(1)
A child may petition the juvenile court to reinstate the
previously terminated parental rights of his or her parent under
the following circumstances:
(a) The child was previously found to be a dependent child
under this chapter;
(b) The child's parent's rights were terminated in a
proceeding under this chapter;
(c) The child has not achieved his or her permanency plan
within three years of a final order of termination; and
(d) The child must be at least twelve years old at the time
the petition is filed. Upon the child's motion for good cause
shown, or on its own motion, the court may hear a petition filed
by a child younger than twelve years old.
(2) A child seeking to petition under this section shall be
provided counsel at no cost to the child.
(3) The petition must be signed by the child in the absence
of a showing of good cause as to why the child could not do so.
(4) If, after a threshold hearing to consider the parent's
apparent fitness and interest in reinstatement of parental
rights, the court finds by a preponderance of the evidence that
the best interests of the child may be served by reinstatement of
parental rights, the juvenile court shall order that a hearing on
the merits of the petition be held.
(5) The court shall give prior notice for any proceeding
under this section, or cause prior notice to be given, to the
department or the supervising agency, the child's attorney, and
the child. The court shall also order the department or
supervising agency to give prior notice of any hearing to the
child's former parent whose parental rights are the subject of
the petition, any parent whose rights have not been terminated,
the child's current foster parent, relative caregiver, guardian
or custodian, and the child's tribe, if applicable.
(6) The juvenile court shall conditionally grant the
petition if it finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
child has not achieved his or her permanency plan and is not
likely to imminently achieve his or her permanency plan and that
reinstatement of parental rights is in the child's best interest.
In determining whether reinstatement is in the child's best
interest the court shall consider, but is not limited to, the
following:
(a) Whether the parent whose rights are to be reinstated is
a fit parent and has remedied his or her deficits as provided in
the record of the prior termination proceedings and prior
termination order;
(b) The age and maturity of the child, and the ability of
the child to express his or her preference;
(c) Whether the reinstatement of parental rights will
present a risk to the child's health, welfare, or safety; and
(d) Other material changes in circumstances, if any, that
may have occurred which warrant the granting of the petition.
(7) In determining whether the child has or has not achieved
his or her permanency plan or whether the child is likely to
achieve his or her permanency plan, the department or supervising
agency shall provide the court, and the court shall review,
information related to any efforts to achieve the permanency plan
including efforts to achieve adoption or a permanent
guardianship.
(8)(a) If the court conditionally grants the petition under
subsection (6) of this section, the case will be continued for
six months and a temporary order of reinstatement entered.
During this period, the child shall be placed in the custody of
the parent. The department or supervising agency shall develop a
permanency plan for the child reflecting the plan to be
reunification and shall provide transition services to the family
as appropriate.
(b) If the child must be removed from the parent due to
abuse or neglect allegations prior to the expiration of the
conditional six-month period, the court shall dismiss the
petition for reinstatement of parental rights if the court finds
the allegations have been proven by a preponderance of the
evidence.
(c) If the child has been successfully placed with the
parent for six months, the court order reinstating parental
rights remains in effect and the court shall dismiss the
dependency.
(9) After the child has been placed with the parent for six
months, the court shall hold a hearing. If the placement with
the parent has been successful, the court shall enter a final
order of reinstatement of parental rights, which shall restore
all rights, powers, privileges, immunities, duties, and
obligations of the parent as to the child, including those
relating to custody, control, and support of the child. The
court shall dismiss the dependency and direct the clerk's office
to provide a certified copy of the final order of reinstatement
of parental rights to the parent at no cost.
(10) The granting of the petition under this section does
not vacate or otherwise affect the validity of the original
termination order.
(11) Any parent whose rights are reinstated under this
section shall not be liable for any child support owed to the
department pursuant to RCW 13.34.160 or Title 26 RCW or costs of
other services provided to a child for the time period from the
date of termination of parental rights to the date parental
rights are reinstated.
(12) A proceeding to reinstate parental rights is a separate
action from the termination of parental rights proceeding and
does not vacate the original termination of parental rights. An
order granted under this section reinstates the parental rights
to the child. This reinstatement is a recognition that the
situation of the parent and child have changed since the time of
the termination of parental rights and reunification is now
appropriate.
(13) This section is retroactive and applies to any child
who is under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court at the time
of the hearing regardless of the date parental rights were
terminated.
(14) The state, the department, the supervising agency, and
its employees are not liable for civil damages resulting from any
act or omission in the provision of services under this section,
unless the act or omission constitutes gross negligence. This
section does not create any duty and shall not be construed to
create a duty where none exists. This section does not create a
cause of action against the state, the department, the
supervising agency, or its employees concerning the original
termination.
[2009 c 520 § 36; 2008 c 267 § 1; 2007 c 413 § 1.]
NOTES:
Severability -- 2007 c 413: "If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or circumstances is not affected." [2007 c 413 § 13.]