664 N.Y.S.2d 792 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1997
—Determination of respondent Commissioner of the State Department of Social Services dated November 24, 1995, which denied petitioner’s application for foster care payments for three children in her custody since July 30, 1988, unanimously annulled, and the petition in this proceeding brought pursuant to CPLR article 78 (transferred to this Court by order of the Supreme Court, New York County [David Saxe, J.], entered July 15, 1996) granted, without costs or disbursements.
The three children were removed from their parents’ home and placed in foster care in November 1986. By order of Family Court, Bronx County (Irene Duffy, J.), entered on or about January 29, 1987, the children were placed in the custody of the municipal respondent. In April 1987, municipal respondent’s case worker completed a Reassessment and Service Plan Review evaluating the six-month placement in foster care. In view of the parents’ request, and the petitioner’s acquiescence, that the children be placed with petitioner, the children’s paternal grandmother, the municipal respondent took steps to achieve the Plan’s goal of “reunit [ing] the children with their paternal grandmother in North Carolina.” The Interstate Compact Placement Request (Social Services Law § 374-a) was completed in connection therewith. Petitioner then took custody of the children in May 1987 for a term of foster care to expire on July 29, 1988.
In August 1988, a second six-month review was prepared, indicating that the children resided in the custody of petitioner in Rowland, North Carolina. The report stated as a Permanency Planning Goal the discharge of the children to a relative, and noted that they were staying with their grandmother. Since the father’s, paternity had not yet been established, resulting from his lack of cooperation, the placement was not defined to be kinship foster care. Because the children were residing with a relative, and were not to be removed thereafter to foster care, the investigation was closed. Thereafter, the Department of Social Services (DSS) took no steps to ascertain the children’s whereabouts, or to finalize the nature of their placement. Nor did it provide petitioner with foster care payments.
Pursuant to the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children (Social Services Law § 374-a), a State that places a child in out-of-State foster care must retain jurisdiction sufficient to determine all matters in relation to the custody, supervision, care, treatment and disposition of the child, until the child is adopted, reaches the age of majority, becomes self-supporting, or is discharged with the concurrence of the appropriate authority of the receiving State (Matter of H. M. Children, 217 AD2d 164). The statute has two purposes: to assure that the placement will be in the child’s best interest, and to preclude the sending State from exporting its foster care responsibilities to a receiving State {supra). In the present case, the children were not adopted, did not reach their majority and were not self-supporting. The only person who could be legally responsible in this case remained the Commissioner of Social Services {Matter of H. M. Children, supra). The discharge to a relative, in this case the grandmother, was not authorized under New York law. The children legally remained under custodial control of DSS pursuant to the Family Court order, so that the voluntary “discharge” to a relative in this case was an insufficient basis to terminate DSS’s responsibilities. Rather, as the “sending agency,” DSS retains an ongoing supervisory as well as financial responsibility for the care of children over whom it asserts custody (Matter of Shaida W., 85 NY2d 453; Matter of H. M. Children, supra).
The fact that its inaction in failing to file the Family Court
Since DSS previously had found petitioner qualified to act as a foster parent, her continued custody of the children as a foster parent would be consistent with their best interests, requiring funding consistent with the continued status. For the reasons stated above, we annul the determination and grant the petition. Concur—Wallach, J. P., Nardelli, Tom, Mazzarelli and Colabella, JJ.