NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0515n.06
No. 18-5680
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
ALICIA M. PEDREIRA; PAUL SIMMONS; ) FILED
JOHANNA W.H. VAN WIJK-BOS; ELWOOD ) Sep 02, 2020
STURTEVANT, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Plaintiffs-Appellants, )
)
ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
)
COURT FOR THE WESTERN
SUNRISE CHILDREN’S SERVICES, INC., fka )
DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
Kentucky Baptist Homes for Children, Inc.; ADAM )
MEIER, Secretary, Cabinet for Health and Family )
OPINION
Services; JOHN TILLEY, Secretary, Justice and )
Public Safety Cabinet, )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
BEFORE: STRANCH, BUSH, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.
JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge. Kentucky taxpayers sued the State of Kentucky
and Sunrise Children’s Services, a religiously affiliated organization, alleging that Kentucky
violated the Establishment Clause by paying Sunrise for religious services that the taxpayers allege
Sunrise imposes on children in State custody. The taxpayers and Kentucky, without Sunrise,
entered into a consent decree in which the taxpayers agreed to dismiss the suit in exchange for
Kentucky’s agreement to make certain changes to its foster-care system. The district court refused
to enforce the decree, asserting that it violated Kentucky law. The taxpayers filed this interlocutory
appeal. We AFFIRM the decision below.
No. 18-5680, Pedreira, et al. v. Sunrise Children’s Servs., Inc., et al.
I. BACKGROUND
In April 2000, Kentucky taxpayers sued the state of Kentucky and Sunrise, formerly known
as Kentucky Baptist Homes for Children, alleging that Kentucky violated the Establishment Clause
by funding Sunrise—a private, religiously oriented organization that provides services for children
in Kentucky’s custody. See Pedreira v. Ky. Baptist Homes for Children, Inc. (Pedreira I), 579
F.3d 722, 725 (6th Cir. 2009), cert. denied, 563 U.S. 935 (2011). Plaintiffs’ allegations include
that numerous children in the care of Sunrise were not allowed to practice their own religion, not
given a choice whether to attend religious services, or experienced some form of discipline for not
attending certain religious services.
The district court granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss the suit for lack of standing. On
appeal, we reversed, holding that Plaintiffs did have standing as Kentucky taxpayers to bring their
claims. Id.
A. Initial “Settlement Agreement”
Seven years after this suit was filed, Plaintiffs and Kentucky entered a Settlement
Agreement to resolve the case, without Sunrise’s approval. The Agreement denied that Kentucky
(or Sunrise) violated the Establishment Clause or other rights of the children under Sunrise’s care,
but it required Kentucky to modify the terms of its standard two-year contracts—Private Child
Care Agreements (PCC Agreements)—with Sunrise and other child-care providers and agencies.
The terms of the Agreement seek to prevent publicly-funded, private child-care providers from
engaging in any form of religious indoctrination, proselytization, or coercion of children in
Kentucky’s public child-care system. The terms require providers to inform a child and the child’s
parent of a child-caring facility’s religious affiliation, to provide children with opportunities to
attend a church of their choice, and to provide non-religious alternatives. Providers must also
agree not to discriminate against children on the basis of religion and, once the children leave their
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care, must give them an exit survey that asks about their experiences and whether the provider
attempted to convert the child to a new religion.
The Agreement includes monitoring provisions requiring Kentucky to provide information
to organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Americans United for
Separation of Church and State (Americans United) concerning the religious beliefs of the children
in Sunrise’s care, those children’s exit surveys, any reports by the State’s caseworkers for those
children, and records of any religious activities at Sunrise’s group homes. The Agreement also
requires Kentucky to provide the ACLU and Americans United similar information about
providers other than Sunrise in the event Kentucky receives and investigates a complaint about the
provider. Finally, the Agreement contemplates the possibility of Kentucky enacting new
regulations to implement some of its provisions. Specifically, if new or modified administrative
regulations “must be enacted to comply with the terms” of the Agreement, Kentucky must “initiate
the process of modifying any [such] administrative regulations.” Kentucky does not have to
guarantee that it will enact or modify any regulation, and a failure to do so would not constitute a
violation of the Agreement.
In exchange, Plaintiffs promise to dismiss their lawsuit with prejudice and waive any
claims based on conduct occurring before the settlement. The Settlement Agreement provides that
the Kentucky district court that enters the agreement has exclusive jurisdiction to enforce it.
Plaintiffs, Kentucky, and the ACLU and Americans United have the same rights to enforce the
Agreement; Sunrise does not. The terms also indicate that the Agreement is not a “consent decree”
and purports to divest the district court of its power to hold Kentucky in contempt if the state
violates the Agreement.
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Plaintiffs and Kentucky agreed on the settlement terms and filed a motion asking the
district court to dismiss the suit and retain jurisdiction to enforce the Settlement Agreement.
Sunrise objected and filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The court denied Sunrise’s
motion, granted Plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss, entered an order incorporating the Agreement, and
retained jurisdiction to enforce the order. Sunrise appealed.
