FILE THIS OPINION WAS FILED
FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON
IN CLERK’S OFFICE DECEMBER 24, 2020
SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON
DECEMBER 24, 2020
SUSAN L. CARLSON
SUPREME COURT CLERK
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
)
) No. 98487-5
In the Matter of the Dependency of
)
) En Banc
A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S.,
)
) Filed :____________________
December 24, 2020
Minor children.
)
)
WHITENER, J.—Under the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 19781
(ICWA) and the Washington State Indian Child Welfare Act 2 (WICWA), the State
must make “active efforts . . . to prevent the breakup of the Indian[3] family.” 25
U.S.C. § 1912(d); see also RCW 13.38.130(1). Two of L.K.’s three children are
Indian children for the purposes of ICWA and WICWA. L.K. claims that the
Department of Children, Youth, and Families (Department) removed her children
1
25 U.S.C. §§ 1901-1963.
2
Ch. 13.38 RCW.
3
Consistent with our recent opinion in In re Dependency of Z.J.G., 196 Wn.2d 152, 157
& n.3, 471 P.3d 853 (2020), we use the terms “Indian child” or “Indian family” when referring to
statutory language. In other instances, we use the term “Native.”
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
without making “active efforts” at keeping the family together as is required under
ICWA and WICWA.
The Court of Appeals did not address this issue but, instead, sua sponte
found that under the invited error doctrine, L.K. is precluded from raising this issue
on appeal. It held that because L.K. repeatedly contended she did not need
services, she cannot now claim on appeal that the Department did not provide her
sufficient services under ICWA and WICWA. It did not reach the issue of whether
the Department provided active efforts.
We reverse the Court of Appeals’ holding that L.K. invited error that
precluded appellate review of whether the Department made active efforts when
she asserted at and before the dependency trial that she did not need services.
Further, we address the issue of active efforts and hold that the Department did not
engage in the statutorily required active efforts to prevent the breakup of an Indian
family. Accordingly, we vacate the dispositional order continuing L.R.C.K.-S. and
D.B.C.K.-S.’s foster care placement. We remand for immediate return of these two
children to their mother, unless the court finds that returning the children puts the
children in “substantial and immediate danger or threat of such danger.” 25 U.S.C.
§ 1920; see also RCW 13.38.160. The finding of dependency is unaffected.
2
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
L.K. is the mother of seven-year-old A.L.K., four-year-old L.R.C.K.-S., and
three-year-old D.B.C.K.-S. A.L.K. has a different father from her siblings.
L.R.C.K.-S. and D.B.C.K.-S.’s father is a member of the Northern Arapaho Tribe
(Tribe) 4 located on the Wind River Reservation. L.R.C.K.-S. and D.B.C.K.-S. are
eligible for enrollment. The issues presented to this court affect only L.R.C.K.-S.
and D.B.C.K.-S. as A.L.K. has not been found to be Native.
I. History with the Department
L.K. has an extensive history with Child Protective Services (CPS) and the
Department, having 19 prior allegations since 2013 and a prior dependency that
was dismissed at fact-finding. In 2013, L.K. relapsed on methamphetamine while
on probation, and the Department initiated a Family Voluntary Services (FVS)
case. The Department offered her “project safe care parenting class, random UAs
[urinalyses], mental health counseling, bus passes and . . . drug and alcohol
evaluation.” Transcript of Proceedings (sealed) at 252. While these cases usually
last 90 days, the Department allowed L.K. to continue services for 7 months. L.K.
did well for the first 4 months, but then her participation started to decline. The
Department closed the case when L.K. declined services.
4
The Tribe filed a notice to intervene as to L.R.C.K.-S. and D.B.C.K.-S. in November 2018. As
an intervenor, the Tribe has filed a brief on the merits of the case in this court.
3
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
The Department initiated another FVS case in 2017 when it got a report that
L.K. was in a detox unit while pregnant with D.B.C.K.-S. The Department set up a
plan that included drug and alcohol treatment, evaluation, and UAs; childcare;
housing; and in-home family preservation services. The in-home family services
provider helped L.K. fill out applications, transported her to different housing, and
got her into housing. However, L.K. chose to live in a motel instead of the housing
provided for her. Nonetheless, the social worker who visited the motel said it was
“clean” and there were no safety concerns. Id. at 271.
The Department also paid for childcare and provided childcare supplies, gas
vouchers, and bus passes. This also included contacting the Tribe and letting the
Tribe know the services that were being offered to the family. Although L.K.
wanted the case to remain open so she had childcare, the case was closed after 90
days in March 2018 because the Department had offered all services and the only
one L.K. was using was childcare.
