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 707.473 - What is refusal to assume parental responsibility (RAPR)?
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Neglect is defined in Texas Family Code (TFC) §261.001(4) as an act or failure to act by a person responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare evidencing the person 's blatant disregard for the consequences of the act or failure to act that results in harm to the child or that creates an immediate danger to the child's physical health or safety. RAPR is a subset of the statutory definition of neglect and involves the following acts or omissions by a person: the failure by the person responsible for a child's care, custody, or welfare to permit the child to return to the child's home without arranging for the necessary care for the child after the child has been absent from the home for any reason, including having been in residential placement or having run away.
(b) We will not make a finding of abuse or neglect against you and will not put your name on the child abuse and neglect central registry described in subchapter C, chapter 702, of this title (relating to Child Abuse and Neglect Central Registry) if you refuse to permit the child to remain in or return to the child's home because:
(c) In this subsection, the term severe emotional disturbance means a mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder of sufficient duration to result in functional impairment that substantially interferes with or limits a person's role or ability to function in family, school, or community activities as defined in Texas Family Code § 261.001(9). We consider a child to have a severe emotional disturbance when a licensed mental health professional has given the child a mental health diagnosis that:
(d) When determining whether the refusal to permit a child to remain in or return to the child's home was based solely on your inability to obtain mental health services necessary to protect the safety and well-being of the child and whether you exhausted all reasonable means available to obtain mental health services and prevent the removal of the child, we will consider factors including, but not limited to, the following:
(e) We will review records in the central registry and remove your name if you were included in the central registry when the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services was named managing conservator of your child who has a severe emotional disturbance solely, so you could obtain mental health services for the child.