On October 6, 2015, we determined that Sunrise had standing to object to and appeal the
Settlement Agreement. Pedreira v. Sunrise Children’s Servs. Inc. (Pedreira II), 802 F.3d 865,
869 (6th Cir. 2015). We reaffirmed Plaintiffs’ standing to bring the suit and held that the district
court did not abuse its discretion by labelling its dismissal of the case as a dismissal with prejudice.
Id. at 870–71. Examining the Agreement, we determined that it had the key attributes of a consent
decree: “the [district] court expressly retained jurisdiction to enforce compliance with the
settlement’s terms; and by incorporating the settlement into the court’s own dismissal order, the
court gave its imprimatur to the settlement’s terms.” Id. at 871. We remanded the case for
consideration of the Agreement as a consent decree and directed the district court to address
whether it was fair, reasonable, and consistent with the public interest. Id. at 872. Specifically,
the district court was to determine whether the consent decree was fair to Sunrise and to allow
anyone affected by the decree an opportunity to present evidence and have its objections heard.
Id.
B. Amended Agreement (“Consent Decree”)
On November 18, 2015, the parties to the original Agreement entered into a First
Amendment to the Settlement Agreement (the Amendment) to address concerns related to singling
out Sunrise for special monitoring. The Amendment alters the original Agreement in two
important respects. First, the monitoring provisions were deleted entirely and replaced with
language that does not mention Sunrise specifically, instead referencing “any Agency.” (R. 552-
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2, PageID 6277) One of the recitals for the Amendment states that “the Parties desire to amend
the Settlement Agreement to eliminate any ‘singl[ing] out’ of or potential reputational harm to
Sunrise by uniformly applying the same monitoring triggers and rules to all Agencies, as set forth
in this Amendment.” (Id. at PageID 6276 (alteration in original))
Second, the Amendment adds clarifications, “in light of objections raised by Sunrise during
briefing concerning the Settlement Agreement.” (Id.) The Amendment provides that no regulatory
changes are needed to comply with or enforce the Agreement: “Notwithstanding any references
in the Settlement Agreement to possible enactment of new or modified administrative regulations,
the Parties agree that the Commonwealth Defendants do not need to enact or modify any
administrative regulations to comply with the Settlement Agreement.” (Id. at PageID 6278)
Unlike the treatment of the monitoring provisions and the Settlement Agreement’s reference to
Sunrise, the parties to the Amendment did not remove or change language concerning enacting or
modifying regulations.
Otherwise, the Amendment provides that “all the terms of the Settlement Agreement shall
remain in full force and effect, and the Parties shall continue to comply with the Settlement
Agreement, as amended herein, including during the pendency of any further proceedings in, or
relating to dismissal of, the Lawsuit.” (Id.) Plaintiffs and Kentucky again agreed to file a joint
motion in the district court requesting approval of the Settlement Agreement as amended, dismissal
of the suit with prejudice, incorporation of the Agreement into the Court’s order of dismissal, and
retention by the court of jurisdiction to enforce the order. (Id.)
C. Change in Administration and Opposition to Amended Agreement
On December 8, 2015, Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin assumed office. On April 11, 2016,
the Governor’s Office notified Plaintiffs’ counsel that it had undertaken a “fresh appraisal” of this
case and concluded that it would not consent to the Amended Agreement. The Governor’s Office
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took the position that the Amended Agreement was not fair, reasonable, or consistent with the
public interest and that it did not wish to pursue the Agreement on remand.
Plaintiffs separately and individually moved the district court to enter the Amended
Agreement and to dismiss the suit on June 27, 2016. Kentucky and Sunrise opposed the motion;
Kentucky specifically asserted “a change in administration and, in every respect, philosophy,
following Governor Matthew G. Bevin’s election in November 2015.” Defendants argued that the
Amended Agreement was unenforceable for lack of consent and that the district court lacked
authority to enter and enforce it. The district court issued an order rejecting Defendants’ arguments
and determining that, regardless of the change of administration, the Amended Agreement
remained a viable proposed consent decree and that it would schedule the matter for a fairness
hearing.
Sunrise filed a motion for reconsideration of the district court’s order, challenging the
Amended Agreement’s lawfulness and contending that the decree could not be lawfully
implemented without modifying or expanding Kentucky regulations. The court granted that
motion, concluding that the Amended Agreement violates Kentucky law because it requires
enactment of new or modified administrative regulations to be implemented. See Pedreira v.
Sunrise Children’s Servs., Inc., No. 3:00-CV-210, 2018 WL 2435424, at *12 (W.D. Ky. May 30,
2018). The court refused to enforce the Amended Agreement. Id.
Plaintiffs filed an interlocutory appeal of the district court’s refusal to enter the Amended
Agreement, and Defendants moved to dismiss the appeal, arguing that we lacked jurisdiction to
hear it. On October 24, 2018, we denied Defendants’ motion to dismiss. The appeal is now before
us on the merits.1
1
Since the filing of this appeal, there has been another change of administration. In 2019, Andrew Graham
Beshear—son of former Kentucky Governor Steven Beshear who served just before Governor Bevin—was
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II. ANALYSIS
We must first ascertain jurisdiction and Plaintiffs’ Article III standing before turning to the
merits.
