AB 1067, as amended, Gipson. Foster children: rights.
(1) Existing law provides that it is the policy of the state that all minors and nonminors in foster care have specified rights, including, among others, the right to be free of the administration of medication or chemical substances, unless authorized by a physician.
This bill would require the State Department of Social Services to convene a working group regarding the specified rights of all minors and nonminors in foster care in order to educate them, foster care providers, and others, and would require the working group to be composed of, among others, the County Welfare Directors Association of California and foster children advocacy groups. The bill would provide the responsibilities of the working group, including making recommendations to the Legislature, by January 1, 2018, for revising the rights, and developing standardized information regarding the revised rights, by July 1, 2018, as specified.
(2) Existing law requires, at least once every 6 months, at the time of a regularly scheduled placement agency contact with the foster child, a foster child’s social worker or probation officer to inform the child of the above-mentioned rights.
This bill would additionally require the social worker or probation officer to inform the care provider and child and family team, if applicable, of those rights, provide a written copy of the rights to the child, and document in the case plan that he or she has informed the child of, and has provided the child with a written copy of, his or her rights. By imposing duties on local officials, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
begin insert(3) This bill would incorporate additional changes in Section 16501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code proposed by AB 1849 and AB 1997, that would become operative only if this bill and either or both of those bills are chaptered and become effective on or before January 1, 2017, and this bill is chaptered last.
end insert(3)
end deletebegin insert(4)end insert The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 16001.8 is added to the Welfare and
2Institutions Code, to read:
(a) The State Department of Social Services shall
4convene a working group regarding the rights of all minors and
5nonminors in foster care, as specified in Section 16001.9, in order
6to educate foster youth, foster care providers, and others.
7Responsibilities of the working group shall include all of the
8following:
P3 1(1) By January 1, 2018, make recommendations to the
2Legislature for revising the rights based on a review of state law.
3(2) By July 1, 2018, develop standardized information regarding
4the revised rights in an age-appropriate manner and reflective of
5any relevant licensing requirements with respect to
the foster care
6providers’ responsibilities to adequately supervise children in care.
7(3) By July 1, 2018, develop recommendations regarding
8methods for disseminating the standardized information specified
9in paragraph (2), including whether to require the signature of a
10foster child verifying that he or she has received and understands
11his or her rights.
12(4) By July 1, 2018, develop recommendations for measuring
13and improving, if necessary, the degree to which foster youth are
14adequately informed of their rights.
15 (b) The working group shall be composed of all of the following:
16(1) The Office of the State Foster Care Ombudsperson.
17(2) The bureau at the Department of Justice whose mission is
18to protect the rights of children.
19(3) The County Welfare Directors Association of California.
20(4) The Chief Probation Officers of California.
21(5) The County Behavioral Health Directors Association of
22California.
23(6) Current and former foster youth.
24(7) Foster parents and caregivers.
25(8) Foster children advocacy groups.
26(9) Foster care provider associations.
27(10) Any other interested parties.
Section 16501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code
29 is amended to read:
(a) (1) The Legislature finds and declares that the
31foundation and central unifying tool in child welfare services is
32the case plan.
33(2) The Legislature further finds and declares that a case plan
34ensures that the child receives protection and safe and proper care
35and case management, and that services are provided to the child
36and parents or other caretakers, as appropriate, in order to improve
37conditions in the parent’s home, to facilitate the safe return of the
38child to a safe home or the permanent placement of the child, and
39to address the needs of the child while in foster care.
P4 1(3) The
agency shall consider the recommendations of the child
2and family team, as defined in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of
3Section 16501, if any are available. The agency shall document
4the rationale for any inconsistencies between the case plan and the
5child and family team recommendations.
6(b) (1) A case plan shall be based upon the principles of this
7section and the input from the child and family team.
8(2) The case plan shall document that a preplacement assessment
9of the service needs of the child and family, and preplacement
10preventive services, have been provided, and that reasonable efforts
11to prevent out-of-home placement have been made. Preplacement
12services may include intensive mental health services in the home
13or a community setting and the reasonable efforts
made to prevent
14out-of-home placement.
15(3) In determining the reasonable services to be offered or
16
provided, the child’s health and safety shall be the paramount
17concerns.
18(4) Upon a determination pursuant to paragraph (1) of
19subdivision (e) of Section 361.5 that reasonable services will be
20offered to a parent who is incarcerated in a county jail or state
21prison, detained by the United States Department of Homeland
22Security, or deported to his or her country of origin, the case plan
23shall include information, to the extent possible, about a parent’s
24incarceration in a county jail or the state prison, detention by the
25United States Department of Homeland Security, or deportation
26during the time that a minor child of that parent is involved in
27dependency care.
28(5) Reasonable services shall be offered or provided to make it
29possible for a child to return to a
safe home environment, unless,
30pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (e) of Section 361.5, the court
31determines that reunification services shall not be provided.
32(6) If reasonable services are not ordered, or are terminated,
33reasonable efforts shall be made to place the child in a timely
34manner in accordance with the permanent plan and to complete
35all steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
36(c) If out-of-home placement is used to attain case plan goals,
37the case plan shall consider the recommendations of the child and
38family team.
39(d) (1) The case plan shall include a description of the type of
40home or institution in which the child is to be placed, and the
P5 1reasons for that
placement decision. The decision regarding choice
2of placement shall be based upon selection of a safe setting that is
3the least restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
4experiences and the most appropriate setting that meets the child’s
5individual needs and is available, in proximity to the parent’s home,
6in proximity to the child’s school, and consistent with the selection
7of the environment best suited to meet the child’s special needs
8and best interests. The selection shall consider, in order of priority,
9placement with relatives, nonrelated extended family members,
10and tribal members; foster family homes, resource families, and
11nontreatment certified homes of foster family agencies; followed
12by treatment and intensive treatment certified homes of foster
13family agencies; or multidimensional treatment foster care homes
14or therapeutic foster care homes; group care placements in the
15order
of short-term residential treatment centers, group homes,
16community treatment facilities, and out-of-state residential
17treatment pursuant to Part 5 (commencing with Section 7900) of
18Division 12 of the Family Code.
19(2) If a short-term intensive treatment center placement is
20selected for a child, the case plan shall indicate the needs of the
21child that necessitate this placement, the plan for transitioning the
22child to a less restrictive environment, and the projected timeline
23by which the child will be transitioned to a less restrictive
24environment. This section of the case plan shall be reviewed and
25updated at least semiannually.
26(A) The case plan for placements in a group home, or
27commencing January 1, 2017, in a short-term residential treatment
28center, shall indicate that the
county has taken into consideration
29Section 16010.8.
30(B) After January 1, 2017, a child and family team meeting as
31begin delete definedend deletebegin insert describedend insert in Section 16501 shall be convened by the county
32placing agency for the purpose of identifying the supports and
33services needed to achieve permanency and enable the child or
34youth to be placed in the least restrictive family setting that
35promotes normal childhood experiences.
36(3) On or after January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, as
37defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who is receiving
38AFDC-FC benefits and who is up to 21 years of age pursuant to
39Section
11403, in addition to the above requirements, the selection
40of the placement, including a supervised independent living
P6 1placement, as described in subdivision (w) of Section 11400, shall
2also be based upon the developmental needs of young adults by
3providing opportunities to have incremental responsibilities that
4prepare a nonminor dependent to transition to successful adulthood.
