IN RE Z.W.; M.W., APPELLANT.
No. 18-FS-513
District of Columbia Court of Appeals
Argued January 23, 2019 Decided August 29, 2019
Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (NEG-390-16) (Hon. Julie Breslow, Magistrate Judge) (Hon. Steven Wellner, Associate Judge)
Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.
Rosemarie Ricchiuto for appellant M.W.
Pamela Soncini, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor General, and Caroline S. Van Zile, Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellee the District of Columbia.
Margie M. Clark, guardian ad litem, for appellee Z.W.
Before GLICKMAN and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and FERREN, Senior Judge.
Opinion of the court by Senior Judge FERREN.
Concurring opinion by Senior Judge FERREN, with whom Associate Judge GLICKMAN joins, at page 59.
Concurring opinion by Associate Judge EASTERLY at page
FERREN, Senior Judge: Appellant M.W., the biological father of minor child Z.W., appeals the trial court‘s change of Z.W.‘s permanency goal from reunification with appellant to adoption.1 Because we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s ruling that a preponderance of the evidence supports the goal change, we affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
A. Removal from the Home
Z.W. was born on February 5, 2015, and is the biological son of mother M.G. and father M.W. On October 7, 2016, the District of Columbia Child and Family Services Agency (“CFSA” or the “agency“) received a call on its child abuse and neglect hotline from the Metropolitan Police Department, as the police had found Z.W., who was 20 months old at the time, alone at M.G.‘s home. M.G. was charged with second-degree child cruelty, and was issued a stay-away order prohibiting her from having contact with Z.W. CFSA placed Z.W. in M.W.‘s care, informed him of the stay-away order, and developed a safety plan with M.W. for Z.W.‘s care. On October 25, 2016, agency staff again discovered Z.W. alone in M.G.‘s home, where M.W. had left him. CFSA removed Z.W. from the home that day, placed him in shelter care, and filed a petition to open a neglect matter in Superior Court.
B. The Neglect Matter
The case came before Magistrate Judge Julie Breslow, who held an initial hearing in October 2016, followed by a disposition hearing in January 2017, at which she accepted M.W.‘s stipulation that Z.W. was a neglected child. Two quarterly disposition review hearings followed in May 2017 and September 2017, and, finally, a permanency hearing occurred in December 2017.2 During this nearly fourteen-month
Because there is some dispute regarding what steps the court ordered M.W. to take during this period, as well as when it ordered him to take these steps and how much time it gave him to comply, the specifics of each court order are laid out below.
1. October 28, 2016 Initial Hearing
At the initial hearing on October 28, 2016, both M.W. and his counsel were present, and Magistrate Judge Breslow made findings that it was contrary to Z.W.‘s welfare to be in M.W.‘s care because M.W. had left the child with M.G., despite knowing of M.G.‘s stay-away order, criminal charge, and substance abuse. The court‘s order established the following requirements for M.W. in the sections pertaining to “visitation” and “services“:
- Visitation between M.W. and Z.W.
- Visitation supervised by CFSA or its designee
- Services
- Parenting Skills
- Domestic Violence (“DV“) Assessment3
2. January 13, 2017 Disposition Hearing
At the disposition hearing on January 13, 2017, M.W. and his counsel again were present. In the order issued at the disposition hearing, the court took notice of a neglect stipulation that M.W. had signed on December 16, 2016, stating that the stipulation provided facts sufficient for the court to adjudicate Z.W. neglected. The stipulation noted M.G.‘s criminal case and the stay-away order; acknowledged the incident in which M.W. left Z.W. with M.G.; and agreed that Z.W. was a neglected child under
The disposition hearing order contains a notation indicating that the court took notice of a predisposition report from CFSA and of a case plan prepared by CFSA. While the predisposition report is included in the record on appeal, a written case plan is not. It is unclear why the plan is missing, but a later exchange between the court and the attorneys at the May 16, 2017 disposition review hearing confirmed that CFSA social worker Michaela Henderson had prepared a written case plan, which did not appear in the court‘s
The January 2017 disposition hearing order set out, at the top of the first page, the dates for the upcoming disposition review hearings (May 16, 2017 and September 15, 2017), as well as the date for the permanency hearing (December 4, 2017). The order also included the magistrate judge‘s findings, based upon the stipulation of neglect, that it was still contrary to Z.W.‘s welfare to be in M.W.‘s care. She also made findings that CFSA had made reasonable efforts to return Z.W. safely to his biological family‘s home, stating that the agency had facilitated visitation and that the social worker was making efforts to improve agency communication with the parents. M.W. objected to this communication finding, but the basis for his objection is not explained. The magistrate judge then made a notation in the “reasonable efforts” section of the order that the social worker had referred M.W. to “parenting, the Father Hood [sic] Initiative and the Man 2 Man intervention group,”4 and that the social worker had begun the DV assessment process. Finally, the magistrate judge set the permanency goal for Z.W. as “reunification” with a biological parent. Her order set out the following requirements for M.W. in its sections pertaining to “visitation,” “orders,” and “services“:
- Visitation between M.W. and Z.W.
- Visitation supervised by CFSA or its designee
- Orders5
- Cooperate with CFSA to ensure Z.W. receives audiology screening and Strong Start referral (M.W. objected to this order)
- No physical discipline
- Services
- Drug
Testing6 - Same-day spot-test
- If negative, future testing suspended
- If positive, weekly thereafter
- Same-day spot-test
- DV Assessment
- Drug
3. May 16, 2017 Disposition Review Hearing
At the May 16, 2017 disposition review hearing, M.W. was not present (for reasons that do not appear in the record), but his counsel was. The order from the hearing indicates that the agency filed a disposition report with the court in advance of the hearing, but did not file a case plan. It is unclear why a case plan was not filed, but, as noted earlier, there was an exchange at this hearing which indicated that the social worker had prepared a written plan and submitted it to the court, but that, due to a technical glitch, that case plan did not appear in the court file. The hearing order also indicated, at the top of the first page, that the next disposition review hearing was scheduled for September 15, 2017, and that a permanency hearing was scheduled for December 4, 2017.
