[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *320 OPINION
Pеggy M. appeals from the judgment terminating her parental rights to her daughter, Elizabeth, claiming the juvenile court should have found their relationship beneficial to Elizabeth such that termination would be detrimentаl to her. Peggy also appeals the denial of her motion under *321
Welfare and Institutions Code section
Elizabeth was born in March 1993 with a positive toxicology screen for cocaine and amphetamine. She was made a dependent of the juvenile court and released to her mother four months later. Dependency jurisdiction was terminated in July 1994. In September, poliсe responded to a report of child neglect by a neighbor and discovered Elizabeth and her 10-year-old brother Bobby had been left alone by the mother for approximately 21 hours. The neighbоr reported the mother was on a binge using speed; she often went on such binges and usually returned wathin three days. Dependency petitions were filed on behalf of both children; Bobby was placed in а group home and Elizabeth was placed in a foster home.
The social worker reported the mother and father, who lived in Missouri, had been married but were divorced in 1982. Nevertheless, they had threе children, Ricky, born February 1978, Bobby, born April 1984, and Elizabeth. The mother lived in Missouri until 1992, when she came to California without her children. She has traveled to Missouri several times since then; and in September 1993, she brought Bobby to Cаlifornia with her. The mother admits she has a chronic drug problem; the father reportedly has an alcohol problem and becomes verbally abusive when drunk. The mother's father, siblings, and various extended fаmily members all live in Missouri. The mother and father agreed the father should have custody of both Bobby and Elizabeth.
In May 1995, the social worker reported the mother had completed a residential reсovery program in February and was enrolled in a drug and alcohol counseling program. She had started parenting classes and was employed. Her visits with Elizabeth were consistent and appropriate. By September, she was visiting Elizabeth three times a week, including family counseling with Elizabeth and Bobby at his group home. The mother had lost her job, however, and was dependent on her boyfriend for housing and support. Her counselor described the relationship with the boyfriend as "tentative" and reported that the mother "still operates in a crisis most of the time." The social worker expressed cаutious optimism, but denominated reunification as "premature."
During the next two months, the mother's behavior began going downhill. She stopped the family counseling sessions with the two siblings and canceled half of her visits with Elizabeth. She expressed concern about the stability of her relationship with her boyfriend, but refused to follow up on *322 referrals to shelters and a residential treatment center that would house both her and her children. She was discharged from her drug maintenance program for lack of attendance, and she admitted to some alcohol consumption. She called the social worker threе times in November, relating that she was having a hard time resisting the temptation to resume using drugs. In December, she succumbed to temptation and used cocaine several times. She was arrested for prostitution and incarcerated.
At the 12-month review on December 14, the court terminated reunification services and set both cases for a selection and implementation hearing. The father had not responded to calls from the social worker, but the mother's cousin and his wife, Dan and Vickie H., who lived in Missouri, expressed interest in providing a permanent home for both children. Orange County Sociаl Services Agency (SSA) initiated an investigation under the Interstate Compact for the Placement of Children to determine the suitability of their home. The court authorized Bobby to visit Dan and Vickie for the Christmas hоlidays, but not Elizabeth.
The selection and implementation hearing was held on April 16, 1996. The day before, the mother filed a petition requesting a hearing under section
The juvenile court proceeded to terminatе the mother and father's parental rights to Elizabeth, finding that none of the statutory exceptions to adoption applied. (§ 366.26, subd. (c)(1)(A)-(D).) Bobby, who was 13 at that time, asked that the parental rights of his mother and father not be terminated; he was continued in long-term foster care pending possible placement with Dan and Vickie.
Section
The petition under section
Here, the juvenile court was justified in denying the petition without a full hearing because there was no showing that a change in placement at this time would promote Elizabeth's best interests.3 Thе circumstances listed in support of changing Elizabeth's placement were the willingness and suitability of Dan and Vickie to be Elizabeth's adoptive parents; the likelihood of Bobby's permanent plaсement with them; their recent three-day visit to California to visit with both children; and their good relationship with and proximity to Elizabeth's extended biological family. But Elizabeth had met Dan and Vickie only once, while she had lived with her foster parents for almost half her life. She had a strong bond to them and they had indicated their desire to provide her a permanent home.
The social worker fairly reported the strengths of both the foster parents and Dan and Vickie as prospective adoptive parents for Elizabeth. She recommended neither in her report because neither had a completed adoptive home study. Pending the evaluation of both families, Elizabeth's best interests clearly were served by leaving her where she was happy and adjusted. This is not to suggest the foster parents will neсessarily be the preferred adoptive home, but at this juncture it would have been premature to change Elizabeth to an unfamiliar home. (In reStephanie M. (1994)
SSA and the minor argue the mother lacks standing to raise the issue of Elizabeth's placement because it does not directly impact her interest in custody and care of Elizabeth. In support of this proposition, they cite several recent decisions in which a parent was held to lack standing when he or she appealed from a judgment of termination raising only the issue of placement or sibling visitation. (In re Jasmine J. (1996)
None of the foregoing cases involved section
The type of parent-child relationship sufficient to derail the statutory preference for adoption is one in which "regular visits and contact have continued or developed а significant, positive, emotional attachment from child to parent." (In re Autumn H.
(1994)
The order denying the petition under section
Crosby, Acting P.J., and Rylaarsdam, J., concurred.