5If admission to, or continuation in, a group home or short-term
6residential treatment center placement is being considered for a
7nonminor dependent, the group home or short-term residential
8treatment center placement approval decision shall include a
9youth-driven, team-based case planning process, as defined by the
10department, in consultation with stakeholders. The case plan shall
11consider the full range of placement options, and shall specify why
12admission to, or continuation in, a group home placement is the
13best
alternative available at the time to meet the special needs or
14well-being of the nonminor dependent, and how the placement
15will contribute to the nonminor dependent’s transition to successful
16adulthood. The case plan shall specify the treatment strategies that
17will be used to prepare the nonminor dependent for discharge to
18a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
19experiences, including a target date for discharge from the group
20home placement. The placement shall be reviewed and updated
21on a regular, periodic basis to ensure that continuation in the group
22home placement remains in the best interests of the nonminor
23dependent and that progress is being made in achieving case plan
24goals leading to successful adulthood. The group home placement
25planning process shall begin as soon as it becomes clear to the
26county welfare department or probation office that a foster child
27in
group home placement is likely to remain in group home
28placement on his or her 18th birthday, in order to expedite the
29transition to a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal
30childhood experiences, if he or she becomes a nonminor dependent.
31The case planning process shall include informing the youth of all
32of his or her options, including, but not limited to, admission to
33or continuation in a group home placement. Consideration for
34continuation of existing group home placement for a nonminor
35dependent under 19 years of age may include the need to stay in
36the same placement in order to complete high school. After a
37nonminor dependent either completes high school or attains his or
38her 19th birthday, whichever is earlier, continuation in or admission
39to a group home placement is prohibited unless the nonminor
40dependent satisfies the conditions of paragraph (5) of subdivision
P6 1(b) of
Section 11403, and group home placement functions as a
2short-term transition to the appropriate system of care. Treatment
3services provided by the group home placement to the nonminor
4dependent to alleviate or ameliorate the medical condition, as
5described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (b) of Section 11403,
6shall not constitute the sole basis to disqualify a nonminor
7dependent from the group home placement.
8(4) In addition to the requirements of paragraphs (1) to (3),
9inclusive, and taking into account other statutory considerations
10regarding placement, the selection of the most appropriate home
11that will meet the child’s special needs and best interests shall also
12promote educational stability by taking into consideration
13proximity to the child’s school of origin, and school attendance
14area, the number of school transfers the child has previously
15experienced,
and the child’s school matriculation schedule, in
16addition to other indicators of educational stability that the
17
Legislature hereby encourages the State Department of Social
18Services and the State Department of Education to develop.
19(e) A written case plan shall be completed within a maximum
20of 60 days of the initial removal of the child or of the in-person
21response required under subdivision (f) of Section 16501 if the
22child has not been removed from his or her home, or by the date
23of the dispositional hearing pursuant to Section 358, whichever
24occurs first. The case plan shall be updated, as the service needs
25of the child and family dictate. At a minimum, the case plan shall
26be updated in conjunction with each status review hearing
27conducted pursuant to Sections 364, 366, 366.3, and 366.31, and
28the hearing conducted pursuant to Section 366.26, but no less
29frequently than once every six months. Each updated case plan
30shall include a
description of the services that have been provided
31to the child under the plan and an evaluation of the appropriateness
32
and effectiveness of those services.
33(1) It is the intent of the Legislature that extending the maximum
34time available for preparing a written case plan from 30 to 60 days
35will afford caseworkers time to actively engage families, and to
36solicit and integrate into the case plan the input of the child and
37the child’s family, as well as the input of relatives and other
38interested parties.
39(2) The extension of the maximum time available for preparing
40a written case plan from the 30 to 60 days shall be effective 90
P8 1days after the date that the department gives counties written notice
2that necessary changes have been made to the Child Welfare
3Services/Case Management System (CWS/CMS) to account for
4the 60-day timeframe for preparing a written case plan.
5(f) The child welfare services case plan shall be comprehensive
6enough to meet the juvenile court dependency proceedings
7requirements pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section 300)
8of Chapter 2 of Part 1 of Division 2.
9(g) The case plan shall be developed considering the
10recommendations of the child and family team, as follows:
11(1) The case plan shall be based upon an assessment of the
12circumstances that required child welfare services intervention.
13The child shall be involved in developing the case plan as age and
14developmentally appropriate.
15(2) The case plan shall identify specific goals and the
16appropriateness of the planned services in meeting those
goals.
17(3) The case plan shall identify the original allegations of abuse
18or neglect, as defined in Article 2.5 (commencing with Section
1911164) of Chapter 2 of Title 1 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, or the
20conditions cited as the basis for declaring the child a dependent of
21the court pursuant to Section 300, or all of these, and the other
22precipitating incidents that led to child welfare services
23intervention.
24(4) The case plan shall include a description of the schedule of
25the placement agency contacts with the child and the family or
26other caretakers. The frequency of these contacts shall be in
27accordance with regulations adopted by the State Department of
28Social Services. If the child has been placed in foster care out of
29state, the county social worker or probation officer, or
a social
30worker or probation officer on the staff of the agency in the state
31in which the child has been placed, shall visit the child in a foster
32family home or the home of a relative, consistent with federal law
33and in accordance with the department’s approved state plan. For
34children in out-of-state group home facilities, visits shall be
35conducted at least monthly, pursuant to Section 16516.5. At least
36once every six months, at the time of a regularly scheduled
37placement agency contact with the foster child, and at each
38placement change, the child’s social worker or probation officer
39shall inform the child, the care provider, and the child and family
40team, if applicable, of the child’s rights as a foster child, as
P9 1specified in Section 16001.9, and shall provide a written copy of
2the rights to the child as part of the explanation. The social worker
3or probation officer shall provide the
information to the child in a
4manner appropriate to the age or developmental level of the child.
5The social worker or probation officer shall document in the case
6plan that he or she has informed the child of, and has provided the
7child with a written copy of, his or her rights.
8(5) (A) When out-of-home services are used, the frequency of
9contact between the natural parents or legal guardians and the child
10shall be specified in the case plan. The frequency of those contacts
11shall reflect overall case goals, and consider other principles
12outlined in this section.
13(B) Information regarding any court-ordered visitation between
14the child and the natural parents or legal guardians, and the terms
15and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting the
16safety
of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
17caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
18(6) When out-of-home placement is made, the case plan shall
19include provisions for the development and maintenance of sibling
20relationships as specified in subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) of Section
2116002. If appropriate, when siblings who are dependents of the
22juvenile court are not placed together, the social worker for each
23child, if different, shall communicate with each of the other social
24workers and ensure that the child’s siblings are informed of
25significant life events that occur within their extended family.
26Unless it has been determined that it is inappropriate in a particular
27case to keep siblings informed of significant life events that occur
28within the extended family, the social worker shall determine the
29appropriate
means and setting for disclosure of this information
30to the child commensurate with the child’s age and emotional
31well-being. These significant life events shall include, but shall
32not be limited to, the following:
33(A) The death of an immediate relative.
34(B) The birth of a sibling.
35(C) Significant changes regarding a dependent child, unless the
36child objects to the sharing of the information with his or her
37siblings, including changes in placement, major medical or mental
38health diagnoses, treatments, or hospitalizations, arrests, and
39changes in the permanent plan.
P10 1(7) If out-of-home placement is made in a foster family home,
2group home, or other child
care institution that is either a
3substantial distance from the home of the child’s parent or out of
4state, the case plan shall specify the reasons why that placement
5is in the best interest of the child. When an out-of-state group home
6placement is recommended or made, the case plan shall, in
7addition, specify compliance with Section 7911.1 of the Family
8Code.
9(8) A case plan shall ensure the educational stability of the child
10while in foster care and shall include both of the following:
11(A) An assurance that the placement takes into account the
12appropriateness of the current educational setting and the proximity
13to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement.