In her order, the magistrate judge made findings that the agency had thus far made “reasonable efforts” to reunify Z.W. with M.W., based on the agency‘s monitoring and interventions to support Z.W.‘s safety, placement, and well-being, (including his medical and developmental needs and services). She noted the agency‘s offering of supervised visits to the parents; its efforts to help M.W.‘s sister obtain emergency licensure as a foster parent; and its efforts to assess and refer M.W. to various services and programs. M.W. objected to these reasonable efforts findings. His counsel argued that she did not know to which anger management class M.W. had been referred, and that there had been a delay in CFSA‘s referral of M.W. to a parenting class. M.W., however, was already attending the parenting class at that point (and, as discussed below, see infra section III.C, that class included an anger management component that satisfied the court‘s order).
The magistrate judge also made findings that M.W. had made “progress” toward the permanency goal of reunification, based on his attendance at a parenting class and his completion of a DV assessment, but she noted that M.W. must complete any service recommended as a result of the DV assessment, as well as the parenting class and an anger management program.
The court‘s order set out the following requirements for M.W.:
- Visitation between M.W. and Z.W.
- Visitation supervised by CFSA or its designee
- Visitation must be separate from mother and not at her home
- Orders
- Anger management course
- Any service recommended by the DV assessment, including Man 2 Man or other approved program
- Spot testing for drugs (available at the courthouse) and continued testing until six consecutive negative tests provided
- Regular visitation
-
- Engagement with speech therapist and participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy
- Services
- Drug Testing
-
Test prior to May 19, 2017 - Weekly testing thereafter until six consecutive tests provided
-
- Drug Testing
4. September 15, 2017 Disposition Review Hearing
M.W. and his counsel were present at the September 15, 2017 hearing. Like the disposition hearing review order from the May 2017 hearing, the order from the September 2017 hearing indicates that an agency disposition report was filed, but a case plan was not. The order also noted that “CFSA filed a written notice of a request to change the permanency goal to ADOPTION and an evidentiary permanency hearing has been scheduled.” And, like the orders from the two prior quarterly hearings, the September 2017 order noted, at the top of the first page, that that permanency hearing was scheduled for December 4, 2017.
The magistrate judge‘s order included findings that the agency had engaged in “reasonable efforts,” through its social workers, toward reunification based on their visits with Z.W. to monitor his well-being and his transition to B.W.‘s foster care home; their efforts to attend to Z.W.‘s medical and developmental needs, including speech and language therapy; their enrollment of Z.W. in day care; and their efforts to assess and refer M.W. to other services and programs. M.W. objected to the reasonable efforts findings, although the basis for his objection was not explained.
The magistrate judge also made findings that M.W. himself had not made “progress” toward reunification, based on his failure to complete the recommended DV program (Man 2 Man), visit Z.W. consistently, or drug test as ordered. M.W. likewise objected to these findings, asserting that that he had a job and housing, had completed a parenting course, was visiting Z.W. regularly, and was not ordered to complete the Man 2 Man DV course until that day. Yet, M.W. had indeed been ordered to complete Man 2 Man prior to that day. At the January 2017 hearing, the magistrate judge had ordered M.W. to undergo a DV assessment and specifically mentioned the agency‘s referral of M.W. to Man 2 Man. And, at the May 2017 hearing, the magistrate judge had ordered M.W. to follow the recommendations of the DV assessment, explicitly referring to Man 2 Man. In fact, M.W.‘s counsel represented at the May 2017 hearing that M.W. had begun attending the Man 2 Man course and enjoyed it.
In sum, in the September 2017 hearing order, the magistrate judge required:
- Visitation
-
- Visitation supervised by CFSA or its designee
- Visitation must be separate from mother and not at her home
- Orders
- Drug testing (weekly)
- APRA [Addiction Prevention and Recovery Administration] assessment and any recommended drug treatment
- Completion of Man 2 Man program
- Consistent visitation
- Participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy
- Services
- DV counseling: Man 2 Man
- Drug testing
- Spot test on September 20, 2017
- Weekly testing thereafter
- APRA assessment and compliance with recommendations
C. The Permanency Goal Change
1. December 4, 2017 Permanency Hearing
On August 31, 2017, before the September disposition review hearing, the government had filed a notice of its intent to seek a change in Z.W.‘s permanency goal from reunification to adoption. Three months later, on December 4, 2017, Magistrate Judge Breslow held a permanency hearing to determine whether a goal change was appropriate, pursuant to Ta.L.7
At the hearing, the magistrate judge took judicial notice of several documents in the record, including the hearing orders that she had issued at the quarterly hearings, the parents’ stipulations of neglect, M.W.‘s drug test results, and the parties’ pretrial stipulation of facts. She then heard testimony for the government from the three CFSA social workers who had been on the case: Henderson, Sherman, and Byrom.
The social workers testified that they had engaged in frequent, ongoing efforts to meet and communicate with M.W., including efforts to engage him in creating and cooperating on the plan for reunification with Z.W. They stressed the importance of his visits with Z.W. and his participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy, and they informed and reminded M.W. of the services he was required to engage in as part of his efforts toward reunification. The social workers further testified that, despite their efforts, M.W. was often inconsistent and unreliable in his contact with the agency, would fail to attend meetings, did not complete all of the services he was ordered to complete (most notably, drug treatment and the DV course), was inconsistent in his visitation with Z.W., and was unengaged in Z.W.‘s speech therapy.
Meanwhile, M.W. had arrived one hour and forty minutes late to the permanency hearing, appearing disheveled. He testified on his own behalf, but his speech was slurred, he was difficult to understand, and he admitted using drugs; he also tested positive for cocaine and marijuana that day.
In her closing argument at the hearing, M.W.‘s counsel asserted that the agency had not proffered a formal case plan signed by M.W., and that no formal case planning meetings had occurred since February 2017. Counsel also argued that the agency had failed to make the required “reasonable efforts,” relying on the case planning issues she had cited and additionally asserting that the agency did not maintain sufficient contact with M.W., did not refer him to a DV program other than Man 2 Man, and did not sufficiently demonstrate that his substance abuse impacted his ability to parent Z.W. Finally, counsel argued that, for his part, M.W. had made “adequate progress” toward reunification because he had completed certain plan requirements and had maintained employment and housing. She further asserted that, under this court‘s case law, “adequate progress” means “minimal progress.”
