Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) The agency shall
complete a comprehensive study for each child evaluated for adoption. The study
shall include:
1. A medical examination of the
child at birth or at the time when the agency assumed custody and again within 30
calendar days before placement in an adoptive home to determine the child's health
and any factors that may interfere with normal development;
2. In addition to (a)1 above, for a child under
two years of age, the agency shall provide the adoptive applicant(s) with
information regarding medical examinations, medical testing, medical/surgical
treatment and immunizations, if any, within 30 calendar days before placement in an
adoptive home.
3. Information to the
extent available about the child's birth family to determine hereditary factors or
pathology that may affect the child's normal development and potentialities as
required on forms developed by the Commissioner of the Department of Children and
Families, pursuant to
N.J.S.A.
9:3-41.1(b);
4. Information on previous placements, if
applicable;
5. Any specialized
evaluations for a physically and/or mentally disabled child to help better
understand the child's strengths and limitations;
6. The child's involvement in the adoption or
documentation of the reason(s) for not involving the child; and
7. A careful evaluation of the advisability, in
terms of best interest, and feasibility of placing the child together with full or
half-siblings whose permanency goal is also adoption or who may have been placed for
adoption previously. The agency shall document, in the case record of the child for
whom adoption is currently being planned, any contraindicators and/or barriers to
the co-placement of siblings, regardless of when they became legally free for
adoption.
(b) The agency
shall provide foster care services, as necessary, to ensure the health and safety of
children who are waiting for legal clearance and/or adoptive placement.
1. The agency shall establish written criteria by
which foster parent applicants are eligible to apply to the agency to provide foster
care for a child.
i. The agency shall ensure that
the criteria apply equally to all applicants.
ii. The agency shall make the criteria available
to the Office of Licensing, to all prospective foster parent applicants and, upon
request, to any person.
2.
Before approving foster parents, the agency shall conduct a home visit and prepare a
comprehensive written assessment, including, but not limited to:
i. The name, address, age, occupation, race and
ethnic background, education, and religion (if any) of all household
members;
ii. Written reports of medical
examinations conducted within the past calendar year for all household members.
These reports shall indicate that all household members are free of communicable
diseases, including results of laboratory tests or X-rays if ordered by the
physician, or other medical impediments to the placement of foster children in the
home;
iii. A physician's written
statement attesting that the foster parents' health status is such that they are
physically capable of providing foster care services;
iv. Three written references that shall be stored
in the foster family's record;
v. A
written assessment of the family's philosophies on child rearing, discipline,
parental roles, and experience with children;
vi. A statement of the agency's assessment of the
results of State and Federal Criminal History Record Information (CHRI) fingerprint
background checks, as specified in
N.J.A.C.
3A:50-4.5;
vii. A statement of the agency's assessment of the
results of the Department's Child Abuse Record Information (CARI) background checks,
as specified in
N.J.A.C.
3A:50-4.6; and
viii. Location and description of physical
environment of the residence and neighborhood.
3. When the results of a CHRI reveal a criminal
conviction, the agency shall:
i. Disclose the
results of the CHRI only to the specific individual on whom the CHRI was conducted;
and
ii. Disclose to the foster home
applicant(s) the name of the adult residing in the applicant's home who has a
criminal conviction, but not disclose to the applicant(s) any other information
about the conviction.
4. When
the results of a CARI background check reveal a substantiated incident(s) of child
abuse or neglect, the agency shall:
i. Disclose the
results of the CARI background check only to the individual identified by the
Department as the perpetrator of the child abuse or neglect incident(s);
and
ii. Disclose to the foster home
applicant(s) the name of the perpetrator, if other than the applicant(s), but not
disclose to the applicant(s) any other information concerning the
incident.
5. Before a child
is placed in an approved foster home, the agency shall ensure that the foster
parent(s) signed an agreement that specifies the terms and conditions of service and
financial remuneration.
6. If a foster
home has not been used for a year, the agency shall update the evaluation of the
home before placing a child.
(c) An agency that provides foster care services
in homes located in New Jersey for children under the auspices of the Department who
are waiting for legal clearance and/or adoptive placement shall ensure that such
homes comply with the provisions of
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-27.3, the
Resource Family Parent Licensing Act.
(d) The agency shall give foster parents a
telephone number to contact in case of emergency.
(e) The pre-placement services shall be recorded
in the child's record, as specified in
N.J.A.C.
3A:50-3.6(d).