22 Va. Admin. Code § 40-201-110 - Court hearings and case reviews
A. For all court hearings, local departments
shall:
1. Facilitate a meeting prior to the
development of the foster care service plan and foster care service plan review
to ensure participation and consider input from the child, the birth parents or
prior custodians, the foster or adoptive parents, relatives and fictive kin who
are interested in the child's welfare, and any other interested individuals,
who may include service providers, in the development of the service plan and
service plan review. All youth 12 years of age and older shall be given the
opportunity to choose up to two people to attend the meeting who are not the
foster parent or caseworker. All of these persons shall be involved in sharing
information for the purposes of well-informed decisions and planning for the
child with a focus on safety and permanence.
2. File petitions in accordance with
subsection L of this section and the requirements for the type of
hearing.
3. Obtain and consider the
child's input as to who should be included in the court hearing. If persons
identified by the child will not be included in the court hearing, the service
worker shall explain the reasons to the child for such a decision consistent
with the child's developmental and psychological status.
4. Inform the court of reasonable efforts
made to achieve concurrent permanency goals.
5. Document the appropriateness of the
placement, including the continued appropriateness of an out-of-state placement
if applicable.
6. Ensure the child
or youth is present for the permanency planning hearing unless the court
determines this not to be in the child's best interest.
B. The child or youth shall be consulted in
an age-appropriate manner about his permanency plan at the permanency planning
hearing and subsequent administrative panel reviews.
C. An administrative panel review shall be
held six months after a permanency planning hearing when the goal of permanent
foster care has been approved by the court. A foster care review hearing will
be held annually. The child will continue to have administrative panel reviews
or review hearings every six months until the child reaches age 18
years.
D. The local department
shall invite the child; the child's birth parents or prior custodians when
appropriate; and the child's foster or adoptive parents, placement providers,
guardian ad litem, court appointed special advocate, relatives, and service
providers to participate in the administrative panel reviews.
E. The local department shall consider all
recommendations made during the administrative panel review in planning
services for the child and birth parents or prior custodians and document the
recommendations on the department approved form. Individuals who were invited,
including those not in attendance, shall be given a copy of the results of the
administrative panel review as documented on the department approved
form.
F. A supervisory review is
required every six months for youth ages 18 to 21 years who are receiving
independent living services only.
G. An administrative panel review is required
every six months for Fostering Futures program participants unless a court
review is held.
H. In accordance
with §
16.1-242.1 of the Code of
Virginia, when a case is on appeal for termination of parental rights, the
juvenile and domestic relations district court retains jurisdiction on all
matters not on appeal. The circuit court appeal hearing may substitute for a
review hearing if the circuit court addresses the future status of the
child.
I. An adoption progress
report shall be prepared every six months after a permanency planning hearing
when the goal of adoption has been approved by the court. The adoption progress
report shall be entered into the automated child welfare data system. The child
will continue to have annual review hearings in addition to adoption progress
reports until a final order of adoption is issued or the child reaches age 18
years.
J. If a child is in the
custody of the local department and a preadoptive family has not been
identified and approved for the child, the child's guardian ad litem or the
local board of social services may file a petition to restore the previously
terminated parental rights of the child's parent in accordance with §
16.1-283.2 of the Code of
Virginia.
K. If a child has been in
foster care 15 out of the last 22 months or if the parent of a child in foster
care has been convicted of an offense as outlined in §
63.2-910.2 of the Code of
Virginia, the local department shall file a petition to terminate the parental
rights and concurrently identify, recruit, process, and approve a qualified
family for adoption of the child unless certain exceptions as outlined in
§
63.2-910.2 are met.
L. Designated nonattorney employees of a
local department may only file petitions that are outlined in this subsection.
All other petitions must be filed by an attorney, including petitions for the
termination of parental rights. In accordance with §§
16.1-260,
54.1-3900, and
63.2-332 of the Code of
Virginia, nonattorney employees of a local department may only do the
following:
1. Initiate a case on behalf of the
local department by appearing before an intake officer; and
2. Complete, sign, and file with the clerk,
on forms approved by the Supreme Court of Virginia, petitions for foster care
review hearings, petitions for permanency planning hearings, petitions to
establish paternity, motions to establish or modify support, motions to amend
or review an order, and motions for a rule to show cause.
Notes
Statutory Authority: §§ 63.2-217 and 63.2-319 of the Code of Virginia.
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