2. The Magistrate Judge‘s Order
On December 13, 2017, Magistrate Judge Breslow issued findings of fact and conclusions of law. She made explicit credibility determinations, fully crediting the testimony of the three social workers: she found Henderson to be “a candid and credible witness,” as well as “a very informative witness“; she found Sherman to be “a credible and informative witness,” whose “testimony was especially credible because of how consistent it was with [] Henderson‘s testimony“; and she “fully credit[ed] [] Byrom‘s testimony.” In contrast, the magistrate judge accorded “little weight” to M.W.‘s testimony, particularly given his “impairment” during the hearing,
1. With respect to the agency‘s responsibility to devise a reasonable plan for achieving reunification, Magistrate Judge Breslow made detailed findings that the agency social workers had engaged in extensive efforts to work with the parents to create a plan, but that the parents did not meaningfully engage.9 She summarized:
[T]hree CFSA social workers have made significant efforts to schedule case planning meetings with the parents; all three were unsuccessful. Their testimony was remarkabl[y] similar and corroborated each other‘s testimony. Each social worker contacted the parents many times, by many different means, and all tried to get the parents to focus on case planning and making a plan for completing court-ordered services. All three social workers attempted to do this, and each time, each parent failed to engage in case planning with the social workers.
The magistrate judge noted that at least one social worker had admitted that she had failed to comprehensively document her communications with Z.W.‘s parents, and the magistrate judge also appeared to acknowledge, at least implicitly, that the court‘s case file did not include a written, signed case plan prepared by the agency.10 In spite of these circumstances, however, Magistrate Judge Breslow fully credited
for achieving reunification.” Thus, she concluded, “by a preponderance of the evidence, that the government provided the parents with an appropriate and reasonable plan for achieving the goal of reunification.”
2. The magistrate judge also made detailed findings that the CFSA social workers had made the required reasonable efforts to support the parents achieving reunification with Z.W.11 In short:
The testimony of the three social workers corroborated each other, and they each testified convincingly that they made repeated efforts to meet with and assist the parents with the services ordered by the court and required for reunification. Each social worker spoke with the parents by telephone and exchanged many text messages with the
parents, and each repeatedly told the parents about the importance of engaging in services, offered the parents help in accessing services, and tried, unsuccessfully, to schedule case planning meetings with the parents. Each social worker stressed to the parents the importance of visiting the child regularly.
She then concluded that “CFSA‘s efforts, through the actions of the three social workers, are more than sufficient for the [c]ourt to conclude, by a preponderance of the evidence, that CFSA expended reasonable efforts to reunify the family and help the parents achieve the goal of reunification.”
3. As to M.W.‘s progress toward meeting the requirements of the plan, the magistrate judge made findings, based on the social workers’ testimony, that he had failed to make adequate progress.12 She
“[M.W.] did complete parenting classes and a [DV] assessment but did not complete the Man 2 Man . . . . He did complete the APRA assessment . . . [and] started treatment at Harbor Lights,” but “[h]e tested positive for cocaine and marijuana on the day of the evidentiary hearing and failed to visit [Z.W.] regularly.” Magistrate Judge Breslow then found, “by a preponderance of the evidence, that [M.W.] failed to make adequate progress toward satisfying the requirements of the plan to achieve the goal of reunification.”
4. Finally, the magistrate judge made factual findings that CFSA had attempted to obtain information from the parents regarding biological relatives who could serve as kinship placements for Z.W. and to pursue these placements, (. . . continued) visit[ed] [Z.W.] consistently,” or “completed the Man 2 Man program.” As noted above, Sherman made efforts, but the magistrate judge found that, “[l]ike [] Henderson, [] Sherman had no success getting [M.W.] to do the things necessary for reunification.” Similarly, Byrom noted “the parents’ lack of progress toward reunification”: she “credited [M.W.] for completing parenting class, the [DV] assessment, and the APRA assessment,” but she “noted that [M.W.] failed to complete Man 2 Man, the service recommended in the [DV] assessment, had not provided proof of engagement in drug treatment services, had recently tested positive for cocaine and marijuana, and had not visited [Z.W.] consistently.” These findings were consistent with the magistrate judge’s comments at the permanency hearing, in which she noted that M.W. had made some efforts resulting in some progress, but characterized his situation as “too little, too late” – particularly given his continuing drug problem, including his impaired presentation at the hearing.
but that these efforts were ultimately unsuccessful.13 She therefore concluded that a preponderance of the evidence established “that the District [] has adequately explored other vehicles for avoiding the pursuit of termination of parental rights by licensing kinship care providers for [Z.W.].”
Having concluded that all four Ta.L. criteria for a permanency goal change14 had been satisfied, Magistrate Judge Breslow changed Z.W.’s permanency goal from reunification to adoption.
3. The Associate Judge’s Order
M.W. sought review of the goal change decision, and, on January 19, 2018, Associate Judge Steven Wellner issued a detailed order addressing M.W.’s assignments of error and affirming the magistrate judge’s ruling.
any particular format, nor does it use the term ‘case plan’ to describe what is required to be established during the [] Ta.L. hearing.” Finally, he found that the magistrate judge had reasonably determined that her own hearing orders constituted a plan, regarding which M.W. had undisputed notice. Thus, he concluded that the magistrate judge did not err in ruling that the agency had provided M.W. with a “reasonable plan” for reunification.
As to M.W.’s second contention – that “CFSA should have expended more effort to help him achieve reunification” – Judge Wellner noted that M.W. “does not challenge [the magistrate judge’s] findings that the social workers made repeated efforts to meet with him and assist him with the services ordered by the trial court; that each social worker spoke with [him] by telephone, exchanged text messages with [him], and repeatedly reminded [him] of the importance of engaging in services; and offered [him] help in accessing services.” The reviewing judge therefore concluded that the magistrate judge did not err in concluding, based on “ample undisputed evidence,” that the government made extensive efforts towards reunification, and that, even if those efforts had been “imperfect,” they were, in their totality, “reasonable.”