II. The Current Dependency Case
In August 2018, L.K.’s children were removed from her care for allegations
of abandonment. A.L.K. was placed with her paternal grandmother, and L.R.C.K.-
S. and D.B.C.K.-S. were placed in non-Native, licensed foster care as there was no
relative placement available and no Native foster care placement. The Department
also contacted the Tribe, who intervened in the case. The Department attempted to
4
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
find a relative or Native placement but could not by the time of the trial. The
Department also set up visitation for L.K. with all the children together three times
per week.
The Department repeatedly attempted to get L.K. to complete UAs and a
hair follicle test, but she consistently refused. The court also ordered the tests, but
she did not comply with the court order. When a social worker met with L.K. in
September 2018, she offered assistance with housing and again asked for drug
testing. The social worker testified that as to services, the Department
recommended “a chemical dependency evaluation, random UAs, domestic
violence perpetrator’s assessment, safe and stable housing, parenting education,
signed release of information, as well as psychological evaluation.” Id. at 303-04.
There is no indication that the social worker offered these services through
referrals or helping with applications and setting up appointments. The social
worker testified that L.K. stated she just wanted financial support and “on several
occasions” said she was unwilling to engage in any services but visitation. Id. at
312.
At the dependency trial, L.K. testified that everything in the most recent CPS
report was “a complete lie” and that she had no problem working with the
Department, but she wanted a fair report. Id. at 20-21. She testified, “I need a lot of
support for a lot of different things.” Id. at 42. She also testified,
5
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
I shouldn’t―I shouldn’t be here right now or I believe that the report
says things that make people believe a certain way and it’s
completely―completely wrong. So, I’m―I have no problem working
with the Department, but I want and I’ve asked to the Department to
please tell the truth and it’s not that difficult to say that I did not leave
my kids and that I was there, but it’s been difficult for the
Department. So, I am not doing classes. I’m not doing any UAs. I’m
not doing hair follicle. I’m strictly visiting my children and I am
standing up for myself. I’ve gone through nineteen [CPS
incidents]. . . . They’ve closed out and completed―completed me
before and they are involved―they are―they are involved in our
lives. . . . I’ve admitted, you know, my relapses and I’ve gotten help
immediately for those and that’s my belief and I just . . . I don’t want
to be lied about. I don’t want to agree to anything that is not true and
if it’s written correctly or told correctly I don’t think that there would
be that big of an issue or concern like there is with how it’s written
right now, the report.
Id. at 48-49. She also repeatedly assured the court that she no longer had a drug
problem.
The ICWA director for the Tribe filed a declaration as a qualified Indian
expert indicating that continued custody by the parents would “result in serious
emotional and physical damage” to the children. See Clerk’s Papers (CP)
(D.B.C.K.-S.) (sealed) at 153. She highlights that L.K. has attended visits but has
not engaged in UAs, has not completed hair follicle testing, and does not have
stable housing. She concludes that the Department has made “active efforts thus far
to provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the
breakup of the Indian family and these efforts have proved unsuccessful.” Id.
6
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
At the end of trial, the court found the children to be dependent and found
that “active efforts were made to avoid removal, as set out in testimony and
[d]eclaration of Qualified Indian Expert.” CP (L.R.C.K.-S.) (sealed) at 183. L.K.
did not challenge the active efforts by the Department at trial. The court also made
a finding that continued custody by the mother “is likely to result in serious
emotional or physical damage to the child.” Id. at 180.
L.K. appealed, alleging that the Department did not make active efforts to
prevent the breakup of an Indian family. The Court of Appeals declined to reach
the issue and, instead, sua sponte, ruled that L.K. invited the error by stating she
did not need services and thus was not entitled to review. L.K. appealed, and we
granted review. 12 Wn. App. 2d 1074 (2020).
The King County Department of Public Defense, Seattle University Center
for Indian Law & Policy, the University of Washington Children and Youth
Advocacy Clinic and Parent Advocacy Project, Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law
and Equality, Professor Matthew L.M. Fletcher, Northwest Justice Project, the
ACLU of Washington, and Washington Defender Association have filed an amici
brief in support of L.K.
7
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
ANALYSIS
I. The Invited Error Doctrine
“Under the doctrine of invited error, a party may not materially contribute to
an erroneous application of law at trial and then complain of it on appeal.” In re
Det. of Rushton, 190 Wn. App. 358, 372, 359 P.3d 935 (2015) (citing In re
Dependency of K.R., 128 Wn.2d 129, 147, 904 P.2d 1132 (1995)). To determine
whether the doctrine applies, the court considers “whether the defendant
affirmatively assented to the error, materially contributed to it, or benefited from
it.” In re Pers. Restraint of Coggin, 182 Wn.2d 115, 119, 340 P.3d 810 (2014)
(plurality opinion); see also In re Pers. Restraint of Thompson, 141 Wn.2d 712,
724, 10 P.3d 380 (2000) (requiring knowing and voluntary action for invited error).