A. Jurisdiction and Standing
Defendants argue again that we lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal because the district
court’s order refusing to enter the Amended Agreement is not final and appealable under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291. We considered this argument before and rejected it, reasoning that the order (1) has “the
practical effect of refusing an injunction,” (2) threatens a “serious, perhaps irreparable
consequence,” and (3) “can be ‘effectively challenged’ only by immediate appeal.” We explained
that because “the terms of the settlement agreement are beyond the relief sought in the complaint,”
Plaintiffs have demonstrated “irreparable consequence because they will lose the ‘bargain’ they
obtained through negotiation.” Defendants offer no new bases to suggest that we lack jurisdiction.
And, upon reviewing our prior order, there is nothing indicating that our determination and
reasoning are flawed. We have jurisdiction to hear this appeal.
Sunrise nevertheless contends that Plaintiffs lack standing to challenge the district court’s
refusal to enter the Amended Agreement on the basis that the relief sought exceeds the scope of
Plaintiffs’ standing for the Establishment Clause claim. It argues that Plaintiffs advocate on behalf
of non-parties (the children) for the enforcement of the Amended Agreement and that Plaintiffs,
as taxpayers, may only seek relief in the form of a prospective injunction against the state’s
unlawful spending. But in Pedreira II, 802 F.3d at 870, we held that the requirements for state
taxpayer standing set forth by the Supreme Court in Arizona Christian School Tuition
Organization v. Winn, 563 U.S. 125, 138–40 (2011), apply. The Winn Court explained that for
elected Governor of Kentucky and is currently serving in that position. Nothing has been filed with the
court altering the position of the parties since that change in administration.
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taxpayer standing, (1) “there must be a ‘logical link’ between the plaintiff’s taxpayer status ‘and
the type of legislative enactment attacked,’” id. at 138 (quoting Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 102
(1968)); and (2) “there must be ‘a nexus’ between the plaintiff’s taxpayer status and ‘the precise
nature of the constitutional infringement alleged,’” id. at 139 (quoting Flast, 392 U.S. at 102). We
have twice held that Plaintiffs satisfy these requirements and have standing as Kentucky taxpayers
to bring their Establishment Clause claim. See Pedreira I, 579 F.3d at 732–33; Pedreira II, 802
F.3d at 870.
We “may not revisit [standing] ‘unless an inconsistent decision of the United States
Supreme Court requires modification of the decision or this Court sitting en banc overrules’ the
earlier panel.” Id. (quoting Ward v. Holder, 733 F.3d 601, 608 (6th Cir. 2013)). Citing Frank v.
Gaos, 139 S. Ct. 1041 (2019) (per curiam), Sunrise argues that Plaintiffs must establish standing
specifically for their request for approval of the Amended Agreement, separate from their standing
for the Establishment Clause claim. Id. at 1046 (vacating and remanding a judgment affirming
approval of a cy pres-only settlement so that the lower court could determine first whether any
named plaintiff—objectors to the settlement—had Article III standing). But Frank does not stand
for that proposition. The Supreme Court remanded Frank because neither the district court nor
the court of appeals assessed objectors’ standing under the operative complaint or the Settlement
Agreement. That is not the case here. See Pedreira I, 579 F.3d at 732–33; Pedreira II, 802 F.3d
at 870. And Sunrise cites no inconsistent decision, or any case that contravenes our prior holding
in Pedreira I, to support its proposition that Plaintiffs lack standing.
B. Merits Discussion
We have held that the Amended Agreement functions as a consent decree. See Pedreira
II, 802 F.3d at 871–72. A district court’s refusal to enter a consent decree is reviewed for an abuse
of discretion. See United States v. Lexington-Fayette Urban Cty. Gov’t, 591 F.3d 484, 491 (6th
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Cir. 2010). “A district court abuses its discretion when it relies on clearly erroneous findings of
fact, or when it improperly applies the law or uses an erroneous legal standard.” Vanguards of
Cleveland v. City of Cleveland, 23 F.3d 1013, 1017 (6th Cir. 1994) (quoting Lorain NAACP v.
Lorain Bd. of Educ., 979 F.2d 1141, 1148 (6th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 509 U.S. 905 (1993)). A
consent decree’s legal validity is a question of law and thus reviewed de novo. See United Black
Firefighters Ass’n v. City of Akron, 976 F.2d 999, 1004 (6th Cir. 1992).
“A consent decree is a strange hybrid in the law.” Vanguards of Cleveland, 23 F.3d at
1017 (quoting Brown v. Neeb, 644 F.2d 551, 557 (6th Cir. 1981)). “It is at once ‘a voluntary
settlement agreement which could be fully effective without judicial intervention’ and ‘a final
judicial order placing the power and prestige of the court behind the compromise struck by the
parties.’” Lorain NAACP, 979 F.2d at 1148 (brackets and ellipsis omitted) (quoting Williams v.
Vukovich, 720 F.2d 909, 920 (6th Cir. 1983)). The “‘scope of a consent decree must be discerned
within its four corners, and not by reference to what might satisfy the purposes of one of the parties
to it’ or by what ‘might have been written had the plaintiff established his factual claims and legal
theories in litigation.’” Vanguards of Cleveland, 23 F.3d at 1017 (quoting Firefighters Local
Union No. 1784 v. Stotts, 467 U.S. 561, 574 (1984)). Finally, “a consent decree should be
construed to preserve the position for which the parties bargained.” Id.
