Filed 3/26/13 Jennifer G. v. Super Ct. CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
JENNIFER G., D063314
Petitioner, (San Diego County
Super. Ct. No. EJ3459C)
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN
DIEGO COUNTY,
Respondent;
SAN DIEGO COUNTY HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY,
Real Party in Interest.
PROCEEDINGS in mandate after referral to a Welfare and Institutions Code
section 366.261 hearing. Gary M. Bubis, Judge. Petition denied; request for stay denied.
Jennifer G. seeks writ review of a juvenile court order terminating reunification
services in the dependency case of her daughter, Charlotte G., and setting a section
1 Further statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
366.26 hearing. Jennifer contends the evidence is insufficient to support the finding she
received reasonable reunification services. We deny the petition.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Jennifer separated from Charlotte's presumed father, Jon G., in August 2010,
before Charlotte's birth in January 2011. The divorce was final before the
commencement of this case. Jennifer and Jon are the parents of twin boys, born in
October 2001, who are not subjects of this appeal. We refer to Charlotte and the twins
collectively as the children.
In September 2011, the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency
(the Agency) filed a dependency petition for eight-month-old Charlotte. The petition
alleged Jennifer hit one of the nine-year-old twins on the face, causing a hand-shaped
bruise, and also hit him on the neck. A medical expert believed Jennifer acted
intentionally. Jennifer initially denied hitting the twin, but later admitted she scratched
his face because he was "choking" or "smothering" Charlotte.
Charlotte was detained in a foster home.2 At the detention hearing, the court
ordered the Agency to provide services including crisis intervention, case management,
counseling and transportation services. The court advised Jennifer that her reunification
services might be limited to "no more than six months" because Charlotte was younger
than three years old (§ 361.5, subd. (a)(3)). In November 2011, the court entered a true
finding on the petition; ordered Charlotte removed from Jennifer's custody and placed in
2 The twins were detained in a separate foster home and lived apart from Charlotte
throughout this case.
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foster care; and ordered reunification services. The court again advised Jennifer that she
would "have no more than six months" to reunify with Charlotte (Id., subd. (a)(3)).
Jennifer's reunification plan included individual therapy, a parenting class designed for
perpetrators of physical abuse, the Incredible Families program and parenting education
classes.
Jennifer made limited progress in therapy and parenting education, causing the
Agency to question whether she "had the cognitive ability to . . . understand . . . the
concepts that were being presented." The Agency consulted with Jennifer's therapist and,
in January 2012, the therapist recommended a psychological evaluation. The evaluation,
which took place in April, revealed that Jennifer suffered from a learning disorder and
possibly a phonological disorder. Her intellectual functioning was in the borderline
range, and her academic performance was in the first to eighth grade range. The
evaluator determined Jennifer needed "extensive interventions" to assist with chores
"such as managing finances, filling out paperwork correctly, and juggling multiple tasks."
The evaluator concluded that "treatment should be modified to be more concrete,
psychoeducational goals should be clearly stated in simple terms, and a focus should be
on connecting [Jennifer] to various community resources in order for her to gain the extra
support she will need." The evaluator stated that "it will take [Jennifer] longer than most
to achieve treatment goals," and noted "it is not unusual for someone with the functioning
level of [Jennifer] to take [two]-[three] times as long as other adults." In addition to
therapy, Jennifer needed parenting classes, although she had already completed the
Incredible Families program with perfect attendance.
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After receiving the psychological evaluation, the Agency asked the Regional
Center to interview Jennifer. Jennifer said she would follow through with the interview,
declined the Agency's offer of assistance and said a friend was helping her. Jennifer did
not follow through, and the social worker began the Regional Center application process
for her.
In late April 2012, Jennifer informed the Agency she was moving to Fresno. On
May 1, Jennifer stopped attending therapy. By the time of the six-month review hearing
on May 2, she had decided not to move to Fresno. At the hearing, the court found
Jennifer had been provided reasonable services and continued her services. On May 29,
Jennifer resumed therapy. By July 16, she had completed three Incredible Families
"booster" sessions. The Agency recommended Jennifer receive home visits from a
parenting educator, but the friend with whom Jennifer was living would not allow it.
On July 25, the twins began a 60-day trial visit with Jon. That day, Jennifer and
Jon announced "they wished to co-parent the children." Although Jon had previously
showed little interest in Charlotte, he now assumed "a parental leadership role" and gave
Jennifer parenting advice. Jennifer responded positively to the advice. Her therapist
believed Jennifer would be unsuccessful in "living independently and solely trying to
manage a household, working, and caring for her children."
The Agency arranged for in-home services for Jon through New Alternatives, with
the idea that the services would also benefit Jennifer, although she was not living in the
home. Therapeutic Behavioral Services from New Alternatives included family therapy,
behavioral coaching and parenting education. After the in-home services began, New
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Alternatives notified the Agency that Jennifer was consistently present for sessions and
Jon was not. Jennifer made little progress. She had a limited ability to contain the twins'
behavior, which included throwing things and verbally threatening Charlotte.
By October 19, 2012, Jennifer had not met with Regional Center personnel to
determine her eligibility for Regional Center services. Jennifer and Jon told the social
worker they did not need the Agency's services and viewed the Agency's involvement as
intrusive and inappropriate. On October 22, Jennifer's therapist recommended in-home
services in lieu of therapy. On October 30, the Agency recommended Jennifer's
reunification services be extended for six months, to the 18-month date, and that she be
permitted to move into Jon's home.
In late November 2012, the social worker asked Jennifer about the status of her
Regional Center application. Jennifer said she was unaware of the status and a New
Alternatives behavioral coach was assisting her with the application. On December 3, the
social worker contacted the Regional Center and learned Jennifer had not been assigned
an intake social worker. On December 4, the Agency determined that Charlotte could not
be safely returned to Jennifer's care and recommended that Jennifer's reunification
services be terminated.
On December 6, 2012, a New Alternatives representative informed the Agency
that New Alternatives was terminating in-home services because the goal of obviating a
higher level of care for one of the twins had been achieved. The representative said that
when a behavioral coach asked Jennifer how things were going in the home, Jennifer said
"fine," although one of the twins had been suspended from school for hitting the other
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twin. New Alternatives had offered Jennifer and Jon further services, but they had
declined. On December 10, the Regional Center informed the Agency that Jennifer did
not qualify for Regional Center services.
The 12-month review hearing took place on January 15, 2013. Social worker
Kimberly Lawhead, who had been assigned to the case on January 1, testified that she
visited Jennifer's home on January 4. The twins were there and were yelling, swearing
and ignoring Jennifer's request that they stop swearing. Jennifer said Jon planned to
move. Jon confirmed this, and said he was not sure if the boys would move with him.
Jennifer had completed her services and said she did not need further services. Lawhead
knew of no additional services that would help Jennifer address the protective issues and
make it safe for Charlotte to be returned to her care in the next six months.
Jennifer testified that if Charlotte were returned to her care, they would live with
Jon and the twins. She believed it would be safe for Charlotte to live in the same home as
the twins, but was willing to live apart from the twins if the Agency believed the twins
presented a danger.
The court found Jennifer had participated in services and made some progress. In
finding that reasonable services had been provided, the court stated "all reasonable
alternatives were explored" with regard to Jennifer's "information processing." The court
concluded that returning two-year-old Charlotte to Jennifer's custody would create a
substantial risk of detriment to Charlotte's physical and emotional well-being and there
was not a substantial probability she would be returned by the 18-month date. The court
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continued Charlotte's foster care placement, terminated Jennifer's services, and set a
section 366.26 hearing.
Jennifer petitioned for review of the court's orders. (§ 366.26, subd. (l); Cal. Rules
of Court, rule 8.452.) This court issued an order to show cause, the Agency responded,
and the parties waived oral argument.
DISCUSSION
Jennifer contends the evidence is insufficient to support the finding she received
reasonable reunification services. She argues that aside from the Regional Center
referral, the Agency made no attempt to help her with her developmental disabilities,
developmental delays and special needs.3 Jennifer complains the Agency did not refer
her to an anger management program or related resource, did not provide unsupervised
visitation and did not include Charlotte in the in-home services provided for the twins.
"Reunification services should be tailored to the particular needs of the family.
[Citation.] The juvenile court and child welfare agency must accommodate the special
needs of disabled . . . parents." (Tracy J. v. Superior Court (2012) 202 Cal.App.4th 1415,
1425-1426.) " 'The standard is not whether the services provided were the best that might
be provided in an ideal world, but whether the services were reasonable under the
3 Jennifer did not appeal the reunification plan ordered at the dispositional hearing
or the reasonable services finding made at the six-month review hearing. She may not
now challenge those matters. (Steve J. v. Superior Court (1995) 35 Cal.App.4th 798,
811.) We limit our review to the period following the six-month review hearing and do
not address Jennifer's complaint that the Agency "set [her] up for failure" by sending her
a written questionnaire before that hearing. We do note, however, that Jennifer received
services for more than a year during the pendency of this case, and was also offered
services in connection with an earlier child abuse referral.
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circumstances.' " (Katie V. v. Superior Court (2005) 130 Cal.App.4th 586, 598-599,
quoting In re Misako R. (1991) 2 Cal.App.4th 538, 547.) "The 'adequacy of reunification
plans and the reasonableness of the [Agency's] efforts are judged according to the
circumstances of each case.' [Citation.] To support a finding reasonable services were
offered or provided, 'the record should show that the supervising agency identified the
problems leading to the loss of custody, offered services designed to remedy those
problems, maintained reasonable contact with the parents during the course of the service
plan, and made reasonable efforts to assist the parents in areas where compliance proved
difficult . . . .' " (Tracy J., at p. 1426.) In determining "whether substantial evidence
supports the trial court's [reasonable services] finding, [we review] the evidence in a light
most favorable to the prevailing party[,] and [indulge] in all legitimate and reasonable
inferences to uphold the court's ruling." (Katie V., at p. 598.)
Jennifer received services including individual therapy, a psychological
evaluation, more than one parenting program and parenting instruction during supervised
visitation. She also participated in services provided to Jon and the twins, including
family therapy and behavioral coaching. She refused further services. Jennifer was
ineligible for Regional Center services, and social worker Lawhead knew of no additional
services that would help Jennifer. Considering the danger the twins posed to Charlotte,
and Jennifer's inability to control their behavior, it was reasonable not to include
Charlotte in the New Alternatives program with the twins. Furthermore, during
supervised visits, Jennifer needed prompting to ensure Charlotte's safety. Before the six-
month review hearing, the Agency intended to refer Jennifer to an anger management
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class, but when her cognitive deficits were recognized, the Agency concluded that class
would not benefit her. Substantial evidence supports the court's finding Jennifer received
reasonable services.4
DISPOSITION
The petition is denied. The request for stay is denied.
MCDONALD, J.
WE CONCUR:
NARES, Acting P. J.
MCINTYRE, J.
4 Jennifer also requests we conduct "an independent review of the record." The
authority on which she relies is inapposite. (In re George T. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 620, 634.)
Jennifer additionally contends the 12-month review order caused harm by separating
Charlotte from the twins. Jennifer did not raise this issue in the juvenile court and we
need not consider it now.
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