With respect to M.W.’s third argument, regarding the adequacy of his progress, Judge Wellner began by observing that M.W. “does not dispute the [magistrate judge’s] key findings of fact on this point” but instead “challenges the . . . legal conclusion that ‘adequate progress’ requires something more than the minimum amount of progress that a parent must achieve.” In response to this argument, the judge found no support in statutory or case law that the “minimal progress” M.W. had made was sufficient to satisfy the “adequate progress” inquiry under Ta.L. He then went on to address M.W.’s contention that the magistrate judge’s “conclusion was unreasonable under [her] own standard for progress.” He found that the magistrate judge had “consider[ed]” and “weigh[ed] evidence relating to M.W.’s “history of substance abuse, his failure to complete the ‘Man 2 Man’ program, and his failure to visit [Z.W.] regularly,” and that she therefore “did not err” in “conclud[ing] that [M.W.] had not made adequate progress toward reunification.”
concluded that M.W.’s assertion that CFSA was required to explore guardianship options was not supported by law, because the D.C. Code “authorizes the court to issue a guardianship order only if the court first finds that adoption is not appropriate for the child,”16 and that, in this case, the magistrate judge had ruled, convincingly, that adoption was appropriate.
Finding no abuse of discretion, the reviewing judge issued a final order affirming the magistrate judge’s order in its entirety. M.W. then filed this appeal.
II. Legal Framework and Standard of Review
The D.C. Code mandates that, in neglect matters, the trial court hold a permanency hearing within twelve months of the child’s entry into foster care, the purpose of which is to determine whether the child should be returned to his or her biological parent(s), placed for adoption, placed in guardianship, or placed in another permanent living arrangement.17 As this court recently noted, our en banc decision in Ta.L. specified four criteria for evaluating the government’s
recommendation of a permanency goal change:
[I]n a neglect case, a trial court’s change of a child’s permanency goal from reunification to adoption is immediately appealable to this court, and we will review for abuse of discretion, upholding the trial court’s decision if it held a full hearing and found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that:
(1) the government provided the parents with a reasonable plan for achieving reunification;
(2) the government made reasonable efforts to help the parents ameliorate the conditions of neglect and to reunify the family;
(3) the parents failed to make adequate progress toward the goals of the plan; and
(4) other options for avoiding the termination of parental rights, including kinship placements, have been adequately explored.18
Ta.L. also clarified that “due process requires a more formal hearing”19 because a goal change “is a critical point in the proceedings . . . that often irreversibly dictates” the ultimate outcome of the case.20 Still, the trial court enjoys “broad discretion” in making permanency goal decisions, and the scope of our
review is limited.21 The standard of review is abuse of discretion, and we will affirm if the trial court “exercised its discretion within the range of permissible alternatives, based on all relevant factors and no improper factor.”22 A trial court’s determination must “be based upon and drawn from a firm factual foundation. . . . It is an abuse of
III. Analysis
On appeal, M.W. argues that the trial court erred in its decision to change
Z.W.’s permanency goal because the government did not meet its burden of demonstrating that the four permanency goal change factors weighed in favor of changing the goal from reunification to adoption.
We begin by noting that, while the evidence in this case may not be as overwhelming as it is in some cases, it is clear that Magistrate Judge Breslow held a formal hearing on the potential goal change, at which the parents were given the opportunity to testify and present evidence. After the hearing, the magistrate judge issued a detailed written opinion, in which she made extensive findings of fact, including explicit credibility determinations regarding the witnesses who testified at the hearing – determinations that we do not second-guess on appeal. Indeed, “in non-jury trials, it is within the province of trial judges to observe the demeanor of witnesses and to make credibility determinations, which inform the judges’ decisions.”26 We “will not redetermine the credibility of witnesses where . . . the trial court had the opportunity to observe their demeanor and form a conclusion.”27 Magistrate Judge Breslow then drew conclusions of law based on these factual findings, offering reasoned explanations for her determination, by a preponderance
of the evidence, that the Ta.L. factors supported a goal change to adoption.
Finally, Associate Judge Wellner conducted a thoughtful, thorough review of the magistrate judge’s decision in light of each of M.W.’s claims of error, ultimately finding no abuse of discretion and affirming the decision. It is against this backdrop that we now conduct our review.
A. Reasonable Plan for Reunification
M.W. argues that the agency did not provide him with a “reasonable plan” for achieving reunification because (1) the agency failed to proffer formal case plans signed by M.W. and held only three formal case planning meetings, none of which took place after February 2017; (2) M.W. did not have adequate notice of the plan requirements or the fact that reunification was dependent upon his fulfilment of these requirements, particularly drug testing and treatment; and (3) the plan (such as it was) did not adequately evolve over time to meet M.W.’s needs, even when he expressed dissatisfaction with certain aspects of it, including the requirement that he attend a DV program called Man 2 Man. We are not persuaded.
1. Formality of Case Plans
As to the formality of case plans, we reiterate that there is no written case plan included in the record on appeal.28 Even so, we conclude that, under the circumstances, this omission does not strengthen M.W.’s argument for two reasons: his own serious default in failing to participate in development of the required plan, and his failure to show that he suffered any prejudice from lack of a written, filed case plan.29
As to the first, the magistrate judge credited the social workers’ testimony, discussed above, that they had conducted extensive outreach to M.W. to elicit his help in developing a case plan. Specifically, the social workers had attempted to schedule meetings with M.W. to discuss the plan, but M.W. had been uncooperative and failed to maintain contact and engage with the social workers. Thus, even if we assume that the lack of case-planning meetings after February 2017 was problematic, the evidence supports a finding that it was attributable to M.W.’s own unresponsiveness.30
( . . . continued) The plan can then evolve through written updates as circumstances warrant, reflecting court orders based on agency notes, reports, and information provided at disposition and disposition review hearings. These updated documents, filed with the court before the hearings, will help clarify and expedite each proceeding. This fully written record may not entirely protect the situation against slippage of expectations; misunderstandings may arise along the way. But it will no doubt contribute to essential clarity for all concerned. Finally, in fairness to the trial court, it is important to note that this court’s decision in In re A.I, ruling that District law requires a written case plan, was issued on August 1, 2019, more than eighteen months after the trial court order by the reviewing judge sustaining the permanency goal change on January 19, 2018, (and over six months after argument of this appeal). Accordingly, although we accept A.I.’s case plan ruling, we do not fault the trial court for concluding that CFSA had developed a reasonable plan for reunification, consistent with Ta.L., as evidenced by social worker testimony and evaluated and applied in the magistrate judge’s orders at the disposition review and permanency hearings.