14(B) An assurance that the placement agency has
coordinated
15with the person holding the right to make educational decisions
16for the child and appropriate local educational agencies to ensure
17that the child remains in the school in which the child is enrolled
18at the time of placement or, if remaining in that school is not in
19the best interests of the child, assurances by the placement agency
20and the local educational agency to provide immediate and
21appropriate enrollment in a new school and to provide all of the
22child’s educational records to the new school.
23(9) (A) If out-of-home services are used, or if parental rights
24have been terminated and the case plan is placement for adoption,
25the case plan shall include a recommendation regarding the
26appropriateness of unsupervised visitation between the child and
27any of the child’s siblings. This recommendation shall include
a
28statement regarding the child’s and the siblings’ willingness to
29participate in unsupervised visitation. If the case plan includes a
30recommendation for unsupervised sibling visitation, the plan shall
31also note that information necessary to accomplish this visitation
32has been provided to the child or to the child’s siblings.
33(B) Information regarding the schedule and frequency of the
34visits between the child and siblings, as well as any court-ordered
35terms and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting
36the safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
37caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
38(10) If out-of-home services are used and the goal is
39reunification, the case plan shall describe the services to be
40provided to
assist in reunification and the services to be provided
P11 1concurrently to achieve legal permanency if efforts to reunify fail.
2The plan shall also consider in-state and out-of-state placements,
3the importance of developing and maintaining sibling relationships
4pursuant to Section 16002, and the desire and willingness of the
5caregiver to provide legal permanency for the child if reunification
6is unsuccessful.
7(11) If out-of-home services are used, the child has been in care
8for at least 12 months, and the goal is not adoptive placement, the
9case plan shall include documentation of the compelling reason
10or reasons why termination of parental rights is not in the child’s
11best interest. A determination completed or updated within the
12past 12 months by the department when it is acting as an adoption
13agency or by a licensed adoption agency that it is
unlikely that the
14child will be adopted, or that one of the conditions described in
15paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 366.26 applies, shall
16be deemed a compelling reason.
17(12) (A) Parents and legal guardians shall have an opportunity
18to review the case plan, and to sign it whenever possible, and then
19shall receive a copy of the plan. In a voluntary service or placement
20agreement, the parents or legal guardians shall be required to
21review and sign the case plan. Whenever possible, parents and
22legal guardians shall participate in the development of the case
23plan. Commencing January 1, 2012, for nonminor dependents, as
24defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who are receiving
25AFDC-FC or CalWORKs assistance and who are up to 21 years
26of age pursuant to Section 11403, the transitional independent
27living
case plan, as set forth in subdivision (y) of Section 11400,
28shall be developed with, and signed by, the nonminor.
29(B) Parents and legal guardians shall be advised that, pursuant
30to Section 1228.1 of the Evidence Code, neither their signature on
31the child welfare services case plan nor their acceptance of any
32services prescribed in the child welfare services case plan shall
33constitute an admission of guilt or be used as evidence against the
34parent or legal guardian in a court of law. However, they shall also
35be advised that the parent’s or guardian’s failure to cooperate,
36except for good cause, in the provision of services specified in the
37child welfare services case plan may be used in any hearing held
38pursuant to Section 366.21, 366.22, or 366.25 of this code as
39evidence.
P12 1(13) A child shall be given a meaningful opportunity to
2participate in the development of the case plan and state his or her
3preference for foster care placement. A child who is 12 years of
4age or older and in a permanent placement shall also be given the
5opportunity to review the case plan, sign the case plan, and receive
6a copy of the case plan.
7(14) The case plan shall be included in the court report and shall
8be considered by the court at the initial hearing and each review
9hearing. Modifications to the case plan made during the period
10between review hearings need not be approved by the court if the
11casework supervisor for that case determines that the modifications
12further the goals of the plan. If out-of-home services are used with
13the goal of family reunification, the case plan shall consider and
14describe the application of
subdivision (b) of Section 11203.
15(15) (A) If the case plan has as its goal for the child a permanent
16plan of adoption or legal guardianship, it shall include a statement
17of the child’s wishes regarding their permanent placement plan
18and an assessment of those stated wishes. The agency shall also
19include documentation of the steps the agency is taking to find an
20adoptive family or other permanent living arrangements for the
21child; to place the child with an adoptive family, an appropriate
22and willing relative, or a legal guardian, and to finalize the adoption
23or legal guardianship. At a minimum, the documentation shall
24include child-specific recruitment efforts, such as the use of state,
25regional, and national adoption exchanges, including electronic
26exchange systems, when the child has been freed for adoption.
27Regardless
of whether the child has been freed for adoption,
28documentation shall include a description of any barriers to
29achieving legal permanence and the steps the agency will take to
30address those barriers. If the plan is for kinship guardianship, the
31case plan shall document how the child meets the kinship
32guardianship eligibility requirements.
33(B) When the child is 16 years of age or older and is in another
34planned permanent living arrangement, the case plan shall identify
35the intensive and ongoing efforts to return the child to the home
36of the parent, place the child for adoption, place the child for tribal
37customary adoption in the case of an Indian child, establish a legal
38guardianship, or place the child nonminor dependent with a fit and
39willing relative, as appropriate. Efforts shall include the use of
P13 1technology, including social
media, to find biological family
2members of the child.
3(16) (A) (i) For a child who is 14 or 15 years of age, the case
4plan shall include a written description of the programs and services
5that will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests,
6to prepare for the transition from foster care to successful
7adulthood. The description may be included in the document
8described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (18).
9(ii) When appropriate, for a child who is 16 years of age or older
10and, commencing January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, the
11case plan shall include the transitional independent living plan
12(TILP), a written description of the programs and services that
13will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests, to
14prepare
for the transition from foster care to successful adulthood,
15and, in addition, whether the youth has an in-progress application
16pending for Title XVI Supplemental Security Income benefits or
17for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status or other applicable
18application for legal residency and an active dependency case is
19required for that application. When appropriate, for a nonminor
20dependent, the transitional independent living case plan, as
21described in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, shall include the
22TILP, a written description of the programs and services that will
23help the nonminor dependent, consistent with his or her best
24interests, to prepare for transition from foster care and assist the
25youth in meeting the eligibility criteria set forth in paragraphs (1)
26to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (b) of Section 11403. If applicable,
27the case plan shall describe the individualized supervision provided
28in
the supervised independent living placement as defined in
29subdivision (w) of Section 11400. The case plan shall be developed
30with the child or nonminor dependent and individuals identified
31as important to the child or nonminor dependent, and shall include
32steps the agency is taking to ensure that the child or nonminor
33dependent achieves permanence, including maintaining or
34obtaining permanent connections to caring and committed adults.
35(B) During the 90-day period prior to the participant attaining
3618 years of age or older as the state may elect under Section
37475(8)(B)(iii) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.
38675(8)(B)(iii)), whether during that period foster care maintenance
39payments are being made on the child’s behalf or the child is
40receiving benefits or services under Section 477 of the federal
P14 1Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. Sec. 677), a caseworker or other
2appropriate agency staff or probation officer and other
3representatives of the participant, as appropriate, shall provide the
4youth or nonminor dependent with assistance and support in
5developing the written 90-day transition plan, that is personalized
6at the direction of the child, information as detailed as the
7participant elects that shall include, but not be limited to, options
8regarding housing, health insurance, education, local opportunities
9for mentors and continuing support services, and workforce
10supports and employment services, a power of attorney for health
11care, and information regarding the advance health care directive
12form.
13(C) For youth 14 years of age or older, the case plan shall
14include documentation that a consumer credit report was requested
15annually from each of the three
major credit reporting agencies at
16no charge to the youth and that any results were provided to the
17youth. For nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include
18documentation that the county assisted the nonminor dependent
19in obtaining his or her reports. The case plan shall include
20documentation of barriers, if any, to obtaining the credit reports.
