IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 18-2135
Filed March 20, 2019
IN THE INTEREST OF J.C. and M.C.,
Minor Children,
J.S.-C., Mother,
Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County, Thomas J. Straka,
Associate Juvenile Judge.
A mother appeals the order terminating her parental relationship with her
two sons. AFFIRMED.
MaryBeth A. Fleming of MaryBeth Fleming Law Office, P.C., Dubuque, for
appellant mother.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Meredith L. Lamberti, Assistant
Attorney General, for appellee State.
Kristy L. Hefel, Dubuque, guardian ad litem for minor children.
Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Tabor and Bower, JJ.
2
TABOR, Judge.
A mother, Jameela, challenges the juvenile court’s order terminating her
parental relationship with her sons, seven-year-old J.C. and ten-year-old M.C.
Jameela contends the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) failed to make
reasonable efforts to reunite her with J.C. and M.C. The juvenile court found
“significant services were offered to mother, but she refused to participate in them
and then chose to move to a different state rendering it impossible for the [DHS]
to provide any meaningful services.” After reviewing the record,1 we reach the
same conclusion as the juvenile court.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
The DHS first became involved with the family in February of 2017 after
receiving a report of suspected physical abuse by Jameela. The DHS investigated
but ultimately did not confirm the report. The following month, the DHS received
a second report of abuse, which an investigation confirmed. In April, the DHS
received a third report alleging Jameela left J.C. and M.C. in her car unattended
while she worked her shift at a Dubuque home-improvement store. Police officers
found the children in the car, and a child-abuse assessment found a denial of
critical care. Jameela initially agreed to participate in services through the DHS.
But when the DHS tried to form an action plan, Jameela refused to sign releases
or provide necessary information.
1
We review termination-of-parental-rights proceedings de novo. In re M.W., 876 N.W.2d
212, 219 (Iowa 2016) (citing In re A.M., 843 N.W.2d 100, 110 (Iowa 2014)). While we are
not bound by the juvenile court’s fact findings, we give them weight, particularly when
witness credibility plays a role. Id. (quoting A.M., 843 N.W.2d at 110).
3
In May, Jameela stopped taking the boys to school, indicating she intended
to homeschool them. The DHS grew increasingly concerned about the boys’
safety when workers were unable to locate the family and Jameela refused to
disclose their whereabouts. So the DHS sought a temporary removal order that
same month. In late May, the DHS finally located J.C. and M.C. after Jameela
took them to the Indiana Department of Children Services. Iowa DHS caseworkers
traveled to Indiana, retrieved the boys, and placed them in foster care under the
juvenile court’s May temporary removal order.
In July 2017, after a hearing, the juvenile court adjudicated the children in
need of assistance (CINA). At the July hearing, Jameela explained her evasive
behavior and refusal to disclose information for coordination of services was
motivated by her fear her abusive ex-husband would locate the family. But
Jameela also told the juvenile court she no longer feared her ex-husband, and the
DHS caseworker testified Jameela had recently been in contact with him. The
juvenile court ordered continued foster-care placement, noting the obstacles
Jameela’s lack of cooperation placed in the way of the DHS coordinating services
to address concerns for the children’s safety.
In the following months, DHS and Family Safety, Risk, and Permanency
(FSRP) workers offered Jameela phone calls and weekly face-to-face visits with
J.C. and M.C., but Jameela’s attendance was sporadic. J.C. and M.C. told
caseworkers they did not want to see or speak to Jameela because they were
afraid. But caseworkers alleviated their fears by crafting a safety plan, and J.C.
and M.C. participated in visitations when Jameela attended. Court-ordered
mental-health evaluations for the boys revealed concerns of extensive abuse at
4
the hands of Jameela. In the fall of 2017, J.C. and M.C. began therapy in
Guttenberg, Iowa. The boys progressed in therapy, and Jameela began attending
joint sessions with them. But the boys’ therapist recommended against joint
counseling with their mother when the boys began to regress as a result of
Jameela’s participation. By the January 2018 review hearing, the Guttenberg
therapist terminated the counseling relationship because Jameela repeatedly
showed up at the therapist’s office unannounced, and the therapist felt she could
not ensure the boys’ safety should the relationship continue.
