 22, 32, 765 P.2d 307 (1988). If the State offers or provides all necessary services
reasonably capable of correcting parental deficiencies within the foreseeable future, and
the parent does not substantially improve within a year of the dependency order, a
presumption arises that the State has established RCW 13.34.180(l)(e). In re Welfare of
A.G., 155 Wn. App. 578, 590,229 P.3d 935 (2010). Even ifRCW 13.34.180(l)(e)'s
rebuttable presumption applies, the State must convince the trial court of a high
probability that the parent will not improve in the near future. In re Welfare ofC.B., 134
Wn. App. at 956 (2006). Because a parent's constitutional rights are implicated, the
presumption shifts only the burden of production to the parent. C.B., 134 Wn. App. at
955.
Parents before the court in dependency proceedings rarely come without
significant difficulties. In re Dependency ofTL-G., 126 Wn. App. at 203. Nonetheless,
33
No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
the paramount goal of child welfare legislation is to reunite the child with his or her legal
parents, if reasonably possible. In re Dependency ofKNJ., 171 Wn.2d at 577.
A relevant decision is In re Welfare ofC.B., 134 Wn. App. 942, 956, 143 P.3d 846
(2006). In C.B., this court reversed a parental termination order because the mother
showed significant remediation by the time of trial. DSHS contended that the past
behavior of the mother established the rebuttable presumption. The mother contended
that she rebutted that presumption because she made substantial progress. The mother's
home had earlier been found unfit for children. Nevertheless, DSHS presented no
testimony at the termination hearing that the mother's home was unsafe. Although she
was dilatory, the mother completed parenting classes. She was more dilatory in attending
anger management classes, but was in attendance at the time of the termination trial.
In Welfare ofC.B., the mother's primary deficiency related to drug use. This court
held that the mother met her burden to produce evidence of improvement because she
completed her chemical dependency programs and presented evidence from her
counselors and friends of a good prognosis. The mother's only outstanding deficiency
was anger management, for which she was enrolled to begin a class shortly after the
termination hearing. DSHS presented no evidence that reunification would require more
than one year. To the contrary, the only further treatment needed would end in four
months.
Before trial, H.O. completed her chemical dependency training and mental health
34
No. 32437-1-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
counseling. She addressed all of the parental deficiencies identified. Her mental health
counselor found that her health had improved such that she could care for B.P. H.O. was
sober for nine months at the time of trial. She cared for one child younger in age than
B.P.
I recognize that returning B.P. to H.O. would create initial trauma to B.P. and
witnesses expressed concern about this trauma. Nevertheless, Lori Eastep, the State's
primary expert and witness, could not identify any deficiency that H.O. encountered in
parenting at the time of trial. Eastep held no safety concerns with H.O. caring for B.P.
Eastep agreed that returning B.P. to H.O. could be a very positive thing for B.P. The
State wanted Eastep to testify that B.P. could not be returned to H.O. Eastep refused.
She instead noted consequences to B.P. of terminating H.O.'s rights. Eastep wanted
continued contact between H.O. and B.P. This testimony undercuts the State's position
that allowing a relationship to continue between H.O. and B.P., with an ultimate goal of
reunification, would cause permanent emotional damage to B.P., rather than temporary
emotional pain. Arredondo, supra, at 120.
In affirming the trial court's finding that H.O. had not corrected parental
deficiencies, the majority commits some factual errors. The majority claims that Lori
Eastep testified that B.P. would never be able to form a real attachment to H.O. and
forcing B.P. to do so would significantly injure B.P.'s mental health. Majority at 4.
Eastep uttered no such testimony. As previously indicated, Eastep advocated a
35
No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
continuing relationship between H.O. and B.P.
The majority claims that services were offered to the mother without the desired
effect. The majority does not identifY the services provided without success. To the
contrary, the services improved H.O.'s mental health and rendered her sober.
When affirming the trial court's decision, the majority ignores the significance of
H.O.'s successful parenting of A. The majority only mentions the existence of A. in two
sentences near the end of the opinion.
The trial court and the majority worry about H.O. relapsing in substance abuse.
Although I share in this disquietude, this worry cannot suffice for termination of parental
rights. Otherwise, no alcoholic or drug abuser could ever have his or her children
returned. A sober alcoholic or sober drug addict struggles to abstain during the rest of
her life. Chemical dependency and a potential relapse were not sufficient in s.J. to
terminate the parent's rights, and it is not sufficient to terminate H.O.'s rights to B.P.
B.P. 's Best Interest
The second step in the State's burden in a parental termination case involves
proving by a preponderance of evidence that termination is in the child's best interest.