21If the consumer credit report reveals any accounts, the case plan
22shall detail how the county ensured the youth received assistance
23with interpreting the credit report and resolving any inaccuracies,
24including any referrals made for the assistance.
25(17) For youth 14 years of age or older and nonminor
26dependents, the case plan shall be developed in consultation with
27the youth. At the youth’s option, the consultation may include up
28to two members of the case planning team who are chosen by the
29youth
and who are not foster parents of, or caseworkers for, the
30youth. The agency, at any time, may reject an individual selected
31by the youth to be a member of the case planning team if the
32agency has good cause to believe that the individual would not act
33in the youth’s best interest. One individual selected by the youth
34to be a member of the case planning team may be designated to
35 be the youth’s adviser and advocate with respect to the application
36of the reasonable and prudent parent standard to the youth, as
37necessary.
38(18) For youth in foster care 14 years of age and older and
39nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include both of the
40following:
P15 1(A) A document that describes the youth’s rights with respect
2to education, health, visitation, and court participation, the
right
3to be annually provided with copies of his or her credit reports at
4no cost while in foster care pursuant to Section 10618.6, and the
5right to stay safe and avoid exploitation.
6(B) A signed acknowledgment by the youth that he or she has
7been provided a copy of the document and that the rights described
8in the document have been explained to the youth in an
9age-appropriate manner.
10(19) The case plan for a child or nonminor dependent who is,
11or who is at risk of becoming, the victim of commercial sexual
12exploitation, shall document the services provided to address that
13issue.
14(h) If the court finds, after considering the case plan, that
15unsupervised sibling visitation is appropriate and has been
16consented to,
the court shall order that the child or the child’s
17siblings, the child’s current caregiver, and the child’s prospective
18adoptive parents, if applicable, be provided with information
19necessary to accomplish this visitation. This section does not
20require or prohibit the social worker’s facilitation, transportation,
21or supervision of visits between the child and his or her siblings.
22(i) The case plan documentation on sibling placements required
23under this section shall not require modification of existing case
24plan forms until the Child Welfarebegin delete Service/Caseend deletebegin insert Services/Caseend insert
25 Management System (CWS/CMS) is implemented on a statewide
26basis.
27(j) When a child is 10 years of age or older and has been in
28out-of-home placement for six months or longer, the case plan
29shall include an identification of individuals, other than the child’s
30siblings, who are important to the child and actions necessary to
31maintain the child’s relationship with those individuals, provided
32that those relationships are in the best interest of the child. The
33social worker or probation officer shall ask every child who is 10
34years of age or older and who has been in out-of-home placement
35for six months or longer to identify individuals other than the
36child’s siblings who are important to the child, and may ask any
37other child to provide that information, or may seek that
38information from the child and family team, as appropriate. The
39social worker or probation officer shall make efforts to identify
P16 1other individuals who are important to the child, consistent
with
2the child’s best interests.
3(k) The child’s caregiver shall be provided a copy of a plan
4outlining the child’s needs and services. The nonminor dependent’s
5caregiver shall be provided with a copy of the nonminor’s TILP.
6(l) Each county shall ensure that the total number of visits made
7by caseworkers on a monthly basis to children in foster care during
8a federal fiscal year is not less than 95 percent of the total number
9of those visits that would occur if each child were visited once
10every month while in care and that the majority of the visits occur
11in the residence of the child. The county child welfare and
12probation departments shall comply with data reporting
13requirements that the department deems necessary to comply with
14the federal Child and Family Services Improvement
Act of 2006
15(Public Law 109-288) and the federal Child and Family Services
16Improvement and Innovation Act of 2011 (Public Law 112-34).
17(m) The implementation and operation of the amendments to
18subdivision (i) enacted at the 2005-06 Regular Session shall be
19subject to appropriation through the budget process and by phase,
20as provided in Section 366.35.
begin insertSection 16501.1 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insert
22
begin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) The Legislature finds and declares that the
24foundation and central unifying tool in child welfare services is
25the case plan.
26(2) The Legislature further finds and declares that a case plan
27ensures that the child receives protection and safe and proper care
28and case management, and that services are provided to the child
29and parents or other caretakers, as appropriate, in order to improve
30conditions in the parent’s home, to facilitate the safe return of the
31child to a safe home or the permanent placement of the child, and
32to address the needs of the child while in foster care.
33(3) The agency shall consider the recommendations of the child
34and family team, as defined
inbegin delete paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) ofend delete
35
Section 16501, if any are available. The agency shall document
36the rationale for any inconsistencies between the case plan and the
37child and family team recommendations.
38(b) (1) A case plan shall be based upon the principles of this
39section and the input from the child and family team.
P17 1(2) The case plan shall document that a preplacement assessment
2of the service needs of the child and family, and preplacement
3preventive services, have been provided, and that reasonable efforts
4to prevent out-of-home placement have been made. Preplacement
5services may include intensive mental health services in the home
6or a community setting and the reasonable efforts made to prevent
7out-of-home placement.
8(3) In determining the reasonable services to be offered or
9provided, the child’s health
and safety shall be the paramount
10concerns.
11(4) Upon a determination pursuant to paragraph (1) of
12subdivision (e) of Section 361.5 that reasonable services will be
13offered to a parent who is incarcerated in a county jail or state
14prison, detained by the United States Department of Homeland
15Security, or deported to his or her country of origin, the case plan
16shall include information, to the extent possible, about a parent’s
17incarceration in a county jail or the state prison, detention by the
18United States Department of Homeland Security, or deportation
19during the time that a minor child of that parent is involved in
20dependency care.
21(5) Reasonable services shall be offered or provided to make it
22possible for a child to return to a safe home environment, unless,
23pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (e) of Section 361.5, the court
24determines that reunification services shall not be
provided.
25(6) If reasonable services are not ordered, or are terminated,
26reasonable efforts shall be made to place the child in a timely
27manner in accordance with the permanent plan and to complete
28all steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
29(c) If out-of-home placement is used to attain case plan goals,
30the case plan shall consider the recommendations of the child and
31family team.
32(d) (1) The case plan shall include a description of the type of
33home or institution in which the child is to be placed, and the
34reasons for that placement decision. The decision regarding choice
35of placement shall be based upon selection of a safe setting that is
36the least restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
37experiences and the most appropriate setting that meets the
child’s
38individual needs and is available, in proximity to the parent’s home,
39in proximity to the child’s school, and consistent with the selection
40of the environment best suited to meet the child’s special needs
P18 1and best interests. The selection shall consider, in order of priority,
2placement with relatives, nonrelated extended family members,
3and tribal members; foster family homes, resource families, and
4nontreatment certified homes of foster family agencies; followed
5by treatment and intensive treatment certified homes of foster
6family agencies; or multidimensional treatment foster care homes
7or therapeutic foster care homes; group care placements in the
8order of short-term residential treatment centers, group homes,
9community treatment facilities, and out-of-state residential
10treatment pursuant to Part 5 (commencing with Section 7900) of
11Division 12 of the Family Code.
12(2) If a short-term intensive treatment center placement is
13selected
for a child, the case plan shall indicate the needs of the
14child that necessitate this placement, the plan for transitioning the
15child to a less restrictive environment, and the projected timeline
16by which the child will be transitioned to a less restrictive
17environment. This section of the case plan shall be reviewed and
18updated at least semiannually.
19(A) The case plan for placements in a group home, or
20commencing January 1, 2017, in a short-term residential treatment
21center, shall indicate that the county has taken into consideration
22Section 16010.8.
23(B) After January 1, 2017, a child and family team meeting as
24begin delete definedend deletebegin insert
describedend insert in Section 16501 shall be convened by the county
25placing agency for the purpose of identifying the supports and
26services needed to achieve permanency and enable the child or
27youth to be placed in the least restrictive family setting that
28promotes normal childhood experiences.