Second, we discern no prejudice to M.W. from the government’s failure to file a formal
To the contrary, it is clear that the steps the agency took to assist M.W. in reunification planning reflect the very elements it would have included in a written, formally filed case plan created without M.W.’s involvement. Because M.W. refused to cooperate, a formal written plan created by the agency – based on what the agency knew of M.W.’s situation – would have involved (1) setting expectations for what M.W. must accomplish to achieve reunification, (2) referring M.W. to programs and services, and (3) outlining the efforts the agency would ( . . . continued) defeat a permanency goal change by refusing to work with CFSA”); In re K.C., 200 A.3d at 1237 (concluding that, because parent “refused to participate in the case-planning process and hampered the [a]gency’s efforts to work with her on the plan,” “[s]he cannot now argue, well after the fact, that the [a]gency should have done even more than it already did to overcome her uncooperativeness”).
undertake to help him achieve that goal. The agency’s actions fulfilled each of these elements. And, as elaborated below, all agency findings and recommendations were communicated to the court and included in the court’s explicit directives to M.W. Thus, given his failure to cooperate, M.W. received everything from CFSA’s reunification planning that he reasonably could have expected to receive – i.e., justifiable services responsive to his known needs – whether specified in a written and filed case plan or, as here, left to agency recommendation adopted in trial court orders. If M.W. required assistance beyond the support and intervention that CFSA was providing, he had an obligation to make the agency aware of those needs by participating in case planning. His failure to do so inevitably meant that any written case plan the agency filed with the court in support of reunification would not have been more suitable or robust than the plan the agency, in fact, followed to meet M.W.’s and Z.W.’s needs.
M.W. offers no substantive ground on which to challenge the lack of a formal, written case plan.31 As discussed further below, he has not successfully
identified any particular respect in which CFSA’s efforts (including its attempts to overcome his lack of cooperation) were deficient, or pointed to any legitimate reason that the
2. Notice of the Plan Requirements
( . . . continued) assertion, which is repeated almost verbatim in M.W.’s brief on appeal, appears to be a reference to the fact that CFSA created a written case plan, but failed to properly file it with the court. See supra note 28.
On a related note, even if M.W. did not sign a case plan, see supra note 29, this court has explicitly held that the lack of a parent’s signature will not invalidate a case plan – particularly where, as here, the trial court concluded that any deficiency in the formality of the plan was due to M.W.’s own shortcomings in communication and engagement. In re J.M., 193 A.3d at 781-82 (where the agency had filed a written plan, but the parent did not sign it, this lapse “did not render the case plan . . . unreasonable or inadequate,” both because the document “was prepared at a time when the [parent] was not in contact with the agency, which was therefore unable to obtain her signature,” and because “the case plan mirrored what the magistrate judge had ordered.”); see also In re A.I., 211 A.3d at 1129 (the plan for reunification was reasonable, even though the parent did not sign it, because the parent’s “refusal to participate [in case-planning] does not render the case plan defective”).
With respect to M.W.’s notice of the plan requirements, as explained below, the social workers devised, and clearly and repeatedly communicated, the plan requirements to M.W., and the court’s hearing orders reiterated and reinforced these requirements for M.W., meaning he undoubtedly had the essential notice of them.33
As we have observed, the magistrate judge found that the social workers reached out to M.W. extensively to engage in case-planning, apprise him of the services and referrals required by court order, and remind him about his obligations to utilize these services over time. The reviewing judge affirmed these findings, stating that, “[t]o the extent there is any dispute about the social workers’ follow up on services or communications, the trial court’s findings that they did follow up and make efforts to communicate regularly with [M.W.] are supported by substantial evidence in the record.”
Moreover, M.W. and his counsel participated in the disposition and disposition review hearings and received the orders from those hearings, meaning
that M.W. undoubtedly had notice of the plan requirements. The magistrate judge herself underscored, with respect to the hearings that were held prior to the permanency hearing, that M.W. had “attended three of the four hearings and his attorney [had] attended all four,” thereby demonstrating that “the parents were well aware of what the plan for reunification required of them” was. The reviewing judge likewise explained that M.W. “was a regular participant in the hearings conducted in this case,” where “the steps necessary for reunification were thoroughly discussed,” and M.W. “does not dispute his receipt of this information.”34 The reviewing judge then cited the magistrate judge’s orders from those hearings, which outline the plan requirements and were admitted in evidence at the permanency hearing. The orders explicitly stated that compliance with the court’s instructions was required “to achieve reunification.” M.W.’s participation in several of the court-ordered services – a fact that he himself highlights on appeal – further undermines any claim that he was unaware of the plan or its elements.
With respect to notice of drug testing and treatment requirements in particular, the magistrate judge ordered drug testing at the first disposition hearing on January 13, 2017, which both M.W. and his counsel attended. For unexplained
reasons, however, M.W. did not begin drug testing pursuant to court order until May 19, 2017 – three days after the court again ordered him to drug test at the disposition review hearing on May 16, 2017. Once drug testing confirmed drug use, the court ordered, at the next disposition review hearing on
3. Evolution of the Plan
M.W. also challenges the adequacy of the plan’s evolution over time. At the first (January 2017) disposition hearing, the magistrate judge learned from social worker Henderson that M.W. may have had a drug problem. She therefore ordered drug testing – spot testing in the courthouse the very day of the hearing – and, if positive, weekly drug testing thereafter. M.W., however, did not submit to that spot test or any other before the next hearing in May. Therefore, at the May 2017 hearing, the court again ordered drug testing and specified that M.W. was required to submit six consecutive negative tests. When M.W. finally began testing, he only submitted four tests before the next hearing in September – two in May and two in June – all of which were positive for cocaine and marijuana. At the September 2017 hearing, as a result of M.W.’s positive tests and his failure to test regularly, the court ordered M.W. to be assessed for substance abuse and to follow any treatment recommendation resulting from the assessment. Based on these facts, the magistrate judge’s actions to modify the plan over time to address M.W.’s drug issues appear to be responsive and rational.
M.W. offers no logical reason why the plan should have evolved in a different direction – for example, away from the unsatisfied requirement that he
complete the Man 2 Man DV course. Man 2 Man was particularly relevant in light of the magistrate judge’s finding that social worker Henderson had determined that M.W.’s behavior toward M.G. suggested that he should receive a DV assessment and treatment to ensure that he would not expose Z.W. to violence in the home.36 Additionally, as noted above, M.W. was free to discuss any desired change to the plan requirements with the social workers,
In sum, the trial court’s ruling that the government provided a reasonable plan for reunification was well-reasoned, informed by relevant factors, and supported by facts in the record. We find no abuse of the trial court’s broad discretion and will not disturb the ruling on appeal.