As a preliminary matter, Kentucky argues that it no longer consents to the Agreement and
that the Amended Agreement is void. This issue is not dispositive and is easily discarded, as courts
have considered the validity of a consent decree despite one party’s change in consent after the
terms were negotiated. See Stovall v. City of Cocoa, 117 F.3d 1238, 1242 (11th Cir. 1997) (citing
Allen v. Ala. State Bd. of Educ., 816 F.2d 575 (11th Cir. 1987); Moore v. Beaufort Cnty, 936 F.2d
159, 163 (4th Cir. 1991)).
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The crux of the legal issue on appeal is whether the Amended Agreement violates
Kentucky law. Because a consent decree is a “final judicial order[,]” the decree cannot be
approved if it “is illegal.” Williams, 720 F.2d at 920; see also Kasper v. Bd. of Election Comm’rs,
814 F.2d 332, 342 (7th Cir. 1987) (emphasizing that “the court may not readily approve a decree
that contemplates a violation of law”). Moreover, “[c]ourts must be especially cautious when state
officials seek to achieve by consent decree what they cannot achieve by their own authority.”
Coalition to Defendant Affirmative Action v. Granholm, 473 F.3d 237, 245 (6th Cir. 2006)
(brackets omitted) (quoting League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Clements, 999 F.2d 831, 846
(5th Cir. 1993) (en banc)). In relevant part, Kentucky law provides: “An administrative body shall
not by internal policy, memorandum, or other form of action . . . [m]odify[,] . . . [e]xpand upon or
limit a statute or administrative regulation . . . . Any administrative body memorandum, internal
policy, or other form of action violative of this section or the spirit thereof is null, void, and
unenforceable.” KRS 13A.130. Also,
any administrative body that is empowered to promulgate administrative
regulations shall, by administrative regulation, prescribe, consistent with applicable
statutes . . . [e]ach statement of general applicability, policy, procedure,
memorandum, or other form of action that implements; interprets; prescribes law
or policy; describes the organization, procedure, or practice requirements of any
administrative body; or affects private rights or procedures available to the public[.]
KRS 13A.100(1).
Kentucky law and courts have a significantly limited view of an agency’s authority.
“Administrative agencies must strictly adhere to the standards, policies, and limitations provided
in the statutes vesting power in them.” Portwood v. Falls City Brewing Co., 318 S.W.2d 535, 537
(Ky. 1958). “An administrative agency, as a purely statutory creation, possesses no inherent
authority and derives all of its rule-making authority from legislative grant.” Fisher v.
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Commonwealth, 403 S.W.3d 69, 78 (Ky. Ct. App. 2013). “Where reasonable doubt exists
concerning the proper scope of an administrative agency’s power, the question must be resolved
against the agency to limit its power.” Id.
The parties dispute (1) whether the Amended Agreement is lawful, specifically whether its
terms are encompassed by and fully consistent with existing provisions of Kentucky law; and
(2) whether Kentucky is required to enact or modify regulations to implement the Amended
Agreement. Each issue will be discussed separately.
1. Existing Kentucky Regulations
The Amended Agreement contains somewhat contradictory language regarding the
modification, expansion, or limitation of existing Kentucky regulations. Sections 2(a)(i) and (ii)
provide that “Subject to the provisions of KRS § 199.801 and upon enactment of modified
administrative regulations within Kentucky Administrative Regulations (KAR) Title 505 and KAR
922, . . . the Commonwealth Defendants shall . . .” (R. 552-1, PageID 6256) That language
anticipates enacting or modifying administrative regulations to enforce the Agreement.
Nevertheless, when we remanded the case for the district court to consider the proposed Agreement
as a consent decree, Plaintiffs and Kentucky amended it to include the following:
Section 3. No regulatory changes needed. Notwithstanding any references in
the Settlement Agreement to the possible enactment of new or modified
administrative regulations, the Parties agree that the Commonwealth Defendants do
not need to enact or modify any administrative regulations to comply with the
Settlement Agreement.
(R. 552-2, PageID 6278) While this amendment arguably assuages concerns over any requirement
to enact or modify existing regulations, Plaintiffs did not remove the above-mentioned language
from sections 2(a)(i) and (ii). As the district court pointed out, that decision differed from
Plaintiffs’ decision to strike the monitoring provisions of the original agreement entirely and
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replace them with new language in the amendment to address this court’s fairness concerns. See
Pedreira, 2018 WL 2435424, at *6.
The parties’ agreement in the amended language that no new regulations are necessary is
relevant, despite Defendants’ argument to the contrary. See Vanguards of Cleveland, 23 F.3d at
1017 (emphasizing that “a consent decree should be construed to preserve the position for which
the parties bargained”). But an expressly stated agreed upon term does not divest us of power to
determine the validity or accuracy of the term. See Pedreira II, 802 F.3d at 871–72 (“Suffice it to
say it takes more than this procedural two-step to circumvent our precedents regarding what counts
as a consent decree and—more to the point—the requirements for entering one . . . . [O]ur
precedents, and not the parties’ recitations (even as incorporated by the district court), determine
whether the order is a consent decree.”). We must examine the substance of the Amended
Agreement, which we have found to constitute a consent decree, and decide whether it comports
with Kentucky law or requires new or modified administrative regulations. See Vanguards of
Cleveland, 23 F.3d at 1017 (emphasizing that the “scope of a consent decree must be discerned
within its four corners, and not by reference to what might satisfy the purposes of one of the parties
to it” (quoting Firefighters Local Union No. 1784, 467 U.S. at 574)).
