214-RICR-30-00-1
K. "Family" means two or more persons who interact and provide one another with physical, emotional, social and/or economic care. This may include a person(s) not legally related to the individual. Members of a family may include, but is not limited to, children, parents, spouses, domestic partners, different-sex and same-sex spouses and/or domestic partners, and siblings (including sister, brother, stepbrother, stepsister, half-brother, half-sister).
L. “Foster care” means substitute care for a child who is placed away from the child’s parents or guardians and for whom the Department has placement and care responsibility through either court order pursuant to a dependent, neglect and/or abuse petition or voluntary placement agreement.
N. “High risk” means a child or youth who is missing from care has one or more of the following factors present:
O. “Indian child” means any unmarried person who is under the age of eighteen (18) and is either:
T. “Relative” means a grandparent, great grandparent, great-great grandparent, aunt, great aunt, great-great aunt, uncle, great-uncle, great-great uncle, first cousin, first cousin once removed, niece, great niece, great-great niece, nephew, great nephew or great-great nephew.
Z. "Young adult" means an individual who has attained 18 years of age but has not reached the age of 21, and was in the legal custody of the Department on his or her 18th birthday due to:
A. The Department provides services to prevent the unnecessary removal of a child from his or her natural home. The desirable service goal is to maintain a child at home through the remediation of family issue(s) which contributes to the risk of harm to the child that brought the family into the Department. Reasonable efforts are made:
G. Telephone Contact:
H. Should the family refuse services and one or more of the conditions listed below, exists, the primary service worker must schedule a consult with the Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.
B. Within thirty (30) days following the removal of a child from the custody of the parent(s) of the child, the Department exercises due diligence to identify and provide written notice to all the following relatives: adult grandparents, parents of a sibling of the child where such parent has legal custody of such sibling, and other adult relatives of the child (including any other adult relatives suggested by the parents) subject to exceptions due to family violence and/or child safety. The notice includes the following information:
A. The Indian Child Welfare Act, 25 U.S.C §§ 1901-1963, requires the Department to find a placement within a reasonable distance of the child's home and in the least restrictive environment to meet the special needs of the identified Indian child:
1. An Indian child must be placed in the following order of preference:
D. Selection of an Adoptive Home
1. The search for and selection of the home occurs in conjunction with the tribe's representative in the following order of preference:
C. The safety plan contains one or both of the following elements depending on the individual safety needs of each child in the family:
2. Out-of-Home Safety Plan is developed if reasonable efforts have been unsuccessful in preventing the removal of the child from the home, or:
F. Each safety plan:
2. Identifies how the foreseeable danger will be managed including:
G. The assessment of present and impending danger and subsequent decisions are made while considering the child’s need for permanency and well-being and occur throughout the duration of the family’s involvement with the Department, specifically at critical decision points including, but not limited to:
4. Reunification and case closure.
B. An assessment is not required in accordance with the above if:
C. Assessments are completed in partnership with the Department’s primary service worker, child (if age appropriate), parent(s)/caregiver(s), formal providers, informal providers and natural supports to the family.
C. If a child is placed in out of home care, each service plan for the child includes specific information to determine the appropriateness of and necessity for out-of-home placement. In addition, the Department must place siblings who have been living with each other prior to placement or who enter placement at or within thirty (30) days of each other together, unless:
D. The service plan must include:
3. Where appropriate, for a child age fourteen (14) or over, a written description of the program and services which will help prepare the youth for the transition toward a self-sufficient and productive adult life; and
c. any revision or addition to the service plan must be developed in consultation with the youth and, at the option of the youth, with up to two (2) members of the case planning team who are chosen by the youth and who are not a foster parent of, or caseworker for, the youth.
E. The Service Plan is time-limited, individualized and strength-based and addresses:
F. Department staff must make every effort to personally interview family members, including children, in the family’s home, when appropriate.
G. The primary service worker obtains signatures on the service plan to confirm that all parties participated in the development, review and revision of the plan and were provided the opportunity to agree or disagree with the content. Each party signing the service plan is notified of his or her right to disagree with the content of the plan and appeal implementation of the plan.
2. The following individuals sign the service plan:
H. Timeframes for completion, review, and approval of the service plan:
J. Each service plan includes a visitation plan if the child is in an out of home placement including details specific to the following:
2. Sibling Visits;
K. Each service plan includes an educational/medical statement, which contains health and education information that must be provided to the foster care provider when a child enters placement. Required information includes:
L. Each service plan includes a permanency goal specific to the family’s situation including a projected date for achieving the identified permanency goal. The Department confers with the family to review the permanency plan of each child in placement at least every six (6) months. Permanency goals include:
1. For a child remaining at home, the permanency goal is maintaining the child at home.
2. For a child in placement, the initial permanency goal is reunification in nearly all situations with specific exceptions as approved by the Family Court.
d. The service plan is designed to achieve:
4. If the Department and the Family Court have determined that reunification and adoption are not viable permanency options and that it is in the best interest of the child to be placed with a kinship guardian, the service plan permanency goal is changed to guardianship.
a. The service plan documents the steps the Department has taken to determine that it is not appropriate for the child to be returned home or adopted. The service plan also addresses:
5. Another Planned Permanent Living Arrangement (APPLA) includes: Permanent Placement with a Fit and Willing Relative, Planned Living Arrangement/ Independent Living and Planned Living Arrangement/Other.
d. The service plan documents:
e. APPLA is appropriate only when the Family Court has been provided with documentation that compelling reasons exist which make all other permanency options unacceptable. These reasons are re-examined at each Administrative Review and every permanency hearing to assess whether a more preferred permanency option is possible such as for the child to:
f. A fit and willing relative can provide APPLA and termination of parental rights does not have to occur within the allotted period if a compelling reason is provided to the Family Court.