RCW 13.34.190(l)(b). AsnotedinInre Welfare ofA.B.:
By virtue ofRCW 13.34.180(1) and RCW 13.34.190, a Washington
court uses a two-step process when deciding whether to terminate the right
of a parent to relate to his or her natural child. The first step focuses on the
adequacy of the parents and must be proved by clear, cogent, and
convincing evidence. The second step focuses on the child's best interests
and need be proved by only a preponderance of the evidence. Only if the
36
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
first step is satisfied may the court reach the second.
168 Wn.2d 908,911,232 P.3d 1104 (2010) (footnotes omitted). No specific factors are
involved in a best interest determination, and each case must be decided on its own facts
and circumstances. In re Welfare ofMR.H., 145 Wn. App. at 28 (2008).
The emptiest element of parental termination cases is the "best interest"
component. The term "best interest" is a vague construct. Its overuse renders the term
meaningless. See John Thomas Halloran, Families First: Reframing Parental Rights as
Familial Rights in Termination ofParental Rights Proceedings, 18 U.C. DAVIS J. JUV. L.
& POL'y 51, 76-77 (2004). "[N]umerous critics have objected to the best interest
determination claiming that it 'allows the judge to import his personal values ... and
leaves considerable scope for class bias.'" Jennifer Ayres Hand, Note, Preventing
Undue Terminations: a Critical Evaluation ofthe Length-of-Time-Out-of-Custody
Groundfor Termination ofParental Rights, 71 N.Y.U. L. REv. 1251, 1275 (1996).
I recognize that many witnesses, upon whom the trial court relied, testified that
termination ofB.P.'s relationship with H.O. was in B.P.'s best interest. Therefore, I will
not focus on this element of the termination process. I observe, however, some telling
testimony of the experts. Lori Eastep saw B.P. andH.O. interact as much as any other
witness. The State asked Eastep if termination of the parental-child relationship served
B.P.'s best interest. The State did not receive the desired response. Eastep stated H.O.'s
retaining parental rights was in B.P.' s best interest. The exchange went:
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No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
Q. So at this time do you have an opinion about whether termination
is in [B.P.'s] best interest?
A. I think permanency is in [B.P.'s] best interest. This may not be
the best answer, but I had suggested a guardianship. That's what I thought
was in [B.P.'s] best interest was for [H.O.] to retain her parental rights and
be involved with her child, but that [B.P.] remain with her current
placement because she is attached to them and is doing very well there.
RP at 85.
Amanda Clemons testified she does not believe it is in B.P.'s best interests to have
another disruption in care. She did not directly testifY that termination of parental rights
was in B.P.'s best interests. Clemons never interacted with H.O. and B.P.
Guardian ad Litem Karen Schweigert lacks the qualifications that other witnesses
held. She testified termination of H.O. 's parental rights is in B.P.' s best interests.
Nevertheless, Schweigert had not seen H.O. and B.P. together since visits resumed in
August 2013. Her concerns about H.O.'s decision making arose from information she
received from others, not from direct observations.
Marcey Monohan testified termination ofH.O. 's parent rights is in B.P.'s best
interests. Nevertheless, she acknowledged she did not observe the therapeutic visits
between H.O. and B.P. conducted by Lori Eastep. Practitioners consider such
observations to be crucial in order to render a qualified, professional opinion as a mental
health expert. Arredondo, supra, at 121.
The parties and the majority ignore that severing ties between B.P. and H.O. also
terminates the companionship of two sisters only one year apart in age. One ofthe joys
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No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
of life is the relationship with one's siblings. An only child often regrets the lack of a
brother or sister. The sibling relationship generally continues well beyond the death of
the parent. "Adults who tend to see the best interest of the child from their own
perspective sometimes overlook the importance of sibling relationships in both the short
and long term." Arredondo, supra, at 122.
Constitutional Right to Parent
Even if we assume the State proved all elements of the Washington statutory
scheme for termination, including the element of the best interests ofB.P., the trial court
erred in terminating the parent-child relationship. Although the trial court found that
H.O. is an unfit parent, this finding is not supported by the record. This finding
contradicts the fact that H.O. successfully parents A. Absent a showing of parental
unfitness by clear and convincing evidence, a state may not terminate a parent's right to
care of her child regardless of the State's parental termination statutes. The State did not
even prove unfitness ofH.O. by a preponderance of the evidence.
Both the United States and Washington Constitutions recognize a parent's
fundamental liberty interest in care and custody of her children. U.S. CONST. amends. V,
XIV; WASH. CONST., art. I, § 3; Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753, 102 S. Ct. 1388,
71 L. Ed. 2d 599 (1982); In re Custody ofSmith, 137 Wn.2d 1,27,969 P.2d 21 (1998).
The fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in the care, custody, and management
of their child does not evaporate simply because they have not been model parents or
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No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
have lost temporary custody of their child to the State. Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. at
753. Even when blood relationships are strained, parents retain a vital interest in
preventing the irretrievable destruction of their family life. Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S.
at 753. The child also has an interest in preventing the erroneous termination of its
relationship with its natural parents. Santosky, 455 U.S. at 765. The concept that all
children are wards of the state and that the state and its agencies have an unhampered
right to determine what is best for the child belongs to a repudiated political and moral
philosophy foreign and repugnant to American institutions. In re Welfare of Warren, 40
Wn.2d 342,343,243 P.2d 632 (1952).
Courts undertake a grave responsibility when they deprive parents of the care,
custody and control of their natural children. In re Welfare ofSego, 82 Wn.2d at 738
(1973). Therefore, terminating parental rights is one of the severest of state actions and
implicates fundamental interests. In re Welfare ofJM, 130 Wn. App. 912, 921, 125
P.3d 245 (2005).
The six elements of parental termination cases, found in RCW 13.34.180 and .190,
address, in part, whether a parent is unfit but the elements are not conclusive or exclusive.
Even if the State establishes the termination factors in RCW 13.34.180(1), the trial court
may not terminate the rights of a currently fit parent. In re Welfare ofA.B., 168 Wn.2d at
919-20 (2010); In re Welfare ofA.G., 160 Wn. App. 841, 845,248 P.3d 611 (2011); In re
Welfare ofShantay CJ, 121 Wn. App. 926, 936, 91 P.3d 909 (2004); Santosky, 455 U.S.
40
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
at 760. Termination of the parent-child relationship must be based on current parental
unfitness. In re Dependency of T.L. G., 126 Wn. App. at 203 (2005). Identifying
parenting deficiencies is not the equivalent of proving parental unfitness. In re
Dependency ofSchermer, 161 Wn.2d 927,943, 169 P.3d 452 (2007).
A finding of current unfitness requires more than the determination that DSHS
proved by a preponderance of the evidence that a parenting deficiency exists. The due
process clause demands the State establish unfitness by clear, cogent and convincing
evidence. In re Welfare ofA.B., 168 Wn.2d at 920; In re A. W, 53 Wn. App. at 29 (1988).
When the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that the mother of a child is
currently deficient, the trial court cannot make such a finding, and, without such a
finding, the trial court cannot terminate the mother's relationship with her child. In re
Welfare ofA.B., 168 Wn.2d at 920; In re Welfare ofCB., 134 Wn. App. 942, 959, 143
P.3d 846 (2006). When the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that the father is
currently deficient at the time of trial, termination is improper even if the evidence shows
that the father is deficient at an earlier time. In re Welfare ofA.B., 168 Wn.2d at 920; In
re Welfare of Ch urape , 43 Wn. App. 634, 638, 719 P.2d 127 (1986).
RCW 13.34.020 reads that the child's rights and needs prevail, but the State
ignores other portions of the statute. The first two sentences of RCW 13.34.020 read:
The legislature declares that the family unit is a fundamental
resource of American life which should be nurtured. Toward the
continuance of this principle, the legislature declares that the family unit
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No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
should remain intact unless a child's right to conditions of basic nurture,
health, or safety is jeopardized.
The trial court erred by finding H.O. was currently unfit to parent B.P. Lori
Eastep testified she does not have any safety concerns when H.O. and B.P. are together.
Eastep could not identifY any problem in H.O.'s parenting. The fact that H.O. cared for
A. established the contrary. All witnesses who observed A. were impressed with A.'s
development, ifnot H.O.'s mothering of A. Eastep described A. as "a very healthy,
happy little girl." RP at 73. Marcey Monohan testified that as long as H.O. remains
clean and sober, she has no concern regarding H.O.'s ability to meet A.'s needs. Since
B.P. can receive basic nurture, health and safety from H.O., RCW 13.34.020 demands the
return ofB.P. to H.O.
The State's primary concern is B.P.'s lack of attachment to H.O. The fact children
have been in foster homes and have developed ties to their foster parents cannot be the I
controlling consideration. In re Welfare ofChurape, 43 Wn. App. at 639 (1986). In re
I
8.1., 162 Wn. App. 873 (2011) established that a lack of attachment to the child does not
render a parent unfit. In S.J., we also held that the termination order violated T.H.'s
constitutional rights to parent her child. The record lacked a showing that T .H. was unfit
to parent. I
In re Welfare ofA.B., 168 Wn.2d 908, 919, 232 P.3d 1104 (2010) is also parallel.