For example, in State v. Henderson, the defendant requested particular jury
instructions, and the court gave them. 114 Wn.2d 867, 868-69, 792 P.2d 514, 515
(1990). On appeal, the defendant argued that the instructions were constitutionally
infirm. Id. at 869. However, this court held that because the defendant was the one
who proposed the instructions, he was precluded from appellate review under the
doctrine of invited error. Id. at 871.
The interplay of dependency law and the invited error doctrine is found in
K.R., 128 Wn.2d 129. In that case, defense counsel moved for the admission of
expert witness testimony on polygraphs without the required written stipulation,
8
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
and the motion was granted. Id. at 147. When it seemed the defense witness would
not be able to testify, defense counsel moved to exclude the State’s expert
testimony for lack of the required stipulation. Id. The court denied the motion but
allowed the defense expert to testify over the phone. Id. On appeal, the parents
argued it was error to admit the expert polygraph evidence without the stipulation.
Id. This court affirmed under the doctrine of invited error because defense counsel
materially contributed to the error. Id.
The Court of Appeals held that L.K.’s position in the trial court that she did
not need services and that the allegations against her were untrue precluded her
from arguing on appeal that the Department did not engage in the statutorily
required “active efforts” to provide her services (the specifics of which will be
discussed in detail in the next section). All three parties disagree, as do we.
The Department contends that although there could be a case in which the
invited error doctrine applies, the Department urges the court not to rely on it in
this case. DCYF [Department] Suppl. Br. at 17. The Department rightly indicates
that when the Department does not engage in active efforts, “a parent’s reluctance
to acknowledge parenting deficiencies should not block that person from raising
that issue on appeal.” Id. at 17-18.
The Tribe contends that the invited error doctrine is a doctrine, rarely used
outside of criminal law in Washington, that has not been used against a parent in
9
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
an active efforts appeal. Suppl. Br. of Intervenor N. Arapaho Tribe at 6. The Tribe
argues that L.K.’s refusing some services but taking advantage of others leads to a
legitimate disagreement for the appellate court as to what services were necessary
and whether the Department made active efforts to provide the services. Id. at 7. It
does not mean L.K. is “setting up an error,” and a refusal to engage in services
does not relieve the Department of its statutory requirement to provide active
efforts. Id.
L.K. contends that she did not “affirmatively contribute or consent to any
error.” Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 19. She claims that she did not refuse all services or
claim that no services would help her, and she emphasizes that she actively
participated in visitation. Id. She argues that she did not invite error by failing to
challenge the Department’s active efforts at the dependency trial, and that she did
not waive the right to active efforts by the Department when she denied needing
services and declined drug testing. Id. at 20.We agree with the parties that the
invited error doctrine does not apply in this case. The Court of Appeals improperly
applied the doctrine, and we reverse as to this issue. L.K. did not assent to the
alleged error, materially contribute to it, or benefit from it. To hold that a parent,
who does not believe she needs services, loses the right to challenge the
Department’s failure to provide services as required by statute would be contrary
to the goals of reunification and the very protections Native families receive under
10
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
ICWA and WICWA. Accordingly, the invited error doctrine does not apply to this
case.
II. ICWA and WICWA’s “Active Efforts” Requirement
The Court of Appeals did not address whether the Department satisfied the
“active efforts” requirement. We choose to address this important issue as this is a
dependency case that is an expedited matter and the parties have fully briefed the
issue.
Whether the Department has satisfied the “active efforts” requirement is a
mixed question of law and fact. In re Parental Rights to D.J.S., 12 Wn. App. 2d 1,
37, 456 P.3d 820 (2020) (citing Bill S. v. State, 436 P.3d 976, 981 (Alaska 2019)).
“We review the underlying findings for substantial evidence, but review de novo
whether those findings satisfy the requirements of ICWA.” Id.
“ICWA and WICWA were enacted to remedy the historical and persistent
state-sponsored destruction of Native families and communities.” In re
Dependency of Z.J.G., 196 Wn.2d 152, 157, 471 P.3d 853 (2020). Both ICWA and
WICWA require the Department engage in “active efforts . . . to prevent the
breakup of the Indian family.” This heightened standard differs from non-Native
dependency cases. Under 25 U.S.C. § 1912(d),
[a]ny party seeking to effect a foster care placement of, or
termination of parental rights to, an Indian child under State law shall
satisfy the court that active efforts have been made to provide
remedial services and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the
11
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
breakup of the Indian family and that these efforts have proved
unsuccessful.
