Minn. Stat. § 260C.001
Subd. 1. Citation; scope.
(b) Juvenile protection proceedings include:
Subd. 2. Juvenile protection proceedings.
(b) The purpose of the laws relating to juvenile protection proceedings is:
(4) to ensure that when removal from the child's own family is necessary and in the child's best interests, the responsible social services agency has legal responsibility for the child removal either:
(6) to ensure that when the child is removed, the child's care and discipline is, as nearly as possible, equivalent to that which should have been given by the parents and is either in:
(7) to ensure appropriate permanency planning for children in foster care including:
Subd. 3. Permanency, termination of parental rights, and adoption.
The purpose of the laws relating to permanency, termination of parental rights, and children who come under the guardianship of the commissioner of children, youth, and families is to ensure that:
(3) when a child is under the guardianship of the commissioner of children, youth, and families, reasonable efforts are made to finalize an adoptive home for the child in a timely manner.
Nothing in this section requires reasonable efforts to prevent placement or to reunify the child with the parent or guardian to be made in circumstances where the court has determined that the child has been subjected to egregious harm, when the child is an abandoned infant, the parent has involuntarily lost custody of another child through a proceeding under section 260C.515, subdivision 4, or similar law of another state, the parental rights of the parent to a sibling have been involuntarily terminated, or the court has determined that reasonable efforts or further reasonable efforts to reunify the child with the parent or guardian would be futile.
The paramount consideration in all proceedings for permanent placement of the child under sections 260C.503 to 260C.521, or the termination of parental rights is the best interests of the child. In proceedings involving an American Indian child, as defined in section 260.755, subdivision 8, the best interests of the child must be determined consistent with the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, section 1901, et seq.
Subd. 4. Construction.
The laws relating to the juvenile protection proceedings shall be liberally construed to carry out these purposes.