29(3) On or after January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, as
30defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who is receiving
31AFDC-FC benefitsbegin insert and who isend insert up to 21 years of age pursuant to
32Section 11403, in addition to the above requirements, the selection
33of the placement, including a supervised independent living
34placement, as described in subdivision (w) of Section 11400, shall
35also be based upon the developmental needs of young adults by
36providing opportunities to have incremental responsibilities that
37prepare a
nonminor dependent to transition to successful adulthood.
38If admission to, or continuation in, a group home or short-term
39residential treatment center placement is being considered for a
40nonminor dependent, the group home or short-term residential
P19 1treatment center placement approval decision shall include a
2youth-driven, team-based case planning process, as defined by the
3department, in consultation with stakeholders. The case plan shall
4consider the full range of placement options, and shall specify why
5admission to, or continuation in, a group home placement is the
6best alternative available at the time to meet the special needs or
7well-being of the nonminor dependent, and how the placement
8will contribute to the nonminor dependent’s transition to successful
9adulthood. The case plan shall specify the treatment strategies that
10will be used to prepare the nonminor dependent for discharge to
11a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
12experiences, including a target date for discharge
from the group
13home placement. The placement shall be reviewed and updated
14on a regular, periodic basis to ensure that continuation in the group
15home placement remains in the best interests of the nonminor
16dependent and that progress is being made in achieving case plan
17goals leading to successful adulthood. The group home placement
18planning process shall begin as soon as it becomes clear to the
19county welfare department or probation office that a foster child
20in group home placement is likely to remain in group home
21placement on his or her 18th birthday, in order to expedite the
22transition to a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal
23childhood experiences, if he or she becomes a nonminor dependent.
24The case planning process shall include informing the youth of all
25of his or her options, including, but not limited to, admission to
26or continuation in a group home placement. Consideration for
27continuation of existing group home placement for a nonminor
28dependent under 19 years of age may include
the need to stay in
29the same placement in order to complete high school. After a
30nonminor dependent either completes high school or attains his or
31her 19th birthday, whichever is earlier, continuation in or admission
32to a group home placement is prohibited unless the nonminor
33dependent satisfies the conditions of paragraph (5) of subdivision
34(b) of Section 11403, and group home placement functions as a
35short-term transition to the appropriate system of care. Treatment
36services provided by the group home placement to the nonminor
37dependent to alleviate or ameliorate the medical condition, as
38described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (b) of Section 11403,
39shall not constitute the sole basis to disqualify a nonminor
40dependent from the group home placement.
P20 1(4) In addition to the requirements of paragraphs (1) to (3),
2inclusive, and taking into account other statutory considerations
3regarding placement, the selection of the most appropriate home
4
that will meet the child’s special needs and best interests shall also
5promote educational stability by taking into consideration
6proximity to the child’s school of origin, and school attendance
7area, the number of school transfers the child has previously
8experienced, and the child’s school matriculation schedule, in
9addition to other indicators of educational stability that the
10Legislature hereby encourages the State Department of Social
11Services and the State Department of Education to develop.
12(e) A written case plan shall be completed within a maximum
13of 60 days of the initial removal of the child or of the in-person
14response required under subdivision (f) of Section 16501 if the
15child has not been removed from his or her home, or by the date
16of the dispositional hearing pursuant to Section 358, whichever
17occurs first. The case plan shall be updated, as the service needs
18of the child and family dictate. At a minimum, the case plan shall
19be
updated in conjunction with each status review hearing
20conducted pursuant to Sections 364, 366, 366.3, and 366.31, and
21the hearing conducted pursuant to Section 366.26, but no less
22frequently than once every six months. Each updated case plan
23shall include a description of the services that have been provided
24to the child under the plan and an evaluation of the appropriateness
25and effectiveness of those services.
26(1) It is the intent of the Legislature that extending the maximum
27time available for preparing a written case plan from 30 to 60 days
28will afford caseworkers time to actively engage families, and to
29solicit and integrate into the case plan the input of the child and
30the child’s family, as well as the input of relatives and other
31interested parties.
32(2) The extension of the maximum time available for preparing
33a written case plan frombegin delete theend delete
30 to 60 days shall be effective 90
34days after the date that the department gives counties written notice
35that necessary changes have been made to the Child Welfare
36Services/Case Management System (CWS/CMS) to account for
37the 60-day timeframe for preparing a written case plan.
38(f) The child welfare services case plan shall be comprehensive
39enough to meet the juvenile court dependency proceedings
P21 1requirements pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section 300)
2of Chapter 2 of Part 1 of Division 2.
3(g) The case plan shall be developed considering the
4recommendations of the child and family team, as follows:
5(1) The case plan shall be based upon an assessment of the
6circumstances that required child welfare services intervention.
7The child shall be involved in developing the case plan as age and
8
developmentally appropriate.
9(2) The case plan shall identify specific goals and the
10appropriateness of the planned services in meeting those goals.
11(3) The case plan shall identify the original allegations of abuse
12or neglect, as defined in Article 2.5 (commencing with Section
1311164) of Chapter 2 of Title 1 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, or the
14conditions cited as the basis for declaring the child a dependent of
15the court pursuant to Section 300, or all of these, and the other
16precipitating incidents that led to child welfare services
17intervention.
18(4) The case plan shall include a description of the schedule of
19the placement agency contacts with the child and the family or
20other caretakers. The frequency of these contacts shall be in
21accordance with regulations adopted by the State Department of
22Social Services. If
the child has been placed in foster care out of
23state, the county social worker or probation officer, or a social
24worker or probation officer on the staff of the agency in the state
25in which the child has been placed, shall visit the child in a foster
26family home or the home of a relative, consistent with federal law
27and in accordance with the department’s approved state plan. For
28children in out-of-state group home facilities, visits shall be
29conducted at least monthly, pursuant to Section 16516.5. At least
30once every six months, at the time of a regularly scheduled
31placement agency contact with the foster child,begin insert and at each
32placement change,end insert the child’s social worker or probation officer
33shall inform thebegin delete child of his or herend deletebegin insert child, the
care provider, and
34the child and family team, if applicable, of the child’send insert rights as a
35foster child, as specified in Sectionbegin delete 16001.9.end deletebegin insert
16001.9, and shall
36provide a written copy of the rights to the child as part of the
37explanation.end insert The social worker or probation officer shall provide
38the information to the child in a manner appropriate to the age or
39developmental level of the child.begin insert The social worker or probation
40officer shall document in the case plan that he or she has informed
P22 1the child of, and has provided the child with a written copy of, his
2or her rights.end insert
3(5) (A) When out-of-home services are used, the frequency of
4contact between the natural parents or legal guardians and the child
5shall be specified in the case plan. The frequency of those contacts
6shall reflect overall case goals, and consider other principles
7outlined in this section.
8(B) Information regarding any court-ordered visitation between
9the child and the natural parents or legal guardians, and the terms
10and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting the
11safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
12caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
13(6) When out-of-home placement is made, the case plan shall
14include provisions for the development and maintenance of sibling
15relationships as specified in subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) of Section
1616002. If appropriate, when siblings who are dependents of the
17juvenile court are not placed together, the social worker for each
18child, if different, shall communicate with each of the other social
19workers and ensure that the child’s siblings are informed of
20significant life events that occur within their extended family.
21Unless it has been determined that it is inappropriate in a particular
22case to keep siblings
informed of significant life events that occur
23within the extended family, the social worker shall determine the
24appropriate means and setting for disclosure of this information
25to the child commensurate with the child’s age and emotional
26well-being. These significant life events shall include, but shall
27not be limited to, the following:
28(A) The death of an immediate relative.