The trial court found little likelihood that conditions will be remedied so that the child
I
could be returned to or placed with her father in the near future. Despite the father's
42
,
No. 32437-1-111
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efforts to render visitations meaningful, he failed to establish a "close attachment" with
his daughter. The trial court found this lack of bonding profound and intractable and
attributed it to subtle changes in the child's relationship with her caretaker. The state
Supreme Court reversed the termination because of the lack of a finding that the father
was currently an unfit parent.
Foreign jurisdictions have rejected the argument that a child should not be
returned to a natural parent because the child has emotionally attached to foster parents'.
Although these jurisdictions rendered decisions in other contexts, the courts' persuasive
reasoning establishes that termination ofH.O. 's parental rights constitutes a violation of
the due process clause. The courts' analysis of expert testimony on childhood bonding is
also instructive.
In In re B.B.M, 291 S.W.3d 463 (Tex. App. Dallas. 2009), Shawn M. challenged
the trial court's order appointing two nonparents as managing conservators or guardians
of his son. The father argued that the evidence did not support the jury's finding that
appointing him as managing conservator would significantly impair the child's physical
health or emotional development. The appeals court agreed and remanded for a new trial.
B.B.M. was the biological child of Shawn M. Shawn M. separated from the
mother before B.B.M.'s birth. Without Shawn M.'s approval, the mother permitted
adoption ofB.B.M. by Travis and Sabra Hess. An adoption coordinator told the Hesses
that the father ofB.B.M. consented to the adoption, and the Hesses took B.B.M. from his
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No. 32437-I-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
birthplace in Dallas to Idaho. The adopting agency later brought action to terminate the
parental rights of Shawn M. Shawn M. counter-petitioned to establish his paternity, and
the Hesses intervened to request termination of Shawn M.' s parental rights or, in the
alternative, to grant them conservatorship over B.B.M. The trial court entered an order
confirming the jury's verdict that refused to terminate Shawn M.' s parental rights, but
granted the Hesses conservatorship over B .B.M.
The Texas law on childhood conservatorship echoes Washington law on
termination of parental rights. To gain the conservatorship over the child, the nonparent
must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that appointment of the parent as
managing conservator significantly impairs the child's physical health or emotional
development. Evidence that a nonparent would be a better custodian of the child was
inadequate to meet this burden. The Hesses relied on evidence of the impairment of
B.B.M.'s emotional development resulting from his removal from their home. The
appellate court responded that the proper focus was on whether the placement of the child
with the natural parent would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional
development. The court answered that the negative effect on the child caused by his
separation from nonparents is not sufficient to deny a natural parent managing
conservatorship, because of the parent's fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody,
and management of his child.
In B.B.M, the Hesses presented the expert testimony of Dr. Beth Bontempo, a
44
No. 32437-1-III
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
psychologist, who conducted a "bonding and attachment assessment." Bontempo stated
that she could "hypothesize based on attachment theory" that the child at issue would
experience a breach of trust, broken attachment, and a sense of abandonment if taken
from the Hesses. In re B.B.M, 291 S.W.3d at 468. Bontempo conceded, however, the
difficulty in predicting the future of a child. The Texas appellate court relied on the rule
that a mere potential threat, as opposed to evidence of actual harm to the child's
emotional development, was insufficient to deny a natural father the right to raise his own
son. Although Shawn M. did not have the difficult history that H.O. has, B.B.M
illustrates that the State may not terminate parental rights based on a lack of attachment
between the child and the parent. The Texas court noted that the rights of a natural parent
are essential and far more precious than any property right.
In re Guardianship ofAshleigh R., 2002-NMCA-103, 132 N.M. 772, 55 P.3d 984
has an outcome similar to In re B.B.M A mother appealed from a judgment appointing
the grandmother as guardians for her two daughters. The mother argued that the trial
court lacked authority under the New Mexico Probate Code to appoint guardians for the
children when she retained the right to custody. She also argued that the trial court
should have granted her custody of her daughters in the absence of an express finding
that she was an unfit parent. The appeals court agreed and held that the trial court could
not deny the mother custody without an express finding that she was unfit.
In Ashleigh R., the two children assumed residency with their maternal .
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No. 32437-1-111
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
grandmother when the mother and father experienced marital difficulties. When the
marriage ended in divorce, the mother joined the grandmother and the two girls. For the
next two years, the mother moved in and out of the house, sometimes taking the girls
with her but usually leaving them in the care of the grandmother. When the mother
demanded return of the daughters, the grandmother filed a guardianship action.
