In this appeal from a termination of parental rights (TPR), father argues that the Windsor Family Court erred in terminating his parental rights without a finding that he is an unfit parent. We dеtermine that father failed to preserve his unfitness claim, and affirm the family court’s decision that termination is in the best interest of the children.
At the July 1999 TPR hearing, the fаmily court found the following pertinent facts. Father was living with, but not married to, mother when the children, C.H. and M.H., were born. He was not living with mother or the children in Septembеr 1996, when mother attempted to smother C.H. with a pillow. As a result of mother’s actions, the children were placed in custody with SRS on an emergency basis.
Father was adjudicated a sex offender at the age of thirteen. He received treatment but did not complete his therаpy program. As a part of the case plan for C.H. and M.H., it was recommended that father undergo a penile plethysmograph to determine if hе is still sexually aroused by children. However, this test never took place, due to circumstances beyond father’s control.
SRS arranged a schedule to allow father to visit the children. Father visited the children on two occasions in two-and-one-half years. Father testified that he canceled scheduled visits due to conflicts with his work schedule. Father’s parents visited the children on occasion. The SRS case plan required that father participаte in parenting skills classes, but father never contacted SRS about these classes nor attended such classes. Father testified that he bought a house and remodeled it to accommodate the children in the event they moved in with him, and that his parents would care for the children while he was at work.
The court concluded that the State had met its burden of proving, by clear and convincing еvidence, that (1) there had been a substantial change in material circumstances, and (2) termination is in the best interests of the chUdren under 33 VS.A. § 5540. SpecificaUy, the court found that: because father visited the chUdren only twice during a thirty-one month period, the chUdren had no significant relationship with him, but had bonded with them fоster parents and have a significant relationship with them; the chUdren have adjusted to the environment provided by their foster home; because of the lack of significant contact between the chUdren and their father and the positive interaction between C.H., M.H., and them foster parents, it was cоnsidered most unlikely that father would be able to resume parental duties within a reasonable period of time; and, finally, father had played no constructive role in the chüdren’s welfare, as they hardly know him and he had no significant part in their lives or development.
The court ordered the termination оf father and mother’s parental rights and transferred legal custody, guardianship, and residual parental rights to SRS. This appeal fofiowed.
Father argues оn appeal that the famüy court erred because his parental rights could not constitutionaUy or statutorily be terminated without a finding that he is an unfit pаrent. The State counters that father’s July 1997 stipulation to the initial disposition placing custody in SRS essentially constituted a finding of his unfitness and that the SRS was not required to show his unfitness at the July 1999 TPR hearing.
We decline to reach father’s contention because he waived his unfitness argument by failing to raise it at any point during the family court proceedings. “We have often stated that ‘[w]e will not reverse a lower court when a party’s failure to raise some matter below denied the court an opportunity to consider it.’” Spencer v. Killington, Ltd.,
We observe, however, that in In re J.H.,
Nevertheless, we still review the tеrmination of parental rights to “sa£eguard[]
Although father attempts to characterize the decision below as one that relies solely on the children’s bond with their “psychological parents,” see In re J. & J.W.,
Because of the lack of significant contact between C.H., M.H., and their father, and, because of the positive interaction of those children with their foster parents, it is considered most unlikely that [father] will be able to resume parental duties within a reasonable period of time.
Indeed, the court noted that § 5540(3) is “[p]erhaps the most significant statutory factor” to bе weighed in the termination of parental rights. See In re M.M.,
Father argues that findings that he visited the children only twice in two-and-one-half years and that he did not particiрate in parenting classes as required by the case plan are not sufficient to support the court’s conclusion that it is “most unlikely that [father] will be аble to resume parental duties within a reasonable period of time.”
The family court’s conclusions will be upheld if they are supported by the findings, see In re J.B.,
Affirmed.
Notes
Father married mother subsequent to' SRS obtaining custody of the children.