The juvenile court’s January 2018 order following the review hearing again
set the permanency goal as reunification. To facilitate this goal, the court ordered
continued FSRP services and therapy for J.C. and M.C. The court also asked
Jameela to consistently schedule and attend visits, comply with therapy, follow the
recommendations of the mental-health evaluation she submitted earlier that
month, and again ordered Jameela to sign the mental-health releases for herself,
J.C., and M.C., to allow the DHS to coordinate services.
In early 2018, the DHS was able to locate J.C. and M.C.’s father, Marcel,
despite Jameela’s refusal to provide his contact information. Marcel participated
in the January review hearing and began visits with J.C. and M.C. in February
2018. After a few months of successful interactions with the boys and compliance
with services, the DHS concluded Marcel was a suitable placement option and
asked the juvenile court to place J.C. and M.C. with Marcel. So the juvenile court
modified the previous dispositional order, and J.C. and M.C. moved to Chicago to
live with their father. Marcel arranged for J.C. and M.C. to continue therapy in
5
Illinois, and their new therapist routinely provided the Iowa DHS updates on J.C.
and M.C.’s progress.
Jameela initially contested placement of J.C. and M.C. with Marcel. But at
the June 2018 hearing, she withdrew her objection to the placement, instead
asking the DHS to arrange therapeutic interactions between her and the boys as
a reasonable effort toward reunification.
The juvenile court expressed concern about forcing the boys to interact with
Jameela before they were ready. As a result, the court ordered no interactions
until the therapist believed interactions would not be harmful to the boys’ progress.2
And in the interim, the court ordered the DHS to contact the therapist to request
she provide Jameela with periodic progress updates. The juvenile court set the
final permanency hearing for the following month. The permanency goal remained
reunification.
In July, after a motion by the State, the juvenile court found providing FSRP
services was no longer reasonable because both Jameela and the boys were living
outside of Iowa.3 Scheduling conflicts resulted in continuation of the final
permanency hearing until October 10, 2018.
On October 4, 2018, Jameela filed a motion for reasonable efforts. She
took issue with the efforts the DHS exerted following the juvenile court’s June 2018
order. Jameela pointed to the court’s mandate the DHS provide J.C. and M.C.’s
2
That therapist reported the boys made significant progress after being placed with their
father and started to “more fully process the trauma they endured at the hands of their
mother.”
3
Jameela left Dubuque in mid-2017. At the time of the July 2018 review hearing, she was
residing in Chicago.
6
new therapist with Jameela’s contact information and request the therapist provide
Jameela updates, asserting she had received no updates. Jameela further
requested the DHS provide her with “contact information and medical records
relating to the children’s therapy, information concerning living arrangements,
school records and health care, [and] that the Mother be offered contact with the
children either in person or via telephone.”
Following a hearing on October 10 and November 1, 2018, the juvenile
court terminated Jameela’s parental rights under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f)
(2018).4 In the order, the court rejected her reasonable-efforts challenge. Jameela
appeals.
II. Analysis
Jameela only challenges termination on one ground.5 She argues the State
failed to make reasonable efforts to facilitate reunification.6
4
Section 232.116(1)(f) permits the court to terminate parental rights when it finds the
following:
(1) The child is four years of age or older.
(2) The child has been adjudicated a child in need of assistance pursuant
to section 232.96.
(3) The child has been removed from the physical custody of the child’s
parents for at least twelve of the last eighteen months, or for the last twelve
consecutive months and any trial period at home has been less than thirty
days.
(4) There is clear and convincing evidence that at the present time the child
cannot be returned to the custody of the child’s parents as provided in
section 232.102.
5
In her petition on appeal, Jameela states in passing: “[B]ecause the children are placed
with their father, Iowa Code [s]ection 232.116(3)(a) allows the [c]ourt to decline to
terminate Jameela’s parental rights.” Her brief mention of this permissive factor is not
sufficient to raise the issue for our review.