29(B) The birth of a sibling.
30(C) Significant changes regarding a dependent child, unless the
31child objects to the sharing of the information with his or her
32siblings, including changes in placement, major medical or mental
33health diagnoses, treatments, or hospitalizations, arrests, and
34changes in the permanent plan.
35(7) If out-of-home placement is made in a foster family home,
36
group home, or other child care institution that is either a
37substantial distance from the home of the child’s parent or out of
38state, the case plan shall specify the reasons why that placement
39is in the best interest of the child. When an out-of-state group home
40placement is recommended or made, the case plan shall, in
P23 1addition, specify compliance with Section 7911.1 of the Family
2Code.
3(8) A case plan shall ensure the educational stability of the child
4while in foster care and shall include both of the following:
5(A) An assurance that the placement takes into account the
6appropriateness of the current educational setting and the proximity
7to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement.
8(B) An assurance that the placement agency has coordinated
9with the person holding the right to make
educational decisions
10for the child and appropriate local educational agencies to ensure
11that the child remains in the school in which the child is enrolled
12at the time of placement or, if remaining in that school is not in
13the best interests of the child, assurances by the placement agency
14and the local educational agency to provide immediate and
15appropriate enrollment in a new school and to provide all of the
16child’s educational records to the new school.
17(9) (A) If out-of-home services are used, or if parental rights
18have been terminated and the case plan is placement for adoption,
19the case plan shall include a recommendation regarding the
20appropriateness of unsupervised visitation between the child and
21any of the child’s siblings. This recommendation shall include a
22statement regarding the child’s and the siblings’ willingness to
23participate in unsupervised visitation. If the case plan includes a
24recommendation for
unsupervised sibling visitation, the plan shall
25also note that information necessary to accomplish this visitation
26has been provided to the child or to the child’s siblings.
27(B) Information regarding the schedule and frequency of the
28visits between the child and siblings, as well as any court-ordered
29terms and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting
30the safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
31caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
32(10) If out-of-home services are used and the goal is
33reunification, the case plan shall describe the services to be
34provided to assist in reunification and the services to be provided
35concurrently to achieve legal permanency if efforts to reunify fail.
36The plan shall also consider in-state and out-of-state placements,
37the importance of developing and maintaining sibling relationships
38
pursuant to Section 16002, and the desire and willingness of the
39caregiver to provide legal permanency for the child if reunification
40is unsuccessful.
P24 1(11) If out-of-home services are used, the child has been in care
2for at least 12 months, and the goal is not adoptive placement, the
3case plan shall include documentation of the compelling reason
4or reasons why termination of parental rights is not in the child’s
5best interest. A determination completed or updated within the
6past 12 months by the department when it is acting as an adoption
7agency or by a licensed adoption agency that it is unlikely that the
8child will be adopted, or that one of the conditions described in
9paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 366.26 applies, shall
10be deemed a compelling reason.
11(12) (A) Parents and legal guardians shall have an opportunity
12to review the case plan, and to
sign it whenever possible, and then
13shall receive a copy of the plan. In a voluntary service or placement
14agreement, the parents or legal guardians shall be required to
15review and sign the case plan. Whenever possible, parents and
16legal guardians shall participate in the development of the case
17plan. Commencing January 1, 2012, for nonminor dependents, as
18defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who are receiving
19AFDC-FC or CalWORKs assistancebegin insert and who areend insert up to 21 years
20of age pursuant to Section 11403, the transitional independent
21living case plan, as set forth in subdivision (y) of Section 11400,
22shall be developed with, and signed by, the nonminor.
23(B) Parents and legal guardians shall be advised that, pursuant
24to Section 1228.1 of the Evidence Code, neither their signature on
25the child welfare services case plan nor their
acceptance of any
26services prescribed in the child welfare services case plan shall
27constitute an admission of guilt or be used as evidence against the
28parent or legal guardian in a court of law. However, they shall also
29be advised that the parent’s or guardian’s failure to cooperate,
30except for good cause, in the provision of services specified in the
31child welfare services case plan may be used in any hearing held
32pursuant to Section 366.21, 366.22, or 366.25 of this code as
33evidence.
34(13) A child shall be given a meaningful opportunity to
35participate in the development of the case plan and state his or her
36preference for foster care placement. A child who is 12 years of
37age or older and in a permanent placement shall also be given the
38opportunity to review the case plan, sign the case plan, and receive
39a copy of the case plan.
P25 1(14) The case plan shall be included in the court
report and shall
2be considered by the court at the initial hearing and each review
3hearing. Modifications to the case plan made during the period
4between review hearings need not be approved by the court if the
5casework supervisor for that case determines that the modifications
6further the goals of the plan. If out-of-home services are used with
7the goal of family reunification, the case plan shall consider and
8describe the application of subdivision (b) of Section 11203.
9(15) (A) If the case plan has as its goal for the child a permanent
10plan of adoption or legal guardianship, it shall include a statement
11of the child’s wishes regarding their permanent placement plan
12and an assessment of those stated wishes. The agency shall also
13include documentation of the steps the agency is taking to find an
14adoptive family or other permanent living arrangements for the
15child; to place the child with an adoptive family, an appropriate
16
and willing relative, or a legal guardian, and to finalize the adoption
17or legal guardianship. At a minimum, the documentation shall
18include child-specific recruitment efforts, such as the use of state,
19regional, and national adoption exchanges, including electronic
20exchange systems, when the child has been freed for adoption.
21Regardless of whether the child has been freed for adoption,
22documentation shall include a description of any barriers to
23achieving legal permanence and the steps the agency will take to
24address those barriers. If the plan is for kinship guardianship, the
25case plan shall document how the child meets the kinship
26guardianship eligibility requirements.
27(B) When the child is 16 years of age or older and is in another
28planned permanent living arrangement, the case plan shall identify
29the intensive and ongoing efforts to return the child to the home
30of the parent, place the child for adoption, place the child for tribal
31
customary adoption in the case of an Indian child, establish a legal
32guardianship, or place the child nonminor dependent with a fit and
33willing relative, as appropriate. Efforts shall include the use of
34technology, including social media, to find biological family
35members of the child.
36(16) (A) (i) For a child who is 14 or 15 years of age, the case
37plan shall include a written description of the programs and services
38that will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests,
39to prepare for the transition from foster care to successful
P26 1adulthood. The description may be included in the document
2described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (18).
3(ii) When appropriate, for a child who is 16 years of age or older
4and, commencing January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, the
5case plan shall include the transitional independent living
plan
6(TILP), a written description of the programs and services that
7will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests, to
8prepare for the transition from foster care to successful adulthood,
9and, in addition, whether the youth has an in-progress application
10pending for Title XVI Supplemental Security Income benefits or
11for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status or other applicable
12application for legal residency and an active dependency case is
13required for that application. When appropriate, for a nonminor
14dependent, the transitional independent living case plan, as
15described in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, shall include the
16TILP, a written description of the programs and services that will
17help the nonminor dependent, consistent with his or her best
18interests, to prepare for transition from foster care and assist the
19youth in meeting the eligibility criteria set forth in paragraphs (1)
20to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (b) of Section 11403. If applicable,
21the case plan shall describe the
individualized supervision provided
22in the supervised independent living placement as defined in
23subdivision (w) of Section 11400. The case plan shall be developed
24with the child or nonminor dependent and individuals identified
25as important to the child or nonminor dependent, and shall include
26steps the agency is taking to ensure that the child or nonminor
27dependent achieves permanence, including maintaining or
28obtaining permanent connections to caring and committed adults.
29(B) During the 90-day period prior to the participant attaining
3018 years of age or older as the state may elect under Section
31475(8)(B)(iii) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.