(Emphasis added.) RCW 13.38.130(1) is almost identical and inserts “involuntary”
before “foster care placement” and “termination of parental rights.”
ICWA does not define “active efforts,” but 25 C.F.R. § 23.2 defines “active
efforts” as
affirmative, active, thorough, and timely efforts intended primarily to
maintain or reunite an Indian child with his or her family. Where an
agency is involved in the child-custody proceeding, active efforts
must involve assisting the parent or parents or Indian custodian
through the steps of a case plan and with accessing or developing the
resources necessary to satisfy the case plan. To the maximum extent
possible, active efforts should be provided in a manner consistent with
the prevailing social and cultural conditions and way of life of the
Indian child's Tribe and should be conducted in partnership with the
Indian child and the Indian child’s parents, extended family members,
Indian custodians, and Tribe. Active efforts are to be tailored to the
facts and circumstances of the case.
It then lists 11 examples of active efforts.
Under RCW 13.38.040(1)(a) “[a]ctive efforts” means “the department . . .
shall make timely and diligent efforts to provide or procure such services,
including engaging the parent . . . in reasonably available and culturally
appropriate preventive, remedial, or rehabilitative services. This shall include those
services offered by tribes and Indian organizations whenever possible.” Further,
In any dependency proceeding under chapter 13.34 RCW, in which
the petitioner is seeking the continued out-of-home placement of an
Indian child, the department or supervising agency must show to the
court that it has actively worked with the parent . . . in accordance
with existing court orders and the individual service plan to engage
12
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
them in remedial services and rehabilitative programs to prevent the
breakup of the family beyond simply providing referrals to such
services.
RCW 13.38.040(1)(a)(ii).
The Court of Appeals addressed the active efforts requirements in In re
Welfare of A.L.C., 8 Wn. App. 2d 864, 439 P.3d 694 (2019). In that case, the father
alleged that the Department did not make the required active efforts because he had
received only one referral from the Department and it occurred 46 days after the
dispositional order. Id. at 868. At a follow-up hearing, the father contended that he
had made personal progress, but he could not complete all services because of the
Department’s failures. Id. at 869-70. The Court of Appeals held that the
Department did not make active efforts because “several months had passed since
the court ordered services, and the Department had not provided access to or
referrals for the majority of the court-ordered services.” Id. at 875. Further, one
referral was too late for the father to complete the class, the Department knew of
the father’s housing issue but did not identify or assist with housing resources, and
the Department had not contributed to any of the services the father identified
himself. Id. Making no referrals and untimely referrals did not meet the active
efforts requirement. Id.
Further, in D.J.S., the Court of Appeals again found that the Department did
not engage in active efforts. 12 Wn. App. 2d at 37. In that case, the Court of
13
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
Appeals relied on Alaska precedent as Alaska “leads the nation in interpreting
ICWA.” Id. at 27. The court adopted rules from Bob S. v. State in which the Alaska
Supreme Court opined,
When determining whether [the Office of Children’s Services]
made active but unsuccessful efforts, courts may look to “the [S]tate’s
involvement in its entirety” and may consider “a parent’s
demonstrated lack of willingness to participate in treatment.” “Our
concern is not with whether the State’s efforts were ideal, but whether
they crossed the threshold between passive and active efforts.”
400 P.3d 99, 107 (Alaska 2017) (second alteration in original) (footnotes omitted)
(citing case).
Relying on these rules, and other out-of-state precedent, the Court of
Appeals lays out that the active efforts requirement requires more than just creating
a case plan and handing out referrals. The Department must affirmatively assist the
parent, and “when a parent fails to engage satisfactorily with a caseworker, the
caseworker still must try to engage the parent.” D.J.S., 12 Wn. App. 2d at 33
(emphasis added) (citing In re Matter of K.L., 2019 MT 256, ¶ 37, 397 Mont. 446,
451 P.3d 518).
In finding that the Department did not engage in active efforts, the Court of
Appeals examined the father’s claims that the Department did not assign culturally
competent help, did not provide a Native counselor, and did not actively seek
housing for the father, among other failings. D.J.S., 12 Wn. App. 2d at 35-37. The
court then details how the Department failed to affirmatively engage in services.
14
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
Id. at 36-37. For example, instead of having the father learn how to gain housing
himself, the court opined that the Department should have taken him to the
resource and helped him fill out applications. Id.