The district court held that six provisions—2(a)(i), 2(a)(ii), 2(b)(i), 2(b)(ii), 2(h), and 2(i)—
require new regulations or modifications to existing regulations for implementation. These
provisions and the district court’s consideration of them will be discussed in turn.
a. Sections 2(a)(i) and (ii)
Sections 2(a)(i) and (ii) set out the obligations of a provider in placing children in child-
caring facilities and foster homes. Before placing any child at a child-caring facility, the child-
caring facility and the child-placing agency must:
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(i) inform the child, and the child’s parent(s) or guardian if a parent or guardian can be
contacted by the Commonwealth at the time of the placement, about the child-caring
facility’s religious affiliation . . . ; (ii) inquire whether the child or parent or guardian
objects to the child being placed at such child-caring facility based on its identified
religious affiliation; and if the child or parent or guardian so objects, (iii) consider such
objection and make reasonable efforts to provide an alternative placement if an alternative
placement exists.
(R. 552-1, PageID 6256–57)
Plaintiffs contend that “[a] host of statutes and regulations authorize . . . Defendants to
implement these common-sense provisions.” These statutes and regulations include the following
provisions from the Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) and Kentucky Administrative Regulations
(KAR):
• KRS § 199.801 — directing the Cabinet of Health and Family Services (the Family
Cabinet)2 to select “the type of placement that best suits the child’s needs” and is “the best
alternative for the child”;
• KRS § 620.090(2) — providing that upon issuance of a temporary custody order, “[t]he
child may also be placed in a facility or program operated or approved by the [Family
Cabinet], including a foster home, or any other appropriate available placement” that is
“least restrictive”;
• KRS § 620.140(1)(c) — providing that when choosing a placement for a removed child,
the Family Cabinet must “consider[] the wishes of the parent or other person exercising
custodial control or supervision”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 6(7)(a)(1) — requiring private child-care providers to “demonstrate
consideration for and sensitivity to . . . [the] religious background of a child in care”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(1)(f)(4) — requiring providers to take a “social history and needs
assessment that includes medical, educational, developmental, and family history” of the
child during the intake process;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(3)(a)(5)(b) — directing the child’s treatment team to create a
treatment plan based on “[s]ocial assessment” that includes information on a child’s
“[r]eligion”;
2
The Family Cabinet is a State of Kentucky government agency that administers child welfare programs,
in addition to other family programs.
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• 922 KAR 1:310 § 6(2)(b) — directing child-placing agencies to then “select a foster home
for a child based upon the individual needs of the child, including . . . [a]ny information
concerning the child’s needs in placement”;
• 922 KAR 1:310 § 6(3) — providing that “[a] child shall participate in the intake process
to the extent that the child’s age, maturity, adjustment, family relationships, and the
circumstance necessitating placement justify the child’s participation”;
• 922 KAR 1:310 § 12(1)(h) — providing that child-caring facilities must “[p]rovide a child
placed by [a] child-placing agency with a family life, including . . . [o]pportunities for
development consistent with the child’s religious, ethnic, and cultural heritage”;
• 922 KAR 1:310 § 19(4)(b)(5) — directing child-placing agencies to obtain “[a] social
history of the biological or legal parent, to include . . . [r]eligion or faith”; and
• 922 KAR 1:360 § 2(2)(k) — providing that an appropriate placement for a child must take
into consideration a child’s history and needs, including a child’s “[r]eligious background
and practices.”
The district court decided that sections 2(a)(i) and 2(a)(ii) limit Defendants’ discretion to
determine the placement of a child and modify existing regulations on the process of placing a
child. The court explained:
The provisions convert discretion into dialogue with children and parents and
guardians concerning appropriate placement, and afford the child, parent or
guardian near veto power on placement by objecting to the entity’s religious
affiliation. Not only does the child, parent, or guardian have a level of input which
did not heretofore exist, but the Commonwealth Defendants and child-placing
agencies are constrained to accept the objection and afford alternative placement,
or justify, in writing, placement in a child-caring facility or foster home over the
objection.
Pedreira, 2018 WL 2435424, at *8. The Amended Agreement states that “[n]othing in this
subsection shall be construed to interfere with the Commonwealth Defendants’ [or child-placing
agency’s] ability to exercise their reasonable and good faith discretion regarding the placement
that it is in the best interest of the child.” (R. 552-1, PageID 6256) The court found that this
disclaimer did not prevent the limiting of an agency’s discretion, and that the provisions do more
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than monitor child-caring facilities as Plaintiffs contend; they require these entities to “engage in
a pre-placement vetting process with the child and parent or guardian.” Pedreira, 2018 WL
2435424, at *8.
