OPINION
Appellant C.S.R. appeals by allowance a per curiam order of a Superior Court panel. The panel vacated the order of the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas and remanded the case with directions to enter a decree terminating appellant’s parental rights. On December 30, 1980, Catholic Social Services of the Diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Inc. (appellee) petitioned for involuntary termination of appellant’s parental rights to Baby Boy A. pursuant to Section 311 of the Adoption Act, Act of July 24, 1970, P.L. 620, 1 P.S. § 311. 1 Common Pleas concluded that *520 appellee had failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence 2 that appellant’s conduct justified a termination of his parental rights. Superior Court determined, upon reviewing the record, that Common Pleas erred in its decision and that appellee had met its burden of proof.
The record shows the undisputed fact that appellant made no effort to fulfill his parental responsibilities for a period of fifteen months, from June, 1979, until September, 1980. Therefore, as a matter of law, appellee has met its burden of proof on the issue of abandonment. It could not show more than appellant’s total failure to act. Because this inaction persisted for a period of time beyond the statutory six months, Common Pleas erred in determining that appellee had not shown abandonment. Furthermore, on this record there, is no evidence that the child’s interests are better served by continuing appellant’s parental rights. Accordingly, the order of Superior Court is affirmed.
Baby Boy A. (child) was born on March 31, 1979. At that time appellant, who is illiterate, was serving a sentence on a rape conviction. 3 Appellant learned of the child’s existence on June 28, 1979, when Kirk L. Reider, Director of Professional Services for appellee, visited him in prison. Mr. Reider visited appellant for the purpose of telling him of the birth of the child and requesting his consent to the termination of his parental rights. Mr. Reider informed appellant that the child’s mother had consented to having the child adopted.
Appellee agency had placed the child in a foster home on April 4, 1979. 4 Mr. Reider told appellant that the placement had been made, although he did not tell appellant where the child was. Appellant refused to agree to voluntary termination of his parental rights. Because he was unable at *521 that time to care for the child himself, appellant suggested to Mr. Reider that appellant’s mother might be able to care for the child for him.
From the time of Mr. Reider’s visit until his release on parole on September 24, 1980, a period of fifteen months, appellant did nothing to try to find out more about the child or to have any communication with the child. Although appellant’s illiteracy hindered his meaningful participation in his child’s life while he was in prison, we are unwilling to hold that the law expects nothing from him at all. We are mindful that the fact-finding function is reserved to Common Pleas; however, the record shows that appellant did nothing to even attempt to fulfill his parental responsibilities prior to his release on parole. 5 Even an illiterate prisoner can show some interest in his child’s well-being and we now hold the law of Pennsylvania requires him to do so if he wishes to retain an absolute right to parental status unaffected by the consideration of how ill-served the child’s interest is by that tie.
Our law, in permitting termination for abandonment over the belated objections of the parent, if termination is best for the child, recognizes the occasional failure of nature’s parent-child bond. It does so by a statute which provides:
Grounds for Involuntary Termination.—
The rights of a parent in regard to a child may be terminated after a petition filed pursuant to section 312, and a hearing held pursuant to section 313, on the ground that:
(1) The parent by conduct continuing for a period of at least six months either has evidenced a settled purpose of relinquishing parental claim to a child, or has refused or failed to perform parental duties; or
(2) The repeated and continued incapacity, abuse, neglect, or refusal of the parent has caused the child to be *522 without essential parental care, control, or subsistence necessary for his physical or mental well-being and the conditions and causes of the incapacity, abuse, neglect, or refusal cannot or will not be remedied by the parent[.]
1 P.S. § 311(1) and (2) (repealed). 6
As a further protection against government interference with the family relation and the values it serves, our constitutions require clear and convincing evidence that the statute’s elements exist before termination is possible.
Santosky v. Kramer,
[A] parent’s absence and/or failure to support due to incarceration is not conclusive on the issue of abandonment. Nevertheless, we are not willing to completely toll a parent’s responsibilities during his or her incarceration. Rather, we must inquire whether the parent has utilized those resources at his or her command while in prison in continuing a close relationship with the child. Where the *523 parent does not exercise reasonable firmness ‘in declining to yield to obstacles,’ his other rights may be forfeited.
Id.,
Common Pleas found that appellant’s efforts in late 1980 served to defeat appellee’s position and apparently excused the prior period of inaction on the basis of the obstacles facing appellant. However, “[i]t is well established that once the statutory period of abandonment has passed, mere renewal of interest and expression of desire for the return of a discarded child do not negate the abandonment.”
In re In the Matter of J.F., a Minor,
Superior Court, therefore, was correct in finding that appellant had failed to perform his parental duties. “Once we have determined that the statutory grounds for involuntary termination of parental rights have been proved, it is
*524
the child’s welfare that is paramount.”
Adoption of David C.,
Accordingly, the order of Superior Court, which vacated the order of the Court of Common Pleas and remanded with directions to the lower court to enter a decree terminating appellant’s parental rights, is affirmed.
JUDGMENT
ON CONSIDERATION WHEREOF, It is now hereby ordered and adjudged by this Court that the order of Superior Court, which vacated the order of the Court of Common Pleas and remanded with directions'to the lower court to enter a decree terminating appellant’s parental rights, is affirmed. '
Notes
. Repealed by Section 2 of the Act of October 15, 1980, P.L. 934. The same provisions are now found in Section 2511 of the Adoption Act, 23 Pa.C.S. § 2511, effective January 1, 1981.
.
Santosky v. Kramer,
. The child was conceived while appellant was on bail pending appeal of that conviction.
. The child was still in that home at the time of the hearing on the termination petition on July 23, 1981.
. We believe that if appellant acted to meet his parental duties during this fifteen month period, it was incumbent upon him to produce some evidence of those actions. He produced none.
. See note 1, supra. Now codified at 23 Pa.C.S. § 2511(a) and (b).
. In October, 1980, appellant traveled to Red Lion, Pennsylvania, in an attempt to locate the child's mother. He also tried unsuccessfully to contact her by telephone. At about the same time he asked the public defender, who was representing him, to contact the appellee agency. The attorney did so, but no further action was taken. Appellant remained on parole until February 5, 1981, when he was recommitted for parole violation. Between September, 1980, and February, 1981, he spent thirty days in prison on a drunk and disorderly charge.
