CONNECTIONS COUNT

Resources Connecting Foster Teens with Families for a Lifetime

From the Annie E. Casey Foundation/Casey Family Services

August 2007, Volume 1

Making It Possible

Need strategies to involve birth families in your state CFSR? New tools can help.

learn more>

Resources and Tools

Two new resources related to dads as permanency resources: What about the Dads? Child Welfare Agencies’ Efforts to Identify, Locate, and Involve Nonresident Fathers (PDF) and Fatherhood.gov, the new federal clearinghouse with sections for researchers and policymakers.

Questions about kinship care among social workers, policymakers, state legislators, or community partners? See Is Kinship Care Good for Kids? (PDF)

Youth and Family Perspectives

“Kayla is like a complicated plant. She has roots with us— her adoptive family—and roots with her birth family. To be healthy as an adult, the more support she has in place, the better.”

Donna Coraluzzo, foster parent

read more >

After TPR: Birth Parents as Family Resources


Increasingly, practitioners and policymakers are recognizing the benefits of birth family reconnections with foster youth, even when a return home is not possible. Some states and localities are taking this a step further by exploring the reunification of older adolescents with their birth parents, despite the termination of parental rights (TPR). In assessing the likelihood of reunification, certain factors must be considered, according to Diane Riggs of the North American Council on Adoptable Children:

  • Other permanency options have been considered and are not viable.
  • There is an established relationship between the youth and the parent: The birth parent is committed to the youth and his or her needs; and the youth wants to live with the parent.
  • Parents have a reliable support system and have made progress in addressing the emotional and concrete issues that prevented them from properly caring for their child pre-TPR.
  • Youth can care for themselves and advocate for their own needs and safety.

Policies to Overcome the TPR

As birth families increasingly become permanency resources for children in care, policymakers must consider how legal relationships between youth and parents whose right have been terminated can best be re-established. The options include:

  1. Legal guardianship with the parent. A state’s guardianship laws can be used to establish the parent’s legal guardianship. This provides parents the right to consent to medical care, enroll the youth in school, and make other decisions that require a legal relationship. In most states, however, legal guardianships end when youth reach age 18, leaving the parent and child with no legally recognized relationship in adulthood.
  2. Adoption by the parent. A state’s adoption laws can be used to fully reestablish a legally recognized parent-child relationship. Adoption, however, requires that the parent be assessed through a home study process, complete required training, and receive agency and court approval to adopt. Because birth parents must qualify to adopt and commit emotional resources and time to the process, many may not see adoption as a realistic or appropriate option.
  3. Reversal of the order terminating parental rights. California expressly provides a process for reversal of TPR. Under California law (AB 519), an adolescent in foster care may petition the court to reinstate his or her birth parent’s legal rights. The court will consider the petition when:
    • The birth parent’s rights were terminated at least three years prior to the adolescent’s petition;
    • The youth is unlikely to be adopted or does not have a case goal of adoption;
    • The parent wishes to resume parenting the youth; and,
    • There is compelling evidence that it is in the youth’s best interests to reverse the TPR.

Absent a state statute that specifically provides for reversing a TPR, courts may be able to use court rules or procedures. In New York State, for example, Section 5015 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules has been interpreted as providing courts with authority to reverse a TPR order or judgment. However, the rule provides neither the specific procedure nor the grounds that must be met for a TPR reversal.

Related Resources

Bookmark and Share

More Articles


Sustaining Birth Family Connections Post Adoption
Family Search: Reconnecting Youth in Foster Care to Family

State Spotlight


Ties with birth families—however complicated—are important to older youth in care, two different studies say.

read more>

Archive


About Connections Count


Produced by the Annie E. Casey Foundation/Casey Family Services, Connections Count is an electronic newsletter focusing on best practices, tools, research, and data on youth permanence in child welfare.

read more>

Contact Us


Casey Family Services
127 Church Street
New Haven, CT 06510
Tel: 203.401.6900
Fax: 203.401.6901

email us>