B. Reasonable Efforts
M.W. next argues that the agency did not make “reasonable efforts” to reunify the family. This contention has no merit. As we have observed, the social workers’ (credited) testimonies indicated that, over the life of the case, they made extensive efforts toward reunification. M.W., however, was inconsistent in maintaining contact with them, in complying with the required services, and in showing up for visits with Z.W. and for his speech therapy sessions. That the agency made the required reasonable efforts is bolstered by other evidence in the record, including the magistrate judge‘s disposition and disposition review orders, which were admitted in evidence at the permanency hearing. All three orders included findings that the agency had made reasonable efforts during the period under review. And, as the reviewing judge noted, M.W. did not dispute these factual findings; he contended only that the agency should have done even more than it did.
The agency, of course, could always have done more if it had unlimited time and resources, and there undoubtedly is room for improvement in its practices and performance. But we defer to the factfinder‘s credibility determinations, and, as explained in the court‘s opinion, the magistrate judge credited the testimonies of the social workers. The testimonies then informed factual findings - which were undisputed by M.W. - demonstrating that the inadequacy of effort was on M.W.‘s side, not on the agency‘s.38
With this background in mind, we review M.W.‘s two substantive contentions on appeal discounting the trial court‘s finding that CFSA made “reasonable efforts” to assist in reunification.
First, he asserts that the agency should have referred him to a DV program other than Man 2 Man because he felt that it was not a good fit for him.39 At the permanency hearing, Henderson testified that M.W. had attended the first two classes and initially said that he enjoyed the program and was learning from it - indeed, M.W.‘s counsel stated at the May 2017 hearing that M.W. “like[d]” the Man 2 Man course - but that M.W. later stopped attending because he had decided it was no longer right for him, apparently because he felt that it was for physically abusive men and that he did not fall into that category. M.W.‘s own testimony was consistent with this assertion. Domestic violence, however, may take forms other than physical violence,40 and it does not appear
M.W.‘s feeling that the class was not well-suited to him was not a compelling reason to obtain a referral to a different service provider. He did not indicate that there was a conflict with his work schedule, a transportation issue, or some other legitimate barrier to attendance. Instead, he simply decided not to attend. Furthermore, the social worker testified that Man 2 Man was the only DV course that CFSA had available at that time, and the court itself, in two of its hearing orders, had specifically ordered him to complete that particular course. M.W. thus had every reason to persevere. One would think that a parent who was serious about reunifying with his child would do what it takes to complete an agency-referred and court-ordered course,41 whether or not it was, in his view, the best class for him. In short, in the absence of any evidence that attending Man 2 Man was legitimately inappropriate or even simply unduly burdensome, M.W. has raised no serious argument that CFSA‘s failure to refer him to (apparently nonexistent) alternative DV programs undermined the reasonableness of the government‘s efforts.
Second, M.W. asserts that the agency did not do enough to “facilitate” drug testing for him early on, i.e., between January and May 2017, and that the court did not order drug assessment or treatment early enough because, as explained above42 and discussed further below, the APRA assessment was not ordered until September 2017.
M.W. does not explain what “facilitation” he was seeking, and there is no indication in the record that he communicated to the agency any confusion or difficulty. For example, as mentioned earlier, M.W. was first ordered to spot test at the January 13, 2017 hearing, at which he was personally present. He could have gone directly from the hearing to the testing facility in the courthouse, as ordered, but he did not. There was no indication that M.W. faced any impediment to testing that day, or on any other day. Thus, short of personally, physically escorting M.W. to each mandated drug test, it is unclear what agency staff could have done to ensure his compliance.
Nor did M.W. request any assistance or accommodation with respect to drug testing or treatment. For instance, the magistrate judge found that social worker Sherman had spoken with M.W. to remind him to do drug testing and participate in an APRA assessment, but, “[d]espite their frequent communications, [M.W.] never asked [] Sherman for any assistance.” Quite the opposite, in fact: in January 2017, M.W. told social worker Henderson that he did not use drugs, and, at the May 2017 hearing, his counsel represented to the court that M.W. did not use drugs and did not need testing. Still, the social workers’ testimonies, credited by the factfinder, were that, throughout the life of the case, they reminded M.W. of the court-ordered
Under these circumstances, it is difficult to see what more the agency could have been reasonably expected to do. Indeed, M.W. does not offer any concrete suggestion as to what more the agency could or should have done. And, as we have recently observed, “the reasonable efforts standard does not burden the agency with the additional responsibility of holding the hand of a recalcitrant parent.”43 As noted,44 when a child is placed in foster care, the trial court must hold a permanency hearing within twelve months - a period of time that may not seem particularly lengthy to adults but is quite significant in the life of a small child. This timeframe imposes an urgency on the government to pursue its efforts with dispatch and on the parents to engage and cooperate promptly. M.W. was on notice of this timeframe and its accompanying urgency, as the magistrate judge‘s January 2017 order contained an explicit warning that notified the parents that a permanency hearing - at which Z.W.‘s permanency goal could be changed from reunification to adoption - would be held on December 4, 2017.45 It appears that the agency took significant action during this timeframe, but, as discussed below, M.W. ultimately did not complete the steps he was required to take during that period.
Accordingly, the trial court‘s finding that the agency had made “reasonable efforts” was supported by a firm factual foundation and fell within a range of permissible alternatives. We find no abuse of discretion.
C. Adequate Progress
M.W. next asserts that the trial court erred in determining that he did not make adequate progress toward reunification. He argues that he made progress by completing a parenting class with an anger management component, completing a DV assessment, engaging in visitation with Z.W., and beginning an outpatient drug treatment program. With respect to drug use in particular, he contends that the initial neglect finding was not based on substance abuse, and that there is no evidence that his drug use impacted his ability to care for Z.W.46 He also contends that his progress was sufficient because Ta.L. requires only “fair progress,” which he characterizes as “a floor, which a parent must not stoop beneath, not the ceiling we hope them to achieve.”