The New Mexico court in Ashleigh R. applied the rule that the trial court must
ordinarily make an express finding that the parent is unfit before denying the parent
custody. The court recognized the difficulties involved for children who are removed
from stable, loving homes and separated from people who have acted as psychological
parents. After a prolonged separation, the biological parent, though not unfit, may be
incapable of reestablishing the necessary parental bond with the child. Nevertheless, the
parent still may regain custody unless the court finds parental unfitness or extraordinary
circumstances. The court is not free to weigh the best interests of the child. The parent
does not forego the right to custody of a child by the child entering the custody of another
when the parent needs assistance. Unstable or inadequate parents can tum their lives
around and become suitable custodians for their children. The fundamental liberty
interest of natural parents in the care, custody, and management of their child does not
evaporate simply because they have not been model parents or have lost temporary
custody of their child to the State.
In Ashleigh R., the grandparents testified that the girls did not want to live with
46
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No. 32437-1-111
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their mother and experienced nightmares and other signs of emotional stress when they
visited her. The appeals court answered that the psychological harm from the transfer of
custody cannot be presumed, but must be proven by those who seek to deny custody to
the parent. Relying on a text on attachment and bonding, the court observed that
commentators warn against overemphasizing potential psychological harm. The court
noted that any transition is likely to cause some stress but not necessarily long-term
psychological damage.
In In re Guardianship ofJ.c., 129 N.J. 1,608 A.2d 1312 (1992), the court
reversed a trial court's ruling terminating parental rights of a mother to three children,
despite the children bonding with foster parents. The mother had a long history of
homelessness, domestic abuse, and substance abuse. The children remained in foster care
for five years. The trial court ruled that the mother's parental rights should be
terminated, while emphasizing the psychological harm that would result from breaking
the bonds that each child had formed with foster caretakers. The trial court blamed the
mother for her inability to plan for their future and her failure to rehabilitate herself. One
child was emotionally disturbed as a result of the conduct of her mother. As in this
appeal, the State presented a parade of expert witnesses at trial who testified to the
bonding of the children with foster parents and the harm caused by reunification with the
mother. The witnesses echoed the opinion that severing of parental ties would be in the
best interest of the children. The mother presented testimony from her chemical
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No. 32437-I-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
dependency counselor that she completed treatment and was sober. Nevertheless, the
trial court expressed concern, in his findings, that the mother would relapse.
When reversing the trial court in In re Guardianship ofJ c., the Garden State
court noted that the law reflects a strong societal bent in favor of the integrity of the
natural family. Parents have a constitutional, fundamental liberty interest in raising their
biological children, even if those children have been placed in foster care. Termination
of parental rights permanently cuts off the relationship between children and their
biological parents. Few forms of state action are both so severe and so irreversible.
To show that the child has a strong relationship with the foster parents or might be better
off if left in their custody is not enough. The State must prove by clear and convincing
evidence that separating the child from his or her foster parents would cause serious and
enduring emotional or psychological harm.
The New Jersey court, in In re Guardianship ofJc., reviewed psychological
literature on childhood attachment. The court noted competing psychological theories of
the effects of parental bonding. Some psychologists hold that change under the right
circumstances can playa positive role in children's development. Although natural
parents can be a disruptive influence for children who have been adopted, some
commentators and psychologists believe that eliminating the natural parents from the
children's lives and memory is impossible and therefore wrong. Scholars suggest that
courts rely too often on theories of parental bonding to keep children in foster care rather
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No. 32437-I-II1
In re Welfare ofB.P. (Dissent)
than return them to their parents. In addition, the uncritical use of bonding theory can tilt
the process in favor of the State and its social workers and foster parents and be misused
to determine only which set of parents is optimum or "better" in some vague social sense,
rather than capable of rearing the child without serious harm. The court questioned
whether social workers are qualified to express opinions concerning psychological
bonding and the harmful consequences to the children from its disruption. The New
Jersey court discounted, ifnot rejected, testimony from experts who had not conducted a
formal bonding study. In the final analysis, the court concluded that there was not clear
and convincing evidence to support the determination to terminate the mother's parental
rights. The court remanded for further testimony and analysis.
In this appeal, no psychologist testified to an attachment disorder suffered by B.P.
No psychologist testified to permanent and serious harm to B.P. if she returns to her
mother. All agreed that R.O. is parenting a happy, well-adjusted A.
By my dissent, I do not suggest that DSRS must relinquish B.P. to R.O. for the
rest ofB.P.'s minority. I only advocate the vacation of the termination order. Although
B.P. should return to her mother, the dependency should remain for a reasonable period
oftime to ensure that R.O. remains sober and capable of caring for B.P.
49
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