Sections 2(a)(i) and (ii) allow for a child and/or parent to object to a placement proposition
and that the child-caring facility or child-placing agency will consider that objection and
alternative placements. These requirements appear to take place after all the procedures for placing
a child have taken place, for which the above-mentioned regulations govern. After a placement
determination consistent with Kentucky regulations has been made, the Amended Agreement
imposes new obligations on the agency, including requiring “reasonable efforts” to find an
alternative placement. Plaintiffs argue that the “reasonable efforts” requirement affords an agency
discretion within existing regulations as opposed to mandating that the agency find an alternative
placement. But such a requirement raises the question of what constitutes reasonable efforts, and
no regulations or statutes specify what that entails or requires. Because administrative agencies in
Kentucky are constricted in their authority to enforce and administer statutes and regulations,
enforcement of the Amended Agreement would require enacting or modifying Kentucky
regulations to ensure appropriate enforcement. See Fisher, 403 S.W.3d at 78.
b. Sections 2(b)(i) and (ii)
Sections 2(b)(i) and (ii) require Defendants to inform children and their parents or
guardians of their protections provided by the Amended Agreement. Those provisions provide:
(i) Prior to placing any child . . . Defendants shall (A) inform the child, and the child’s
parent(s) or guardian . . . of the terms of the modified PCC Agreement and procedures
set forth in Sections 2(a), 2(d)(i)-(ii), 2(e), and 2(f) of this Agreement; (B) inform the
child, and the child’s parent(s) or guardian[,] . . . of the contact information for the
available Ombudsman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services (‘Ombudsman’)
and the Service Appeal Process set forth in 922 KAR 1:320 (‘Service Appeal Process’),
and that the Ombudsman and the Service Appeal Process are available in the event the
child or parent or guardian has concerns regarding the [child-caring facility’s or child-
placing agency’s] alleged violations of the terms of the modified PCC Agreement and
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procedures set forth in Section 2(a), 2(d)(i)-(ii), 2(e), and 2(f); (C) provide the child
with a document, that the child could keep on his or her person or in his or her room,
containing information about the terms of the modified PCC Agreement and procedures
set forth in Sections 2(a), 2(d)(i)-(ii), 2(e), and 2(f), the Ombudsman, and the Service
Appeal Process.
(ii) The PCC Agreement shall be modified to provide that a child-caring facility shall post
information, in at least one common area of the child-caring facility, about the terms of
the modified PCC Agreement and procedures set forth in Sections 2(a), 2(d)(i)-(ii),
2(e), and 2(f), the Ombudsman, and the Service Appeal Process; and that a child-
placing agency shall post information, in a prominent place in each location operated
by the child-placing agency, about the terms of the modified PCC Agreement and
procedures set forth in Section 2(a), 2(d)(i)-(ii), 2(e), and 2(f), the Ombudsman, and
the Service Appeal Process.
(R. 552-1, PageID 6257–58)
Plaintiffs contend that these provisions are encompassed in the following existing
Kentucky regulations:
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(1)(h) — providing that “[b]efore admission, the child and custodian
shall be informed in writing of their rights and the child-caring facility’s responsibilities,
including policy pertaining to the services offered to the child”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(1)(i) — providing that “[a] child shall be informed upon admission of
the right to file a grievance”; and
• 922 KAR 1:320 §§ 6(1)(a), (7)(a) — stating that the Family Cabinet provides people with
a grievance form “at each case planning conference,” as well as a “written statement
describing appeal [grievance] rights.”
Considering only the first regulation, the district court determined that sections 2(b)(i) and
2(b)(ii) require modifying existing Kentucky regulations by requiring Defendants, in addition to
the child-caring facilities and child-placing agencies, to provide information relating to the
religious rights of the child pre-placement. It also found that Defendants must inform the child
and parent of the “terms of their contract” with the facilities and agencies, and of the terms of the
Amended Agreement. Pedreira, 2018 WL 2435424, at *9. The court concluded that the
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provisions limit Defendants in choosing the methods and means to monitor the child-caring
facilities and impose additional obligations on Defendants in the child-placement process.
There is no dispute that the Amended Agreement and existing Kentucky regulations,
specifically KAR 1:300 § 7(1)(h) and (1)(i), require facilities and agencies to inform a child and
the parent or guardian about the child’s rights and the entities’ responsibilities. Requiring these
entities to inform the child about the provisions within the Amended Agreement and the PCC
agreements likely would not require modification of existing regulations because the agreements
are merely an elaboration of those rights and responsibilities. But the context of these regulations
demonstrate that they are directed at only the child-care facility and not the state of Kentucky. For
example, § 7(1)(h) provides that “the child and custodian shall be informed in writing of their
rights and the child-caring facility’s responsibilities, including policy pertaining to services offered
to the child.” KAR 1:300 § 7(1)(h) (emphasis added). Because some children in the foster care
system are in the custody of the Family Cabinet, see KRS § 620.090(1), a requirement that the
Cabinet inform itself in writing lacks clarity. And the facility, not Kentucky, is in the best or
perhaps only position, to provide information regarding its own policies pertaining to its services.
Plaintiffs nevertheless argue that “there is nothing in the regulation that prohibits the
Family Cabinet and private childcare providers from acting as one another’s agent in providing
information to children.”