As discussed above, Magistrate Judge Breslow, in her permanency goal change
On review, Judge Wellner noted that M.W. did not dispute the magistrate judge‘s factual findings that M.W. had failed to make progress in certain key areas; he rejected M.W.‘s legal argument that he had satisfied an adequate progress “floor“; and, finally, he concluded that the magistrate judge did not err in determining that M.W.‘s progress on the reunification plan was inadequate.
We reject out of hand M.W.‘s assertion - which he repeats on appeal, again without offering any legal support - that Ta.L. requires only that parents not fall beneath a “fair progress” “floor.” Under our case law, the government must prove “that the parents have failed to make adequate progress towards satisfying the requirements of [the reunification] plan,”47 and there is no indication in Ta.L. or elsewhere that the standard is as low, or the review as minimal, as M.W. urges.
This brings us to M.W.‘s fallback argument that his progress was, in fact, adequate, even according to a meaningful adequate progress standard. The trial court‘s decisions acknowledge that M.W. completed a parenting course, which contained an anger management component, and also DV and APRA assessments. Those requirements of the plan, therefore, were satisfied. We thus are left with determining whether the trial court abused its discretion in concluding that M.W.‘s failure to fulfill the remaining requirements - drug testing and treatment, visitation with Z.W. and participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy, and completion of the DV course - supported a finding, by a preponderance of the evidence, that M.W.‘s progress toward reunification was not “adequate.”
First, as discussed above with respect to drug testing and treatment, the magistrate judge ordered drug testing at the January 2017 hearing, but M.W. complied only belatedly and episodically - and only after the court again ordered drug testing at the May 2017 hearing.48 Furthermore, the four tests he completed (in May and June 2017) established that he was using drugs, as they were all positive for cocaine and marijuana. At the September 2017 hearing, therefore, the court ordered M.W. to undergo an APRA assessment and any recommended treatment. The parties do not dispute that, at some point after the September 2017 hearing and order, M.W. completed the APRA assessment and began an outpatient treatment program; and, at the December 2017 permanency hearing, M.W. testified that he had been attending the program for approximately six weeks.49
M.W. nonetheless contends that, because his substance abuse was not the reason for the neglect finding or the removal of Z.W. from the home, the court should not have considered it when evaluating his progress under the reunification plan. And yet, as M.W. himself argues, the reunification plan can and should evolve when appropriate. That is exactly what happened here. As discussed above in the context of the plan‘s reasonableness, adding a drug testing and treatment element was an appropriate and reasonable evolution of the plan. The record clearly shows that M.W. did not fulfill this requirement.
Second, as to visitation and speech therapy, the magistrate judge made factual findings, based on the credited testimony of the social workers, that M.W. had been inconsistent and unreliable in his visitation with Z.W. and in his participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy. As the reviewing judge pointed out, M.W. “does not dispute that he failed to visit [Z.W.] regularly, noting instead that he did make some visits to see his son.” Thus, the record establishes that M.W. failed to engage in consistent and reliable visitation, and failed to meaningfully participate in Z.W.‘s speech therapy, thereby demonstrating a lack of compliance with this dimension of the reunification plan.
Third, with respect to the DV course, as discussed above, it is undisputed that M.W. completed the DV assessment; that the Man 2 Man course was recommended both as a result of that assessment and independently by one of the social workers; that this course was ordered by the court; and that M.W. began but did not finish it. As explained in the context of the reasonable efforts analysis,52 M.W. offered no persuasive reason for not completing
In sum, the record shows that M.W. complied with some plan requirements but failed to comply with others. Thus, we must evaluate whether the trial court abused its discretion in ruling that his progress, on the whole, was inadequate. While adequacy is not defined in our case law, an evaluation of “adequate progress” - which bears on whether a parent can care for a child in a safe and healthy way54 - is undoubtedly a fact-bound inquiry that must be conducted on a case-by-case basis. Indeed, in neglect cases, trial judges have always assessed the adequacy of biological parents’ progress when determining whether to change a child‘s permanency goal from reunification to adoption. Since our decision in Ta.L., trial courts have been required to hold an evidentiary hearing and make findings that explicitly address four elements of the neglect proceedings, including the adequacy of the parents’ progress in satisfying the requirements of the reunification plan.55
In this case, we do not discount the efforts that M.W. made - completing the parenting course with an anger management component, the DV assessment, and the drug assessment - and we credit him with fulfilling these requirements of the plan. As explained above, however, the record shows significant shortcomings. M.W. did not timely or fully comply with drug testing requirements or complete a drug treatment program, and his continued use of drugs - as illustrated by his presentation and failed drug test on the day of the permanency goal hearing - raises grave concerns regarding his ability to properly care for Z.W. The inconsistency of M.W.‘s visitation with Z.W. is likewise concerning, given that visitation is obviously a critical component of a parent‘s efforts to maintain a relationship with his or her child,56 and M.W.‘s lack of meaningful participation in Z.W.‘s speech therapy indicates a lack of commitment to supporting the boy‘s cognitive and behavioral development
Accordingly, the trial court‘s reasoned decision that M.W. failed to make adequate progress toward satisfying the requirements of the reunification plan was drawn from a firm factual foundation, was determined by reference to all proper factors and no improper factors, and was supported a preponderance of the evidence. We perceive no abuse of discretion with respect to this element of the analysis.
D. Alternatives to the Termination of Parental Rights
We turn to the fourth and final Ta.L. factor. M.W. argues that CFSA did not adequately explore other options for avoiding termination of his parental rights, including kinship placements, because it did not hold a formal meeting on this topic after Z.W. was moved from his paternal aunt‘s home in November 2017, and further because the agency did not explore guardianship prior to seeking a goal change to adoption.