A. The Department supports regular, planned contact between a child in placement and his or her family. Contact must begin as soon as possible after the child is separated from his/her family. Contact is defined as:
D. Contact and visitation is both a right and a responsibility of the parent. The parent bears the primary responsibility to maintain the formulated visitation schedule including transportation for himself/herself.
J. The two (2)-week visitation schedule may not be applicable to those placement sites where a special visitation plan is a regulation of the facility/agency and an important element in the case plan.
B. Siblings who are placed in foster care should maintain contact with each other to have continuity in their relationships:
E. Visitation between a child and a parent who is hospitalized for medical or psychiatric reasons is contingent upon the regulations of the hospital, the goal and objectives of the Case Plan, condition of the parent, degree of risk to the child, and the ability of the child to understand the nature and/or seriousness of the parent's illness. With increased physical or emotional risk to the child, visitation must be limited even more.
B. The Department ensures that the initial and each subsequent placement of the child:
E. The Department ensures a request is made to the Family Court for a factual determination and designation of the residence of the parent(s) of a child placed in custody of the Department in accordance with R.I. Gen. Laws § 16-64-1.2.
B. The Family Court enters an order that the Department will make educational decisions on behalf of a child placed in the care and custody of the Department then the Department will submit to the Rhode Island Department of Education a referral for the appointment of an educational advocate.
B. The Department protects parent(s) and legal guardian(s) right to consent as well as its staff and service providers from legal liability by ensuring that appropriate consents are obtained.
C. If the parent(s) cannot be located or the parent(s) objects to the surgery and there is an urgency to intervene in the matter to prevent permanent harm, the Department may petition the Family Court for authorization for the surgery, or the Department may provide authorization for the surgery depending on the legal status of the child.
B. It is not always possible to have an EPSDT screening examination performed prior to or immediately after the placement of a child; however, an appointment for the examination must be scheduled within seven (7) working days of the child's placement.
B. Eligibility - A youth must meet all of the following requirements to be eligible for services:
C. Services and Supports
D. Termination - Services and supports are terminated when any of the following conditions apply:
4. The youth reaches twenty-one (21) years of age.
D. Transition planning occurs during the ongoing assessment process. Service plans are updated to reflect behavior changes and actions steps to achieve permanency for each child. Transition planning occurs and is documented within the service plan at minimum during the following timeframes:
E. The youth development/transitional living plan within the service plan addresses:
B. Eligibility
3. A youth must meet at least one of the following requirements to be eligible for the VEC program:
C. Young adults in the VEC program may live in a supervised living arrangement that is approved by the Department. Such living arrangements may include:
D. For the purposes of the VEC program, a supervised independent living setting is a housing arrangement which meets the approval of the Department and includes ongoing oversight and case management provided by Department staff and/or another entity with whom the Department has contracted with to perform such services.
E. The VEC program assists young adults with:
H. Any young adult who is open to the Department and who elects not to participate in the VEC program or who terminates his or her VEC participation may request to be reinstated into the VEC program prior to his or her twenty-first (21) birthday if he or she continues to meet the edibility requirements as presented in §§ 1.17(B)(1)(a) through (f) of this Part.
F. The Administrative Review provides the opportunity for the assessment of each child’s status to:
B. A child or youth is determined to be missing when he/she cannot be located within:
C. When a child cannot be located and is determined to be missing from any placement the placement provider, or parent/guardian if the child is placed at home, immediately:
B. At the eleventh (11th) month, or when adoption becomes the primary service plan goal through the termination of parental rights (TPR) filing, court ordered goal change to adoption, or direct consent is obtained, the child is registered with the state’s adoption exchange.
G. Post-adoption privileges may be granted by the Family Court when the birth parent and child have a significant emotional attachment and it is in the best interest of the child to maintain some contact with the birth parent.
D. A child must meet all of the following three (3) requirements to be considered as a child with special needs and to be eligible for federal or state adoption assistance:
I. A youth who obtains permanency through adoption on or after his or her 16th birthday and before his or her 18th birthday is eligible to continue adoption assistance until the young adult’s 21st birthday if he or she meets one or more of the following requirements:
M. The Department recertifies the adoption assistance agreement every two (2) years. At any time during the life of the agreement, either the Department or the adoptive parent(s) may request an adjustment in the adoption subsidy payment. Some situations that may justify an adjustment to the adoption subsidy payment include:
E. A youth who obtains permanency through guardianship on or after their 16th birthday and before their 18th birthday is eligible to continue guardianship or kinship assistance until the young adult’s 21st birthday if he or she meets one or more of the following requirements:
B. At least six (6) months prior to a child turning eighteen (18) years of age, or up to the age of twenty-one (21) if the young adult elects to participate in the VEC program, the Department is required to provide the Family Court with a description of the transition services afforded to the youth or young adult or a detailed explanation of why such services were not offered.
C. During the ninety-day period immediately prior to the date on which a youth in foster care will attain eighteen (18) years of age, or up to the age of twenty-one (21) if the young adult elects to participate in the VEC program, the primary service worker and, as appropriate, other representatives of the youth, provide the youth with assistance and support in developing a discharge plan which is documented in the service plan. The discharge plan is personalized at the direction of the youth and is as detailed as the youth may elect.
1. The Discharge Plan is focused around skills to gain independence and transition to successful adulthood and includes specific options in the following areas:
2. The discharge plan includes information about:
E. Youth leaving out of home placements due to attaining eighteen (18) years of age, or up to the age of twenty-one (21) if the young adult elects to participate in the VEC program, unless the youth has been in care for less than six (6) months, must receive the following documents upon discharge from the Department: