Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 749 - MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR CHILD-PLACING AGENCIES
Subchapter C - ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION
Division 1 - PLANS AND POLICIES REQUIRED DURING THE APPLICATION PROCESS
Section 749.107 - What must my conflict of interest policies include?
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
Your conflict of interest policies must include:
(1) A statement that child placement staff and child placement management staff will not conduct, review, or approve foster home screenings, adoptive home screenings, or post-placement adoptive reports if there is a conflict of interest or bias with the family or the child. For example, there would be a conflict of interest if the staff is related to or has a personal relationship with the family or the child;
(2) A statement that it is a conflict of interest for your agency to verify as a foster parent or approve as an adoptive parent any of the following persons or relatives of any of the following persons: any current owner, member of the governing body, executive director, or any other employee or contract service provider of your agency;
(3) A code of conduct on the relationship between your agency's owners (including members of the governing body, if applicable), employees, contract service providers, children in placement, children's families, and prospective and current foster and adoptive parents, including required parameters for entering into independent financial relationships or transactions;
(4) For corporations or other types of business entities, a statement that the majority of the voting members of the governing body must consist of persons who do not have a conflict of interest that would potentially interfere with objective decision making. Persons who have such a conflict of interest include the following:
(5) For adoptions, you may state whether the person whom you evaluated appears to be suitable for adoption, even if there are other individuals requesting adoption. If you have not evaluated parties of a disputed case, you must refrain from making an adoption or custody recommendation, unless otherwise directed by the court.