32675(8)(B)(iii)), whether during that period foster care maintenance
33payments are being made on the child’s behalf or the child is
34receiving benefits or services under Section 477 of the federal
35Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 677), a caseworker or other
36appropriate agency staff or
probation officer and other
37representatives of the participant, as appropriate, shall provide the
38youth or nonminor dependent with assistance and support in
39developing the written 90-day transition plan, that is personalized
40at the direction of the child, information as detailed as the
P27 1participant elects that shall include, but not be limited to, options
2regarding housing, health insurance, education, local opportunities
3for mentors and continuing support services, and workforce
4supports and employment services, a power of attorney for health
5care, and information regarding the advance health care directive
6form.begin insert
Information provided regarding health insurance options
7shall include verification that the eligible youth or nonminor is
8enrolled in Medi-Cal and a description of the steps that have been
9or will be taken by the youth’s social worker or probation officer
10to ensure that the eligible youth or nonminor is transitioned into
11the Medi-Cal program for former foster youth upon case closure
12with no interruption in coverage and with no new application
13being required, as provided in Section 14005.28.end insert
14(C) For youth 14 years of age or older, the case plan shall
15include documentation that a consumer credit report was requested
16annually from each of the three major credit reporting agencies at
17no charge to the youth and that any results were provided to the
18youth. For nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include
19documentation that the county assisted the nonminor dependent
20in obtaining his or her reports. The
case plan shall include
21documentation of barriers, if any, to obtaining the credit reports.
22If the consumer credit report reveals any accounts, the case plan
23shall detail how the county ensured the youth received assistance
24with interpreting the credit report and resolving any inaccuracies,
25including any referrals made for the assistance.
26(17) For youth 14 years of age or older and nonminor
27dependents, the case plan shall be developed in consultation with
28the youth. At the youth’s option, the consultation may include up
29to two members of the case planning team who are chosen by the
30youth and who are not foster parents of, or caseworkers for, the
31youth. The agency, at any time, may reject an individual selected
32by the youth to be a member of the case planning team if the
33agency has good cause to believe that the individual would not act
34in the youth’s best interest. One individual selected by the youth
35to be a member of the case planning team
may be designated to
36be the youth’s adviser and advocate with respect to the application
37of the reasonable and prudent parent standard to the youth, as
38necessary.
P28 1(18) For youth in foster care 14 years of age and older and
2nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include both of the
3following:
4(A) A document that describes the youth’s rights with respect
5to education, health, visitation, and court participation, the right
6to be annually provided with copies of his or her credit reports at
7no cost while in foster care pursuant to Section 10618.6, and the
8right to stay safe and avoid exploitation.
9(B) A signed acknowledgment by the youth that he or she has
10been provided a copy of the document and that the rights described
11in the document have been explained to the youth in an
12age-appropriate manner.
13(19) The case plan for a child or nonminor dependent who is,
14or who is at risk of becoming, the victim of commercial sexual
15exploitation, shall document the services provided to address that
16issue.
17(h) If the court finds, after considering the case plan, that
18unsupervised sibling visitation is appropriate and has been
19consented to, the court shall order that the child or the child’s
20siblings, the child’s current caregiver, and the child’s prospective
21adoptive parents, if applicable, be provided with information
22necessary to accomplish this visitation. This section does not
23require or prohibit the social worker’s facilitation, transportation,
24or supervision of visits between the child and his or her siblings.
25(i) The case plan documentation on sibling placements required
26under this section shall not require modification
of existing case
27plan forms until the Child Welfarebegin delete Service/Caseend deletebegin insert Services/Caseend insert
28 Management System (CWS/CMS) is implemented on a statewide
29basis.
30(j) When a child is 10 years of age or older and has been in
31out-of-home placement for six months or longer, the case plan
32shall include an identification of individuals, other than the child’s
33siblings, who are important to the child and actions necessary to
34maintain the child’s relationship with those individuals, provided
35that those relationships are in the best interest of the child. The
36social worker or probation officer shall ask every child who is 10
37years of age or older and who has been in out-of-home placement
38for six months or longer to identify individuals other than the
39child’s siblings who are
important to the child, and may ask any
40other child to provide that information, or may seek that
P29 1information from the child and family team, as appropriate. The
2social worker or probation officer shall make efforts to identify
3other individuals who are important to the child, consistent with
4the child’s best interests.
5(k) The child’s caregiver shall be provided a copy of a plan
6outlining the child’s needs and services. The nonminor dependent’s
7caregiver shall be provided with a copy of the nonminor’s TILP.
8(l) Each county shall ensure that the total number of visits made
9by caseworkers on a monthly basis to children in foster care during
10a federal fiscal year is not less than 95 percent of the total number
11of those visits that would occur if each child were visited once
12every month while in care and that the majority of the visits occur
13in the residence of the child. The county
child welfare and
14probation departments shall comply with data reporting
15requirements that the department deems necessary to comply with
16the federal Child and Family Services Improvement Act of 2006
17(Public Law 109-288) and the federal Child and Family Services
18Improvement and Innovation Actbegin delete of 2011end delete (Public Law 112-34).
19(l)
end delete
20begin insert(end insertbegin insertm)end insert The implementation and operation of the amendments to
21subdivision (i) enacted at the 2005-06 Regular Session shall be
22subject to appropriation through the budget
process and by phase,
23as provided in Section 366.35.
begin insertSection 16501.1 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insert
25
begin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) The Legislature finds and declares that the
27foundation and central unifying tool in child welfare services is
28the case plan.
29(2) The Legislature further finds and declares that a case plan
30ensures that the child receives protection and safe and proper care
31and case management, and that services are provided to the child
32and parents or other caretakers, as appropriate, in order to improve
33conditions in the parent’s home, to facilitate the safe return of the
34child to a safe home or the permanent placement of the child, and
35to address the needs of the child while in foster care.
36(3) The agency shall consider the recommendations of the child
37and family team, as defined
in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of
38Section 16501, if any are available. The agency shall document
39the rationale for any inconsistencies between the case plan and the
40child and family team recommendations.
P30 1(b) (1) A case plan shall be based upon the principles of this
2section and the input from the child and family team.
3(2) The case plan shall document that a preplacement assessment
4of the service needs of the child and family, and preplacement
5preventive services, have been provided, and that reasonable efforts
6to prevent out-of-home placement have been made. Preplacement
7services may include intensive mental health services in the home
8or a community setting and the reasonable efforts made to prevent
9out-of-home placement.
10(3) In determining the reasonable services to be offered or
11
provided, the child’s health and safety shall be the paramount
12concerns.
13(4) Upon a determination pursuant to paragraph (1) of
14subdivision (e) of Section 361.5 that reasonable services will be
15offered to a parent who is incarcerated in a county jail or state
16prison, detained by the United States Department of Homeland
17Security, or deported to his or her country of origin, the case plan
18shall include information, to the extent possible, about a parent’s
19incarceration in a county jail or the state prison, detention by the
20United States Department of Homeland Security, or deportation
21during the time that a minor child of that parent is involved in
22dependency care.
23(5) Reasonable services shall be offered or provided to make it
24possible for a child to return to a safe home environment, unless,
25pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (e) of Section 361.5, the court
26determines that
reunification services shall not be provided.
27(6) If reasonable services are not ordered, or are terminated,
28reasonable efforts shall be made to place the child in a timely
29manner in accordance with the permanent plan and to complete
30all steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
31(c) If out-of-home placement is used to attain case plan goals,
32the case plan shall consider the recommendations of the child and
33family team.