In In re Dependency of A.M., 106 Wn. App. 123, 136-37, 22 P.3d 828
(2001), the Court of Appeals held that the superior court could look to a parent’s
unwillingness to participate in services when determining if the Department had
provided “active efforts” in a termination trial. In that case the Department
provided the mother with services until she left drug treatment and subsequently
cut off all communication with her child, her tribe, and her social worker for two
years. Id. at 136. The court relied on the provision of initial services to show that
the Department had made active efforts and relied on the mother’s decision to
cease all communication for years as evidence to show that she made it impossible
for the Department to provide further services. Id. at 136-37.
It is important to note that both A.M. and D.J.S. concern termination trials
where services were court ordered. In the present case, prior to the dependency
trial the court had conducted only shelter care hearings. However, “[t]he court may
not order a parent to undergo examinations, evaluation, or services at the shelter
care hearing unless the parent agrees to the examination, evaluation, or service.”
RCW 13.34.065(4)(j) (emphasis added); see also CP (L.R.C.K.-S) (sealed) at 18
(ordering UAs and hair follicle tests at shelter care hearing), 21 (L.K. did not sign
15
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
the shelter care order). Where the parents in A.M. and D.J.S. were required to
engage in services, L.K. was not. There is a material difference between parents
refusing to engage in court-ordered services and the present case, where L.K.
refused to engage in a voluntary service. A parent’s declination to engage in
voluntary services prior to a finding of dependency cannot be used as evidence that
the Department has engaged in active efforts for the purposes of removing children
from their parent’s care.
We hold that the Department in the present case did not engage in active
efforts as is required under ICWA and WICWA. Here, the social worker testified
as to a case plan and assistance with housing and chemical dependency. But,
similar to D.J.S., there is no indication in the record that the social worker actively
made attempts to help L.K. access any services other than helping with one phone
call and a case plan. She did not drive L.K. to services or assist her with filling out
forms or applications. As L.K. observes in her supplemental briefing, “The social
worker appears to have inferred Ms. L.K. would refuse parenting and counseling
services and no testimony establishes if or when those [services] were offered.”
Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 13. The record establishes that L.K. did not want all of the
services the Department offered, but not that the Department made attempts to
engage in active efforts to ensure she received services, even if they were
unwanted. Further, the present case is distinguishable from A.M. Here, L.K. has not
16
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
ceased all communication and disappeared for years. Quite the opposite. She is
attending her visitation and asking for services she wants, while rejecting a service
she does not want and cannot be ordered to do at this time.
The Department contends that because it made active efforts in the prior
FVS cases and, then, in the current case L.K. rejected services, this court should
find active efforts overall. The flaw in this argument is that the Department admits
that it knows how to engage in active efforts because it did so in the FVS cases.
Nonetheless, the Tribe agrees with the Department, adding that the Department did
engage in active efforts to involve the Tribe in the proceedings. However, the tribal
representative does not indicate what active efforts the Department made. In her
declaration the tribal representative does not indicate that she had any
conversations with L.K. but, instead, simply relied on conversations with the social
worker and a review of the case file, which shows that only referrals were made.
Further, the tribal representative seems to have applied an incorrect standard as she
indicates that “parents have not completed recommendations even though
numerous referrals and attempts have been made” when the Department must do
more than make referrals. CP (D.B.C.K.-S.) (sealed) at 154. Although D.J.S. holds
it would be appropriate to look at the entirety of the Department’s interactions with
a parent, this does not relieve the Department from its obligation to provide timely
17
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
active efforts in the current case. Having provided active efforts in the past is not
sufficient to show timeliness in the present case.
The contrast between the FVS cases and the present dependency case
highlights the Department’s failure to provide L.K. with active efforts in the
present case because, unlike the FVS cases, in the context of this dependency it
does not appear the Department has done much more than create a service plan and
provide a housing referral. As the Court of Appeals has held multiple times, this is
not sufficient to show active efforts. In the FVS cases the Department provided
counseling, in-home preservation services, day care, and obtained housing for L.K.
Ultimately the court did not find the children dependent at a subsequent fact-
finding, so one can infer that the FVS case services did prevent the breakup of the
family at that time.
Accordingly, we hold that the Department did not engage in active efforts to
prevent the breakup of L.K’s family prior to removing her Native children.
III. The Remedy
Under 25 U.S.C. § 1920,
[w]here any petitioner in an Indian child custody proceeding
before a State court has improperly removed the child from custody of
the parent or Indian custodian or has improperly retained custody after
a visit or other temporary relinquishment of custody, the court shall
decline jurisdiction over such petition and shall forthwith return the
child to his parent or Indian custodian unless returning the child to his
parent or custodian would subject the child to a substantial and
immediate danger or threat of such danger.
