Texas Administrative Code
Title 40 - SOCIAL SERVICES AND ASSISTANCE
Part 19 - DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY AND PROTECTIVE SERVICES
Chapter 707 - CHILD PROTECTIVE INVESTIGATIONS
Subchapter A - INVESTIGATIONS
Division 1 - INTAKE, INVESTIGATION AND ASSESSMENT
Section 707.451 - What terms and definitions are used in reports, investigations, and assessments of abuse and neglect?
Universal Citation: 40 TX Admin Code ยง 707.451
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) The following terms have the following meanings when used in this subchapter:
(1) An absent parent or non-custodial
parent--a parent who, at the time of the occurrence of the conduct which is the
basis for the investigation, does not have actual possession or control of the
child and is not primarily responsible for the child's care because of any of
the following:
(A) Divorce;
(B) Separation;
(C) Incarceration; or
(D) Any other reason that results in the
parent not having actual possession or control and primary responsibility of
the child.
(2)
unforeseen, unexpected, or unplanned act or event that occurs unintentionally
and causes or threatens physical injury despite exercising the care and
diligence that a reasonable and prudent person would exercise under similar
circumstances to avoid the risk of injury.
(3) Blatant disregard--the real and
significant harm or threat of harm to the child as a result of the person's
act(s) or omission(s):
(A) Would have been
obvious to a reasonable person in the same situation; and
(B) The reasonable person would have known to
take precautionary measures to protect the child from the impending
harm.
(4) Child--person
under 18 years of age who is not and has not been married or who has not had
the disabilities of minority removed for general purposes.
(5) Child safety--the absence of danger or
the presence of protective actions demonstrated over time by a parent or
caregiver that mitigates dangers to the child.
(6) Danger--behaviors or conditions that
place a child in imminent danger of serious harm.
(7) Day--calendar day unless otherwise
specified.
(8) Guardian--anyone
named as "guardian of the person of a child" by a probate court
order.
(9) Household--
(A) A unit composed of persons living
together in the same dwelling, whether or not they are related to each other,
when the dwelling consists of:
(i) The child's
family's household, including the households of both parents when the parents
reside separately;
(ii) A household
in which the parent has arranged for or authorized placement of the child;
or
(iii) A household in which the
child is legally placed by a parent or a court.
(B) During the receipt and investigation of
reports of child abuse and neglect, we treat an unrelated person who resides
elsewhere or whose place of residence cannot be determined as a member of the
household if the person is at least 10 years old and either:
(i) Has regular free access to the household;
or
(ii) When in the household
dwelling takes care of or assumes responsibility for children in the
household.
(10) Immediate danger to child's physical
health or safety--the person's act(s) or omission(s) placed the child in a
situation that has resulted in or would have resulted in physical or mental
harm to the child.
(11)
Investigations--a program of the Child Protective Investigations division of
the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services that investigates
allegations of child abuse and neglect by a person responsible for the child's
care, custody, or welfare as defined in Texas Family Code §
261.001(5)(A) -
(C).
(12) Managing or possessory conservator--a
person legally responsible for a child as the result of a court
order.
(13) Parent--the mother, a
man presumed to be the biological father or who has been adjudicated to be the
biological father by a court of competent jurisdiction, or an adoptive mother
or father. The term does not include a parent as to whom the parent-child
relationship has been terminated.
(14) Preponderance of evidence--evidence
which is of greater weight or more convincing than the evidence which is
offered in opposition to it; that is, evidence which as a whole shows that the
fact sought to be proved is more probable than not.
(15) Protective actions--specific actions
that have been taken by an individual or family to directly address the danger
of abuse and neglect and are demonstrated over time.
(16) Reasonable effort to prevent--actions
that a person responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare would have
taken to protect a child from abuse the person knew or reasonably should have
known was occurring. It is not required for that person to have directly
perpetrated the abuse.
(17)
Reporter--an individual who makes a report to the Texas Department of Family
and Protective Services or a duly constituted law enforcement agency alleging
the abuse or neglect of a child. If more than one individual makes a report
alleging abuse or neglect of the same child, all such individuals shall have
the designation of a reporter.
(18)
Risk factors--elements of individual and family functioning that may place a
child at risk of abuse or neglect.
(19) Risk of child abuse or neglect--a
reasonable likelihood that in the foreseeable future there will be an
occurrence of child abuse or neglect as defined in Texas Family Code (TFC)
§261.001. The presence of risk does not constitute abuse or neglect as
defined in TFC §261.001 but qualifies children and families to receive
protective services as specified in §700.311(a)(1), subchapter C, chapter
700, of this title (relating to Eligible Individuals).
(20) Strengths--resources and conditions of
an individual or the family that increase the likelihood or ability to protect
a child from abuse or neglect but do not fully address the danger to the
child.
(21) Substantial harm--real
and significant physical injury or damage to a child.
(22) Substantial risk--a real and significant
possibility or likelihood.
(b) Terms not defined in this subchapter have the meaning given in the Texas Family Code, including definitions in Chapter 101 and § 261.001, Texas Family Code, and other relevant law, or their ordinary meaning if not defined in law.
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