While that is true, there is also nothing in the regulations that requires Kentucky to provide
information consistent with the Amended Agreement’s mandate. Plaintiffs also argue that the
district court failed to consider 922 KAR 1:320 §§ 6(1)(a) and 7(a), which direct the Family
Cabinet itself to inform its clients about the grievance procedure, specifically about their right to
file a “Service Appeal.” But these regulations are limited to parents, foster parents, and other
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adults seeking review of an adverse action against them by the Cabinet, see 922 KAR 1:320 § 2,
not children seeking redress for violations of their rights by child-care facilities.
Sections 2(b)(i) and 2(b)(ii) require modifying and/or expanding regulations so that
Kentucky may participate in the process of informing children or, at a minimum, to establish that
facilities and agencies have authority to conduct this process on Kentucky’s behalf.
c. Sections 2(h) and 2(i)
Sections 2(h) and 2(i) govern procedures Defendants must take when a child leaves a
placement. Those provisions provide:
(h) Agency Exit Surveys. The Commonwealth Defendants shall prepare a brief exit survey
concerning the child’s experiences and impressions regarding the child-care facility’s
religious activities and accommodations. During the week of a planned discharge for
any child who has been in the care of a single child-caring facility for one month or
longer, the Agency shall (i) provide the child with the exit survey, (ii) provide a secure
location for the child to submit the exit survey anonymously, and (iii) submit the exit
surveys to the Commonwealth Defendants on at least a quarterly basis. The
Commonwealth Defendants shall maintain these exit surveys, organized by the Agency
from which the surveys were received. Such exist survey shall include, but not be
limited to, questions concerning whether the child experienced any alleged form of
religious coercion, discrimination, or proselytization during such placement, as
described in Section 2(f). The central office of the Department for Community Based
Services or Department of Juvenile Justice, or their counsel, shall investigate any
allegations of religious coercion, discrimination, or proselytization contained within
the Exit Surveys, and take appropriate action, as necessary. The Commonwealth
Defendants, in their reasonable and good faith discretion, shall determine whether any
such allegation of religious coercion, proselytization, or discrimination may violate the
terms of Sections 2(d), (e) or (f) of this Agreement and thus merits a referral of the
complaint to the Office of the Inspector General within the Cabinet for Health and
Family Services (‘Office of the Inspector General’) for further investigation and other
appropriate action, as deemed necessary by the Office of Inspector General in its
reasonable and good faith discretion.
(i) Case Manager Surveys. The Commonwealth Defendants shall require case workers to
(i) question all children on their caseload about the child’s experiences and impressions
regarding the Agency’s religious activities and accommodation at one of the “home
visits” made by the case worker annually, and (ii) document the children’s responses
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in TWIST, or through other similar documentation. The questions shall include
without limitation inquiries regarding the activities prohibited by Section 2(f). If a case
worker believes that an Agency has engaged in an act of religious coercion,
discrimination, or proselytization, the case worker shall report such complaint and
suspected behavior to the central office of the Department for Community Based
Services or Department of Juvenile Justice, who shall investigate any such allegations,
and take appropriate action, as necessary. The Commonwealth Defendants, in their
reasonable and good faith discretion, shall determine whether any such allegation of
religious coercion, discrimination, or proselytization may violate the terms of Sections
2(d), (e) or (f) of this Agreement and thus merits a referral of the complaint to the Office
of Inspector General for further investigation and other appropriate action, as deemed
necessary by the Office of Inspector General in its reasonable and good faith discretion.
(R. 552-1, PageID 6261–62)
Plaintiffs argue that “[t]hese provisions, too, do not modify or expand existing laws.” They
point to the following statutes and regulations for support:
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 6(7)(a)(1) — requiring child-care providers to “demonstrate
consideration for and sensitivity to . . . [the] religious background of a child in care”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(6)(d) — providing that “when a child is leaving a facility as a planned
discharge, a predischarge conference shall be held to ensure that the child and family are
prepared for successful transition into placement” and that the child, parent or guardian,
and the treatment team are required to “attend this conference”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(6)(e) — requiring at least one “preplacement visit prior to [a] planned
discharge”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(6)(g) — providing that “[u]pon discharge” a child’s educational,
medical, vocational, psychological, legal, and social needs “shall be assessed”;
• 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(7)(a)(11) — requiring child-care providers to maintain confidential
records, including a “[d]ischarge summary”;
• KRS § 199.640(3) — providing that “[e]ach licensed facility or agency shall be visited and
inspected at least one (1) time each year by a person authorized by” the Family Cabinet
and that “[a] complete record of the visit and inspection shall be filed” with the Family
Cabinet;
• 922 KAR 1:305 § 6(1) — providing that “[a] child-caring facility or a child-placing agency
shall not deny access to a human services surveyor or other representative of the [Family
Cabinet]”;
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• 922 KAR 1:330 § 6(1) — authorizing Family Cabinet “to obtain necessary information to
complete an investigation in a report of child abuse, neglect, or dependency” that occurs in
a licensed child-caring facility;
• 922 KAR 1:360 § 2(2)(k) — providing that making changes to a child’s level of care or
placement requires current information about the child’s “[r]eligious background and
practices”; and
• 922 KAR 1:360 § 3 — providing that, after placing a child with a provider, a Family
Cabinet staff member must “[c]onduct a utilization review for a child . . . [s]ix (6) months
from the initial placement” and “[e]very three (3) months thereafter[,]” “[r]eassign a child’s
level of care after the previous level has expired[,] . . . [m]onitor each child-caring facility
and child placing agency[,] . . . [and m]aintain a confidential information system for each
child” that includes placement history, level of care assignments, length of treatment, and
discharge outcomes.