18
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Emphasis added.) RCW 13.38.160 is almost identical and contains effectively the
same emphasized language. Consistent with these statutes, the Department argues
that the remedy when the Department improperly removes the children without
providing active efforts is to affirm the dependency order, but to vacate the
dispositional order’s out-of-home placement and to remand for a determination of
whether returning the children would subject the children to substantial and
immediate danger or threat of danger. We agree.
In A.L.C., the father agreed to an order of dependency and to out-of-home
placement until he could find housing. 8 Wn. App. 2d at 867. In response to the
Department’s report for a dependency review hearing, the father argued that the
Department had not made active efforts to reunify the family as was required under
ICWA and WICWA. Id. at 868. The trial court held that the Department had made
active efforts, but the Court of Appeals reversed. Id. at 870. As to the remedy, the
Court of Appeals opined,
Here, the Department has improperly maintained A.L.C.’s
placement in out-of-home care because the Department has failed to
provide active efforts to prevent the breakup of the Indian family. The
appropriate remedy is the remedy prescribed by statute. Thus, we
remand to the juvenile court to either immediately return A.L.C. or
make the statutorily required finding that returning A.L.C. will subject
her to substantial and immediate danger or threat of such danger.
Id. at 877.
19
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
Similarly, in the present case, the Department has improperly maintained the
out-of-home placement as it did not provide active efforts to prevent the breakup of
this family in the present case. Under the statute, the remedy is to remand to the
trial court to immediately return L.R.C.K.-S. and D.B.C.K.-S. to their mother if it
cannot make the statutorily required finding that returning them would subject
them to “a substantial and immediate danger or threat of such danger.”
Accordingly, we reverse the dispositional order’s foster care placement and
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the Court of Appeals and hold that L.K. did not “invite error”
when she asserted she did not need services. Further, we vacate the dispositional
order and the trial court’s ruling that the Department engaged in “active efforts” as
required by ICWA and WICWA. Accordingly, we remand to the trial court to
resolve the issue of the foster care placement, after consideration of whether
returning the children to their mother would cause a substantial risk of harm, and
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The finding of dependency is
unaffected.
20
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., and D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
WE CONCUR:
21
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
No. 98487-5
MONTOYA-LEWIS, J. (concurring)—As the majority states, the State is
required to engage in “active efforts” throughout a dependency involving the
Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) and the Washington Indian Child Welfare Act
(WICWA). 25 U.S.C. § 1912(d); RCW 13.38.130(1). As discussed extensively in
In re Dependency of Z.J.G., the ICWA and WICWA statutes exist to prevent the
breakup of the Indian family and to ensure the continued existence of tribes, tribal
communities, and tribal families. 196 Wn.2d 152, 471 P.3d 853 (2020). The
definition of “active efforts” is perhaps the most discussed area of ICWA by social
workers, lawyers, and judicial officers when considering how to practically apply
ICWA to specific familial situations. It is, however, perhaps the least discussed
area in the state and federal case law.
This, therefore, leads to enormous confusion in the field. Social workers and
their departments attempting to comply with active efforts often have guidance that
means they must do more than they would in a case that requires reasonable
1
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
efforts, but not how much more or in what ways. 1 Similarly, lawyers struggle with
how to prove that a social worker took “active efforts,” and judicial officers also
lack the kind of guidance that can be useful in specific cases.
25 C.F.R. § 23.2 defines “active efforts,” as the majority describes. There
are several aspects of this definition that can be used in this case to more
concretely illustrate what active efforts means in the field of ICWA. For one thing,
the definition makes clear that social workers must work proactively,
collaboratively, and culturally appropriately. 25 C.F.R. § 23.2 explains:
Active efforts are to be tailored to the facts and circumstances of the
case and may include, for example:
....
(2) Identifying appropriate services and helping the parents to
overcome barriers, including actively assisting the parents in
obtaining such services;
....
(8) Identifying community resources including housing,
financial, transportation, mental health, substance abuse, and peer
support services and actively assisting the Indian child’s parents or,
when appropriate, the child’s family, in utilizing and accessing those
resources.
1
The use of “active efforts” versus “reasonable efforts” has been called the “gold
standard” of social work in dependencies. NAT’L INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ASS’N, SETTING THE
RECORD STRAIGHT: THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT FACT SHEET (2015),
https://www.nicwa.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Setting-the-Record-Straight-ICWA-Fact-
Sheet.pdf [https://perma.cc/UB55-PKSM]. While all families and children deserve the active
efforts of the governmental departments that work with them, both budgetary and personnel
issues so far prevent this.