6
In Jameela’s petition on appeal, she asserts she “does not dispute [the juvenile court’s
finding the children could not be returned to her care] as she has had no opportunity to
repair her relationship with her children or address the concerns giving rise to their
resistance to seeing or talking to her.” But as discussed later in the analysis, reasonable
efforts toward reunification is part of the State’s burden in proving the child cannot be
returned to the parent’s care. See In re C.B., 611 N.W.2d 489, 493 (Iowa 2000).
7
The DHS must exert reasonable efforts to reunite children with their parents.
Iowa Code § 232.102(6)(b); In re T.C., 522 N.W.2d 106, 108 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994)
(citing In re C.L.H., 500 N.W.2d 449, 453 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993)). The reasonable-
efforts requirement strives to “both prevent[] and eliminat[e] the need for removal.”
In re C.H., 652 N.W.2d 144, 147 (Iowa 2002). Making reasonable efforts toward
reunification is not “a strict substantive requirement of termination”—instead, it is
a facet of the State’s burden to prove the child “cannot be safely returned to the
care of a parent.” In re C.B., 611 N.W.2d 489, 493 (Iowa 2000). When the
elements of termination require reasonable efforts, the scope of the services
offered by the DHS after removal “impacts the burden of proving those elements.”
In re L.T., ___ N.W.2d ___, ___, 2019 WL 982910, at *5 (Iowa 2019) (analyzing
reasonable efforts under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f)–(h)).
The determination of what services are reasonable varies from family to
family. In re C.H., 652 N.W.2d at 147. “Generally, in making reasonable efforts to
provide services, the State’s focus is on services to improve parenting.” Id.
Jameela asserts the DHS’s efforts were deficient because “she has never received
any information regarding their school, therapy, or any other aspect of their lives
since the hearing on June 7, 2018.”7
While the DHS is obligated to put forth effort in reuniting families, “a parent
must do something, must make some effort to move; neither standing still nor
7
In her petition on appeal, Jameela also complains the Iowa DHS did not transfer the case
to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. To the extent Jameela is
arguing transfer of the family’s case to Illinois is a service that should have been provided,
the argument is not preserved. See In re L.M., 904 N.W.2d 835, 840–41 (Iowa 2017)
(“Although DHS must make reasonable efforts in furtherance of reunification, . . . parents
have a responsibility to object when they claim the nature or extent of services is
inadequate.”).
8
cruise control on a status-quo path will defeat an impending termination.” In re
T.S., 868 N.W.2d 425, 442 (Iowa Ct. App. 2015). Since the inception of the DHS
involvement with her family, Jameela has repeatedly dismissed its efforts to
provide her services to address her mental-health concerns. Jameela did not
comply with the court’s request for her to submit a mental-health evaluation until
the month of the second review hearing, nearly six months after the court’s
instruction to do so. Not only did Jameela impede the services the DHS attempted
to provide her, she placed obstacles in the provision of services to her sons.
Jameela interfered with J.C. and M.C.’s therapy, causing their first therapist to
discontinue treatment. Jameela refused to provide the DHS information or sign
releases to facilitate relative placement. And she refused to sign medical releases
for the boys, prompting the DHS to seek court orders granting permission to make
decisions and access information necessary for J.C. and M.C.’s treatment.
Additionally, the record does not reveal, nor does Jameela explain, how
receiving updates from J.C. and M.C.’s therapist would contribute to addressing
her own mental health such that reunification would become a possibility. 8 See In
re A.G., No. 17-2024, 2018 WL 1099557, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 21, 2018)
(“[T]he record does not show it would have made a difference in the termination
decision.”). Accordingly, we agree with the juvenile court’s conclusion the State
met its burden in proving J.C. and M.C. could not be returned to Jameela’s care
through numerous and reasonable efforts to provide her services to work toward
8
Although we find no impact from the absence of these therapy updates, we do not
condone the alleged failure by the DHS to follow through with the juvenile court’s directive.
9
reunification. We affirm the juvenile court’s order terminating Jameela’s parental
rights to J.C. and M.C.
AFFIRMED.