The district court determined that sections 2(h) and 2(i) present somewhat differing results.
The court found that section 2(i)’s requirement for case manager surveys is acceptable because
questions concerning religious accommodation and activities fall within the scope of existing
regulations providing annual home visits by Kentucky case workers. But the court determined
that section 2(h)’s mandate to require exit surveys “differ[ed] in kind and purpose” from the
discharge and aftercare procedures provided. Pedreira, 2018 WL 2435424, at *11. Rather than
gathering information for discharge planning of a child, the new exit surveys would serve as a
form of “debriefing” to determine compliance with the Amended Agreement. Id. And sections
2(h) and 2(i) both require an investigation if certain allegations of religious coercion have been
made, which the court determined was an obligation not present in existing regulations. The court
concluded that sections 2(h) and 2(i) would require modification of existing regulations to be
enforceable.
Plaintiffs argue that no modifications to existing regulations are necessary for discharge
planning because, like the exit surveys, such planning takes into consideration a child’s
experiences while in private child-care. Plaintiffs also contend that the regulations grant broad
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authority to the Family Cabinet to monitor child-caring facilities and that such monitoring includes
investigation of religious coercion. But these assertions are not readily apparent in the regulations
cited. The listed regulations concern discharge and aftercare obligations to ensure a child’s smooth
transition from one placement to another; they are forward-looking. See 922 KAR 1:300
§ 6(7)(a)(1); 922 KAR 1:300 § 7(6)(d). Section 2(h), however, requires backward-looking
information to assess a child’s experience, which may trigger a subsequent investigation. While
an investigation into allegations of unlawful conduct is encompassed in existing regulations, see
922 KAR 1:330 § 6(1), the district court correctly noted that the regulations do not say
investigations are triggered and must be conducted based on allegations made in the exit survey.
Sections 2(h) and 2(i) require modification of existing Kentucky regulations.
Plaintiffs maintain that Kentucky’s prior practices and representations demonstrate that no
new regulations are necessary because it has fully complied with the terms of the Amended
Agreement for more than three years. Kentucky did so by revising the PCC Agreements to reflect
the amended terms. And that the Amended Agreement was initially consented to and enforced
does not necessarily mean that it is lawful. The court has an independent duty to evaluate the
Amended Agreement and determine its legality. Williams, 720 F.2d at 920.
In sum, many of the provisions of the Amended Agreement require Defendants to modify
or expand various regulations. Despite Plaintiffs’ inclusion of amended language providing that
no new regulations or modifications are necessary, the provisions themselves require
modifications to be implemented and enforced under Kentucky law.
2. Additional Issues
Plaintiffs also argue that even if the Amended Agreement requires new regulations, the
Commonwealth Defendants are bound by their contract to undertake “the process of adopting or
modifying such regulations.” But Kentucky did not necessarily consent to rulemaking here. The
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Amended Agreement provides: “the Parties agree that the Commonwealth Defendants do not need
to enact or modify any administrative regulations to comply with the Settlement Agreement.” (R.
552-2, PageID 6278) And even the initial Settlement Agreement provided that Kentucky does not
have to guarantee it will enact or modify regulations and that a failure to do so does not constitute
a violation of the Agreement. (R. 552-1, PageID 6265)
Additionally, Plaintiffs request that we certify to the Kentucky Supreme Court the question
of whether Kentucky law requires Kentucky to enact or modify regulations to implement the
Amended Agreement. But this question is not new or unsettled. See In re Amazon.com, Inc.,
Fulfillment Ctr. Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) & Wage & Hour Litig., 852 F.3d 601, 607 (6th
Cir. 2017) (“Certification to a state supreme court ‘is most appropriate when the question is new
and state law is unsettled . . . .’” (quoting City of Columbus v. Hotels.com, L.P., 693 F.3d 642 (6th
Cir. 2012))). “[T]he appropriate time to request certification of a state-law issue ‘is before, not
after, the district court has resolved [it].’” Id. (second alteration in original) (quoting State Auto
Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Hargis, 785 F.3d 189, 194 (6th Cir. 2015)). And because Plaintiffs chose
to file this action in federal court, they cannot then “‘seek refuge’ in state court only after an
unfavorable ruling.” Id. (quoting Hotels.com, 639 F.3d at 654). We deny Plaintiffs’ request for
certification.
This case presents an unusual situation. The provisions of the consent decree did not
explicitly require Kentucky to enact or modify regulations, and the positions of the parties have
shifted during litigation. Our review, however, shows that the Amended Agreement, functioning
as a consent decree, requires Kentucky to enact and modify regulations. Under Kentucky law,
particularly KRS 13A.130, that requirement is not appropriate. The district court did not abuse its
discretion by refusing to enter the Amended Agreement.
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III. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
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