As discussed above, the reviewing judge observed that the magistrate judge made factual findings - which M.W. did not dispute - that CFSA did explore kinship options, including a successful placement with B.W., M.W.‘s own sister (Z.W.‘s paternal aunt). Still, M.W. argues that the agency should have explored additional relatives after B.W disrupted Z.W.‘s placement with her. He offers no factual or legal support for this argument, however, nor does he assert that he suggested additional relatives to the agency for exploration at that time. Furthermore, the reviewing judge observed that a governing statute provides that a court may not order guardianship unless it finds adoption to be inappropriate,57 and that here the magistrate judge found that adoption was appropriate for Z.W. M.W. offers no rationale for why guardianship would have been appropriate, let alone more appropriate, than adoption in this case. He likewise fails to offer any evidence that he requested the agency or the court to consider guardianship, or that he proffered possibilities for potential guardians for Z.W. He has therefore failed to raise any serious argument that the trial court erred with respect to this factor.58
The magistrate and reviewing judges concluded that a preponderance of the evidence established that the government adequately explored alternatives to TPR, including kinship placements. These judges rested their conclusions upon facts of record; they considered the correct legal principles;
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion when changing Z.W.‘s permanency goal from reunification to adoption. We therefore affirm the judgment.
So ordered.
FERREN, Senior Judge, with whom GLICKMAN, Associate Judge, joins, concurring:
I join the court‘s opinion and write separately only to address the issue of hearsay evidence in neglect proceedings. This issue was not briefed by the parties, but was raised at oral argument, where counsel for the government noted that some judges have ruled that hearsay evidence is inadmissible at permanency hearings in which the trial court considers the government‘s request for a goal change. In this case, it is apparent from the transcript of December 2017 permanency hearing that the magistrate judge sustained hearsay objections or permitted perceived hearsay testimony only for purposes other than the truth of the matter asserted.
While it may be true that some magistrate judges disallow hearsay at permanency hearings, it is not clear why. To the contrary, this court has said that hearsay evidence is admissible in such hearings. In In re D.B., we considered the “many different proceedings throughout the neglect process, including dispositional hearings, disposition review hearings, and permanency and permanency review hearings,” and, in examining relevant statutes and rules, we concluded that “[h]earsay is admissible in such hearings.”1 Hearsay evidence must be material and relevant, and there must be safeguards to assure that biological parents have the opportunity to rebut such evidence.2 But there does not appear to be a per se bar to the admission of hearsay in these hearings.3
It is important to add, for clarity, that disposition, disposition review, permanency, and permanency review hearings held in the context of neglect proceedings are distinguishable from fact-finding hearings held to determine whether neglect occurred in the first instance. We have said that hearsay evidence cannot be admitted over proper objection in such fact-finding hearings unless it comes under a valid hearsay exception. See, e.g., In re M.F., 55 A.3d 373, 378 (D.C. 2012); In re Ty.B., 878 A.2d 1255, 1263-65 (D.C. 2005); In re Ca.S., 828 A.2d 184, 189-92 (D.C. 2003). No such hearing occurred in this case, as M.W. (and M.G.) stipulated to neglect.
In fact, the Child and Family Services Agency (“CFSA” or “the agency“) must, by law, file reports for disposition-related and permanency-related hearings that presumably contain hearsay.4 Indeed,
During the life of a neglect case, documents that are filed with the court, such as the agency‘s disposition reports and permanency reports, are reviewed by the magistrate judge and inform the magistrate judge‘s orders at the initial hearing, disposition hearing, and disposition review hearings. These hearing orders then inform the permanency goal change decision, at least indirectly, and also directly if they are admitted in evidence at the permanency hearing. Both the agency‘s reports and the magistrate judge‘s orders are then included in the record, which is before the reviewing associate judge and is then before this court on appeal. Accordingly, in seeking to conduct a proper and thorough review of such cases, it seems entirely appropriate for this court to review these documents, in order to ensure that the trial court‘s rulings rest on firm factual foundations and are supported by preponderant evidence.
In Ta.L., however, the en banc court flagged an important concern. We observed that, although an agency report, unsupported by testimony, “may be sufficient for a typical neglect review hearing, it does not pass due process muster when the rights at stake are as great as a parent‘s constitutional right to raise his or her child.”5 The problem has been, we said, that, in making permanency goal change decisions, “trial courts are routinely presented with information contained in the government‘s permanency report without any testimony from those who provided the information on which the government‘s recommendations are based or any other evidence that undergirds the findings and/or conclusions found in those reports.”6 Since Ta.L., therefore, the “more formal hearing[s]”7 that have been convened to decide permanency goal changes have provided a forum in which social workers and other service providers and professionals must now testify under oath and be subjected to cross-examination
Accordingly, to the extent that biological parents wish to challenge the contents of agency reports or other documents, or the testimonies of the social workers who prepared them - or any other evidence that is before the trial court - they may do so at the “more formal” permanency hearing.8 These permanency hearings, therefore, are now more formal than they were before the issuance of Ta.L., and they are likely to be more formal than other kinds of hearings during the life of a neglect case, such as disposition, disposition review, and permanency review hearings, which continue to be rather informal. This does not necessarily mean, however, that hearsay evidence should not be permitted at these more formal permanency hearings.9
In sum, while permanency hearings in which goal changes are considered now involve formal elements, such as sworn testimony and the creation of transcripts - elements that are typically absent in other kinds of hearings in a neglect case10 - there appears to be no inherent need or logic that mandates excluding hearsay. Indeed, family court proceedings are generally flexible, affording latitude and discretion to the trial court, and the court can safeguard the right of biological parents to a meaningful evidentiary hearing without resort to overly formalistic or rigid constraints that will restrict the quantity and quality of relevant evidence that can be admitted.11 The magistrate judge as factfinder may accord greater or lesser weight to various kinds of evidence based upon indicia of reliability, but I find no support in the law for the notion that hearsay evidence is inadmissible in permanency hearings.
EASTERLY, Associate Judge, concurring dubitante: In an opinion far longer than either of the trial court orders on review, this court upholds the permanency goal change from
Effectively, we resolve this case on harmlessness grounds. (As In re Ta.L., 149 A.3d at 1078, and In re A.I., 211 A.3d at 1128, make clear, the threshold case planning requirement is the foundation for any downstream assessment of the agency‘s reasonable efforts and the parent‘s progress.) We require CFSA to engage in case planning and make reasonable efforts to support parents in reunifying with their children precisely because parents whose children have been removed from their custody generally “fac[e] serious challenges and lack[] robust support systems,” Ta.L., 149 A.3d at 1080; accord In re J.M., 193 A.3d 773, 783 (D.C. 2018) (acknowledging “the obvious“: parents in this category “need assistance” and generally are “not proactive“). Yet we conclude in this instance that even if the agency had done what it should have, it would not have made a difference. We do so without asking
