In this § 1983 case, Dandy Ebmeier claims Jill Stump, Dennis O’Brien, and Ann Still-man, all former employees of the Nebraska Department of Social Services (“NDSS”), violated his federal due-process rights by disregarding a court-approved plan aimed at reuniting Mr. Ebmeier with his two children. The District Court 1 granted summary judgment for the defendants, holding that, given the circumstances, Ms. Stump, Ms. Stillman, and Mr. O’Brien acted in an objectively reasonable manner. 2 We affirm.
I.
In April, 1988, a state court in Buffalo County, Nebraska, found that Mr. Ebmeier had neglected and abused his two children. The court therefore placed the children with NDSS. Two months later, the court approved NDSS’s “therapeutic plan.” The plan’s long-term goal was reuniting Mr. Eb-meier and the children. The court noted, however, that “the extent of the problеms disclosed have not and will not, in the near future, allow reunification of the children into the family home although all reasonable efforts to accomplish that goal have beеn taken or are being planned for the family.”
The court’s skepticism was, in hindsight, well-founded. Although the reunification *1013 plan remained in effect, the defendants decided to begin the procеss of terminating Mr. Ebmeier’s parental rights. Two years after the court approved the plan, a petition for termination was filed, and the court terminated Mr. Ebmeier’s parental rights in November, 1990. 3
Mr. Ebmeier claims the defendants “disregarded” both the Buffalo County Court’s order approving the reunification plan and NDSS policy, 4 thereby violating his “constitutionally protected fundamental liberty interest in the care and custody of his children.” As the District Court put it, Mr. Ebmeier asserts a “clеarly established right requiring the defendants to adhere strictly to the court order that directed them to devise a reunification plan.”
II.
The District Court did not decide whether Mr. Ebmeier had a fedеral right requiring the defendants to adhere unswervingly to the court-approved case plаn. Rather, the Court held that even if Mr. Ebmeier did enjoy such a right, the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. The Court noted the precarious situations child-welfare workers confront and the fine linеs they must observe, and held that, given all the circumstances, Ms. Stillman’s, Mr. O’Brien’s, and Ms. Stump’s actions were objectively reasonable. We agree.
In qualified-immunity cases, however, “the threshold question ... is whether the plaintiff has alleged the violation of a constitutional right.”
Cole v. Bone,
It is established beyond peradventure that a state aсtor’s failure to observe a duty imposed by state law, standing alone, is not a sufficient foundation on which to erect a section 1983 claim. Although it is true that constitutional significance may аttach to certain interests created by state law, not every transgression of state law does double duty as a constitutional violation.
Martinez v. Colon,
III.
For the reasons given above, we affirm thе District Court’s order.
Notes
. The Hon. Warren K. Urbom, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
. The District Court dismissеd Mr. Ebmeier’s state-law claims without prejudice.
. The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed the Buffalо County Court's decision terminating Mr. Eb-meier’s parental rights.
In re Interest of S.B.E. and D.E.,
. The NDSS manual provides that “[a]lternatives tо reunification should be considered only when all reasonable efforts to reunify the family hаve been exhausted and return home appears unlikely.” Nebraska Dep’t of Sociаl Services Manual, Title 474, Neb.Admin.Code § 4-007.02(2).
. We are not saying that the defendants actually did disregard the court-approved plan or NDSS poliсy. On our reading, the text and tone of the court's order and of the relevant statements of NDSS policy are aspirational, not mandatory. For example, the manual calls on сaseworkers to reassess periodically the possibility of attaining the original goals of a case plan. Neb.Dep’t of Social Services Manual, Title 474, Neb.Admin.Code § 4-007.02.
.See also
Cole v. Bone,