2
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
(Emphasis added.) In the dependency petition in this case, the Department of
Children, Youth, and Families (Department) cited L.K.’s housing instability as a
reason it recommended out-of-home placement. But there is no evidence that the
Department did any more than refer her to a few shelters. There is no evidence that
the Department identified appropriate services that would enable L.K. to secure
stable housing, recognized barriers that would prevent her from doing so,2 or
“actively assist[ed]” her in accessing or utilizing resources relating to housing. Id.
Instead of making “affirmative, active, thorough, and timely efforts intended
primarily to maintain or reunite the Indian child[ren] with [their] family,” id., the
Department merely referred L.K. to temporary housing after it determined that
housing instability was a reason to remove the children from her care. Given that
RCW 13.34.020 states that “[t]he right of a child to basic nurturing includes the
right to a safe, stable, and permanent home and a speedy resolution of any
proceeding under this chapter,” it appears that the legislature intended that the
Department actively engage in assisting a family in finding safe and stable housing
to preserve the family unit, regardless of whether the family is an Indian family.
2
See SUZANNE SKINNER, SEATTLE UNIV. SCH. OF LAW HOMELESS RIGHTS ADVOCACY
PROJECT, SHUT OUT: HOW BARRIERS OFTEN PREVENT MEANINGFUL ACCESS TO EMERGENCY
SHELTER 11-33 (Sara K. Rankin ed., 2016),
https://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=hrap
[https://perma.cc/98LP-NHKP] (discussing numerous barriers to accessing homeless shelters,
including insufficient beds, unsanitary and unsafe conditions, and a shortage of shelters for
families).
3
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
(Emphasis added.) The requirements of ICWA and WICWA, however, make it
crystal clear that it is the Department’s responsibility to do more than refer
someone to temporary housing when it decides that instability in housing is a
reason to break up the Indian family.
Prior cases have held that simply providing lists of referrals to a parent in an
ICWA proceeding does not meet the active efforts standard. See In re Parental
Rights to D.J.S., 12 Wn. App. 2d 1, 33, 456 P.3d 820 (2020) (“‘Active efforts’
require more than a referral to a service.” (citing In re Beers, 325 Mich. App. 653,
680, 926 N.W.2d 832 (2018))).3 In this case, the Department testified that it
repeatedly attempted to get L.K. to complete urinalyses (UAs), but she refused,
even after a court order that she do so. A careful reading of 25 C.F.R. § 23.2
shows that the burden of active efforts lies with the Department to engage the
parent in developing a case plan that the parent understands and can “access[] or
develop[] the resources necessary to satisfy the case plan.” Department social
workers should expect resistance from parents, but particularly from parents of
Native children, given the horrific and long-term attempts to destabilize the Indian
3
See also In re Welfare of A.L.C., 8 Wn. App. 2d 864, 874, 439 P.3d 694 (2019)
(Department failed to make active efforts when a dispositional order required the parent to
engage in several assessments but, several months later, the Department “had done little more
than” provide a referral for one of the assessments); State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families
Dep’t v. Yodell B., 2016-NMCA-029, ¶ 26, 367 P.3d 881 (2015) (Department failed to make
active efforts when it “pointed Father in the direction of service providers, but did little else to
assist Father in implementing the treatment plan”).
4
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
family. See, e.g., Z.J.G., 196 Wn.2d at 165. In addition to that resistance—which I
note is obvious in L.K.’s testimony that the Department was repeatedly lying about
her to the court—the vast majority of Native parents are offered services that have
little to no connection to “the prevailing social and cultural conditions and way of
life of the Indian child’s Tribe.” 25 C.F.R. § 23.2.
Moreover, requiring a parent to participate in assessments is not equivalent
to making active efforts to assist the parent in accessing services or developing the
resources necessary to keep the family together. Id. As the majority describes on
page 5, in 2018 the Department offered L.K. assistance with housing and requested
drug testing. The majority lists the services the Department requested as “‘a
chemical dependency evaluation, random UAs, domestic violence perpetrator’s
assessment, safe and stable housing, parenting education, signed release of
information, as well as psychological evaluation.’” Majority at 5 (quoting
Transcript of Proceedings (sealed) at 303-04). These “services” are more
accurately described as requirements. The Department sought L.K.’s participation
in determinations as to her drug and alcohol usage, her involvement in domestic
violence, and her ability to parent and to complete parenting education classes, as
well as her completion of a full psychological evaluation. Many of these
requirements mirror the requirements of hundreds of dependencies across
courthouses in this state.
