Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a)
Rights. Child Welfare
Services (CWS) makes reasonable, good-faith efforts to provide the rights in
(1) through (5) for a child in DHS custody, when doing so is in the child's
best interest, per Section 1-9-119.1 of Title 10A of the Oklahoma Statutes (10A
O.S. § 1-9-119.1).
(1)
Placement. A child deserves to:
(A) remain in the custody of his or her
parent(s) or legal custodian unless and until there is a determination in
accordance with state law that removal is appropriate;
(B) be placed in accordance with state law,
when circumstances permit and, in (i) through (iv) order of preference, with an
approved:
(i) relative;
(ii) kinship placement;
(iii) resource family who previously cared
for the child; and
(iv) resource
family;
(C) be placed in
the nearest geographic proximity to his or her home as possible;
(D) be placed with the child's sibling(s),
when the sibling(s) is also placed outside of his or her home, when
appropriate;
(E) be placed with a
child of his or her own, when appropriate;
(F) be placed with an approved resource
family that can and is willing to accommodate the child's communication needs,
when possible;
(G) be provided with
both information about a resource family or program and, when circumstances
permit, an opportunity to meet the resource parent or program staff before
placement occurs;
(H) be provided
an age-appropriate explanation why he or she is in foster care and what is
happening to him or her and to his or her family, including a sibling(s), when
possible;
(I) continue in the same
school or educational placement with minimal disruption in order to receive an
education that fits his or her age and individual needs;
(J) be treated with dignity during placement
changes.
(i) Except when a change in placement
is due to an emergency, a child and the child's attorney are given
five-judicial days' notice before a change in placement.
(ii) Prior to any placement change, the
impacted child is consulted when appropriate and advised in an age-appropriate
manner of the circumstances and the reason for the placement change. The
child's input concerning the placement change is considered, taking the child's
age and developmental level into account; and
(K) receive reasonable equipment and
assistance to transport personal possessions during placement
changes.
(2)
Safety. Efforts are made to ensure a child in DHS custody:
(A) lives in a safe, healthy, and comfortable
home;
(B) has adequate and
appropriate clothing;
(C) receives
individualized medical, dental, vision, behavioral health, and other required
services by a continuity of providers, when reasonably possible;
(D) is free of unnecessary or excessive
medication; and
(E) can report a
potential violation of personal rights without fear of punishment,
interference, coercion, or other retaliation.
(3)
Privacy. A child deserves:
(A) to have an age-appropriate expectation of
privacy in accordance with existing law as to his or her person, property, and
communications;
(B) to freely
exercise his or her own religious beliefs, including the refusal to attend any
religious activities and services; and
(C) confidentiality of all of his or her
juvenile court records consistent with existing law.
(4)
Communications. A child
deserves:
(A) written visitation plans with a
parent(s) and sibling(s), per 10A O.S. § 1-7-105;
(B) to begin visitation with a parent(s) and
sibling(s) in accordance with existing law;
(C) to have safe and reasonable
communications with his or her parent(s), sibling(s), extended family and
friends, when appropriate;
(D)
regular and meaningful access his or her attorney, guardian, and/or
court-appointed special advocate;
(E) to communicate, in private when
necessary, with any court and the judge with personal jurisdiction of his or
her case. This includes informing the court of inadequate representation
provided by any attorney or other individual tasked with advocating on his or
her behalf;
(F) the opportunity to
engage in regular, meaningful, and private communication with his or her
assigned child welfare (CW) specialist;
(G) to participate, in a manner consistent
with his or her age and developmental level in the development of, and any
revision to, the service plan;
(H)
to be presented with the service plan for his or her review and signature, when
appropriate;
(I) to be notified of,
attend, and have the opportunity to be heard in court hearings relating to his
or her case and in family meetings, when appropriate; and
(J) to have, in accordance with existing law,
all of his or her records available for review by his or her attorney and
court-appointed special advocate when such review is necessary.
(5)
Personal growth.
A child deserves:
(A) to have fair and equal
access to all available services, placements, care, treatments and benefits,
and to not be subjected to discrimination or harassment, as ensured by existing
law;
(B) to engage in reasonable,
age-appropriate day-to-day activities, including extracurricular, enrichment
and social activities, consistent with the most family-like
environment;
(C) to receive
independent living and support services and, unless circumstances or existing
law requires a document be obtained sooner, be provided identification and
permanent documents, including, but not limited to, his or her birth
certificate, Social Security card, and health records by 18 years of age, to
the extent allowed by federal and state law;
(D) the opportunity to work and develop job
skills at an age-appropriate level that is consistent with state law;
and
(E) to manage or have managed
his or her personal earnings and financial resources in a manner consistent
with his or her age and developmental level.
(b)
Balancing rights. One or
more of the rights in subsection (a) may conflict; therefore, a balanced
approach to protect these rights takes into account both the child's unique
circumstances and what is in the child's best interest.
(c)
Rights notification. A
statement of these rights is provided to:
(1)
each child upon entering foster care and at annually thereafter; and
(2) any foster parent once a child in DHS
custody enters the foster parent's home and annually thereafter.
(d)
Questions or
complaints. A child in DHS custody is encouraged to talk to the assigned
CW specialist and/or the foster parent(s) when he or she has questions or wants
to talk to someone about his or her rights. When talking with the CW specialist
or foster parent(s) is not helpful or the child is uncomfortable, a youth
advocate may be contacted at OK Foster Youth Matters at 1-800-522-8014, or a
complaint may be filed at www.okfosteryouthmatters.org.
(e)
Grievance.
(1) A child in DHS custody has the right to
file a grievance about the foster care services provided or received, without
fear of reprisal or discrimination. The grievance is filed with the Office of
Client Advocacy (OCA).
(2) After
exhausting the remedies available through the OCA grievance process, a child in
DHS custody may request intervention from the district court with jurisdiction
over his or her case to obtain relief.