|
Mont. Code § 41-3-423
Montana
Code
Title
41. Minors
Chapter
3. Child Abuse and Neglect
Part
4. Abuse or Neglect Proceedings
§ 41-3-423.
Reasonable efforts required to prevent removal of child or to return -- exemption -- findings -- permanency plan
(1) The department shall
make reasonable efforts to prevent the necessity of removal of a child
from the child's home and to reunify families that have been separated
by the state. Reasonable efforts include but are not limited to voluntary
protective services agreements, development of individual written case
plans specifying state efforts to reunify families, placement in the least
disruptive setting possible, provision of services pursuant to a case
plan, and periodic review of each case to ensure timely progress toward
reunification or permanent placement. In determining preservation or reunification
services to be provided and in making reasonable efforts at providing
preservation or reunification services, the child's health and safety
are of paramount concern.
(2)
Except in a proceeding subject to the federal Indian Child Welfare Act,
the department may, at any time during an abuse and neglect proceeding,
make a request for a determination that preservation or reunification
services need not be provided. If an indigent parent is not already represented
by counsel, the court shall immediately provide for the appointment or
assignment of counsel to represent the indigent parent in accordance with
the provisions of 41-3-425. A court may make a finding that the department
need not make reasonable efforts to provide preservation or reunification
services if the court finds that the parent has:
(a) subjected a child
to aggravated circumstances, including but not limited to abandonment,
torture, chronic abuse, or sexual abuse or chronic, severe neglect of
a child;
(b) committed, aided,
abetted, attempted, conspired, or solicited deliberate or mitigated deliberate
homicide of a child;
(c) committed aggravated
assault against a child;
(d) committed neglect
of a child that resulted in serious bodily injury or death;
or
(e) had parental rights
to the child's sibling or other child of the parent involuntarily terminated
and the circumstances related to the termination of parental rights are
relevant to the parent's ability to adequately care for the child at issue.
(3) Preservation or reunification
services are not required for a putative father, as defined in 42-2-201,
if the court makes a finding that the putative father has failed to do
any of the following:
(a) contribute to the
support of the child for an aggregate period of 1 year, although able
to do so;
(b) establish a substantial
relationship with the child. A substantial relationship is demonstrated
by:
(i) visiting the child
at least monthly when physically and financially able to do so; or
(ii)
having regular contact with the child or with the person or agency having
the care and custody of the child when physically and financially able
to do so; and
(iii) manifesting an ability
and willingness to assume legal and physical custody of the child if the
child was not in the physical custody of the other parent.
(c) register with the
putative father registry pursuant to Title 42, chapter 2, part 2, and
the person has not been:
(i) adjudicated in Montana
to be the father of the child for the purposes of child support; or
(ii) recorded on the child's
birth certificate as the child's father.
(4) A judicial finding
that preservation or reunification services are not necessary under this
section must be supported by clear and convincing evidence.
(5)
If the court finds that preservation or reunification services are not
necessary pursuant to subsection (2) or (3), a permanency hearing must
be held within 30 days of that determination and reasonable efforts must
be made to place the child in a timely manner in accordance with the permanency
plan and to complete whatever steps are necessary to finalize the permanent
placement of the child.
(6) If reasonable efforts
have been made to prevent removal of a child from the home or to return
a child to the child's home but continuation of the efforts is determined
by the court to be inconsistent with the permanency plan for the child,
the department shall make reasonable efforts to place the child in a timely
manner in accordance with the permanency plan and to complete whatever
steps are necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
Reasonable efforts to place a child permanently for adoption or to make
an alternative out-of-home permanent placement may be made concurrently
with reasonable efforts to return a child to the child's home. Concurrent
planning may be used.
(7) When determining whether
the department has made reasonable efforts to prevent the necessity of
removal of a child from the child's home or to reunify families
that have been separated by the state, the court shall review the services
provided by the agency including, if applicable, protective services provided
pursuant to 41-3-302.
History: En. 10-1311 by
Sec. 7, Ch. 328, L. 1974; amd. Sec. 21, Ch. 100, L. 1977; R.C.M. 1947,
10-1311(4), (5); amd. Sec. 4, Ch. 659, L. 1985; amd. Sec. 11, Ch. 609,
L. 1987; amd. Sec. 1, Ch. 696, L. 1991; amd. Sec. 1, Ch. 112, L. 1993;
amd. Sec. 1, Ch. 362, L. 1993; amd. Sec. 13, Ch. 458, L. 1995; amd. Sec.
3, Ch. 501, L. 1997; amd. Sec. 7, Ch. 516, L. 1997; amd. Sec. 9, Ch. 566,
L. 1999; amd. Sec. 5, Ch. 83, L. 2001; amd. Secs. 8, 18(3), Ch. 281, L.
2001; amd. Sec. 9, Ch. 311, L. 2001; Sec. 41-3-403, MCA 1999; redes. 41-3-423
by Sec. 17(2), Ch. 281, L. 2001; amd. Sec. 5, Ch. 555, L. 2003; amd. Sec.
31, Ch. 449, L. 2005.
|