5
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
I recognize that at an early stage of a dependency, knowing what
“appropriate services” might be takes time. But it is incorrect to describe
requirements parents must engage in in order to avoid dependency as services.
Services are intended to resolve the issues that gave rise to the dependency.
Evaluations, visitation observations, and other requirements are not equivalent to
services to remedy the parental deficiencies identified by the evaluations. Rather,
they are assessments of the parent to determine whether a family should remain
intact. Those of us who have worked in the dependency arena understand (or
should understand) that the standard evaluations like the ones ordered in this case
require the parent to undergo personal and invasive testing and observation. While
that may be unavoidable in order to determine services necessary to either keep a
family intact or reunify a family, I would argue that calling those intensive
observations services to the parent is disingenuous, at best.
As discussed by the majority, L.K. herself is not Native, though two of the
children involved in this dependency are. This makes this case an ICWA case, and
the active efforts required apply to everyone in this case, including the non-Native
mother. It may seem a remarkable statement to argue that L.K. should be given
services that take into account the tribal needs of the Indian family given that she is
non-Native. But the law here is clear:
6
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
To the maximum extent possible, active efforts should be provided in
a manner consistent with the prevailing social and cultural conditions
and way of life of the Indian child’s Tribe and should be conducted
in partnership with the Indian child and the Indian child’s parents . . .
and Tribe.
25 C.F.R. § 23.2 (emphasis added). The Code of Federal Regulations makes clear
that the focus in providing active efforts is on the maintenance of the Indian
family. When a non-Native parent is involved, she is nevertheless part of an
Indian family, and she is also entitled to active efforts, which is more than
providing a referral and giving her a series of requirements to complete.
Thus, active efforts involve the identification of the issues necessary to
remedy the parental deficiencies and maintain the Indian family, and it requires
that the Department be engaged, “with the Indian child and the Indian child’s
parents, extended family members, Indian custodians, and Tribe.” Id. (emphasis
added). There is little evidence in this record that any of the requirements
demanded of L.K. involved any of these individuals or organizations. (And, as the
majority states, none of the evaluations and other demands made of L.K. actually
were required because these are voluntary services at this stage of the case and her
refusal to participate does not violate a court order. RCW 13.34.065(4)(j); majority
at 15-16.) Further, L.K. asked for services she believed could avoid the breakup of
the family, and no such services were provided. When a struggling parent can
identify the help they need and the Department does not engage in an active effort
7
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
to assist in providing it, it is impossible to see how 25 C.F.R. § 23.2 can be
satisfied.
The requirements made of L.K. were numerous, invasive, and complex. It is
clear from the record that L.K. did not want to comply, except to participate in
visitation and to receive financial support. She disputed the contents of the
Department’s report and the social worker’s testimony at her dependency trial,
though she acknowledged a history of drug use, addiction, and relapses. The
qualified Indian expert at the trial agreed that the Department had made active
efforts and that those efforts “have proved unsuccessful.” Clerk’s Papers
(D.B.C.K.-S.) (sealed) at 154.
I agree that the “invited error” doctrine does not and should not apply to this
case. I would go beyond the majority’s holding, however, and conclude that the
resistance a parent may show to the numerous requirements and demands the
Department makes of parents at these early stages of dependencies should never be
found to be “invited error.” Even for parents who have been through prior
dependency cases, as L.K. had, parents at this stage of dependency proceedings are
most often confused, overwhelmed, and expected to follow a schedule of
appointments the most capable of us would find difficult.
I note one further issue that did not get raised during the case. 25 C.F.R.
23.2 requires states (as do ICWA and WICWA) to exhaust every effort to identify
8
In re Dependency of A.L.K., L.R.C.K.-S., D.B.C.K.-S., No. 98487-5
(Montoya-Lewis, J., concurring)
placements in accordance with placement requirements laid out in ICWA. The
majority states, the “The Department attempted to find a relative or Native
placement but could not by the time of the trial.” Majority at 4-5. The record is
silent as to the efforts the Department undertook to keep these children together
with their older sibling or with a relative or Native placement. 25 C.F.R. 23.2
again requires the Department to engage in active efforts to keep children together
by identifying extended family because it is “consistent with the need to ensure the
health, safety, and welfare of the child.” Although this issue is not raised in this
case, I have rarely seen all such efforts exhausted and find the separation of these
children from each other a further tragedy in this case and a continuation, not a
remedy, to the state-sponsored breakup of the Indian family. This issue, like many
others involving ICWA and WICWA, is a crisis that is causing trauma now to
families and tribes, and it should be treated as such.
9