34(d) (1) The case plan shall include a description of the type of
35home or institution in which the child is to be placed, and the
36reasons for that placement decision. The decision regarding choice
37of placement shall be based upon selection of a safe setting that is
38the least restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
39experiences and the most
appropriate setting that meets the child’s
40individual needs and is available, in proximity to the parent’s home,
P31 1in proximity to the child’s school, and consistent with the selection
2of the environment best suited to meet the child’s special needs
3and best interests. The selection shall consider, in order of priority,
4placement with relatives, nonrelated extended family members,
5and tribal members; foster family homes, resource families, and
6nontreatment certified homes of foster family agencies; followed
7by treatment and intensive treatment certified homes of foster
8family agencies; or multidimensional treatment foster care homes
9or therapeutic foster care homes; group care placements in the
10order of short-term residentialbegin delete treatment centers,end deletebegin insert therapeutic
11programs,end insert group homes, community treatment facilities, and
12
out-of-state residential treatment pursuant to Part 5 (commencing
13with Section 7900) of Division 12 of the Family Code.
14(2) If a short-termbegin delete intensive treatment centerend deletebegin insert residential
15therapeutic programend insert
placement is selected for a child, the case
16plan shall indicate the needs of the child that necessitate this
17placement, the plan for transitioning the child to a less restrictive
18environment, and the projected timeline by which the child will
19be transitioned to a less restrictive environment. This section of
20the case plan shall be reviewed and updated at least semiannually.
21(A) The case plan for placements in a group home, or
22commencing January 1, 2017, in a short-term residentialbegin delete treatment begin insert therapeutic programend insertbegin insert,end insert shall indicate that the county has
23center,end delete
24taken into consideration Section 16010.8.
25(B) After January 1, 2017, a child and family team meeting as
26begin delete definedend deletebegin insert describedend insert in Section 16501 shall be convened by the county
27placing agency for the purpose of identifying the supports and
28services needed to achieve permanency and enable the child or
29youth to be placed in the least restrictive family setting that
30promotes normal childhood experiences.
31(3) On or after January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, as
32defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who is receiving
33AFDC-FC benefitsbegin insert and who isend insert up to 21 years of age pursuant to
34Section 11403, in addition to the above requirements,
the selection
35of the placement, including a supervised independent living
36placement, as described in subdivision (w) of Section 11400, shall
37also be based upon the developmental needs of young adults by
38providing opportunities to have incremental responsibilities that
39prepare a nonminor dependent to transition to successful adulthood.
40If admission to, or continuation in, a group home or short-term
P32 1residentialbegin delete treatment centerend deletebegin insert therapeutic programend insert placement is
2being considered for a nonminor dependent, the group home or
3short-term residentialbegin delete treatment centerend deletebegin insert therapeutic programend insert
4 placement approval decision shall include a
youth-driven,
5team-based case planning process, as defined by the department,
6in consultation with stakeholders. The case plan shall consider the
7full range of placement options, and shall specify why admission
8to, or continuation in, a group home placement is the best
9alternative available at the time to meet the special needs or
10well-being of the nonminor dependent, and how the placement
11will contribute to the nonminor dependent’s transition to successful
12adulthood. The case plan shall specify the treatment strategies that
13will be used to prepare the nonminor dependent for discharge to
14a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
15experiences, including a target date for discharge from the group
16home placement. The placement shall be reviewed and updated
17on a regular, periodic basis to ensure that continuation in the group
18home placement remains in the best interests of the nonminor
19dependent and that progress is being made in achieving case plan
20goals leading to successful adulthood.
The group home placement
21planning process shall begin as soon as it becomes clear to the
22county welfare department or probation office that a foster child
23in group home placement is likely to remain in group home
24placement on his or her 18th birthday, in order to expedite the
25transition to a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal
26childhood experiences, if he or she becomes a nonminor dependent.
27The case planning process shall include informing the youth of all
28of his or her options, including, but not limited to, admission to
29or continuation in a group home placement. Consideration for
30continuation of existing group home placement for a nonminor
31dependent under 19 years of age may include the need to stay in
32the same placement in order to complete high school. After a
33nonminor dependent either completes high school or attains his or
34her 19th birthday, whichever is earlier, continuation in or admission
35to a group home placement is prohibited unless the nonminor
36dependent satisfies the conditions
of paragraph (5) of subdivision
37(b) of Section 11403, and group home placement functions as a
38short-term transition to the appropriate system of care. Treatment
39services provided by the group home placement to the nonminor
40dependent to alleviate or ameliorate the medical condition, as
P32 1described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (b) of Section 11403,
2shall not constitute the sole basis to disqualify a nonminor
3dependent from the group home placement.
4(4) In addition to the requirements of paragraphs (1) to (3),
5inclusive, and taking into account other statutory considerations
6regarding placement, the selection of the most appropriate home
7that will meet the child’s special needs and best interests shall also
8promote educational stability by taking into consideration
9proximity to the child’s school of origin, and school attendance
10area, the number of school transfers the child has previously
11experienced, and the child’s school matriculation
schedule, in
12addition to other indicators of educational stability that the
13Legislature hereby encourages the State Department of Social
14Services and the State Department of Education to develop.
15(e) A written case plan shall be completed within a maximum
16of 60 days of the initial removal of the child or of the in-person
17response required under subdivision (f) of Section 16501 if the
18child has not been removed from his or her home, or by the date
19of the dispositional hearing pursuant to Section 358, whichever
20occurs first. The case plan shall be updated, as the service needs
21of the child and family dictate. At a minimum, the case plan shall
22be updated in conjunction with each status review hearing
23conducted pursuant to Sections 364, 366, 366.3, and 366.31, and
24the hearing conducted pursuant to Section 366.26, but no less
25frequently than once every six months. Each updated case plan
26shall include a description of the services that have been
provided
27to the child under the plan and an evaluation of the appropriateness
28and effectiveness of those services.
29(1) It is the intent of the Legislature that extending the maximum
30time available for preparing a written case plan from 30 to 60 days
31will afford caseworkers time to actively engage families, and to
32solicit and integrate into the case plan the input of the child and
33the child’s family, as well as the input of relatives and other
34interested parties.
35(2) The extension of the maximum time available for preparing
36a written case plan from the 30 to 60 days shall be effective 90
37days after the date that the department gives counties written notice
38that necessary changes have been made to the Child Welfare
39Services/Case Management System (CWS/CMS) to account for
40the 60-day timeframe for preparing a written case plan.
P34 1(f) The child welfare services case plan shall be comprehensive
2enough to meet the juvenile court dependency proceedings
3requirements pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section 300)
4of Chapter 2 of Part 1 of Division 2.
5(g) The case plan shall be developed considering the
6recommendations of the child and family team, as follows:
7(1) The case plan shall be based upon an assessment of the
8circumstances that required child welfare services intervention.
9The child shall be involved in developing the case plan as age and
10developmentally appropriate.
11(2) The case plan shall identify specific goals and the
12appropriateness of the planned services in meeting those goals.
13(3) The case plan shall
identify the original allegations of abuse
14or neglect, as defined in Article 2.5 (commencing with Section
1511164) of Chapter 2 of Title 1 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, or the
16conditions cited as the basis for declaring the child a dependent of
17the court pursuant to Section 300, or all of these, and the other
18precipitating incidents that led to child welfare services
19intervention.
20(4) The case plan shall include a description of the schedule of
21the placement agency contacts with the child and the family or
22other caretakers. The frequency of these contacts shall be in
23accordance with regulations adopted by the State Department of
24Social Services. If the child has been placed in foster care out of
25state, the county social worker or probation officer, or a social
26worker or probation officer on the staff of the agency in the state
27in which the child has been placed, shall visit the child in a foster
28family home or the home of a relative, consistent
with federal law
29and in accordance with the department’s approved state plan. For
30children in out-of-state group home facilities, visits shall be
31conducted at least monthly, pursuant to Section 16516.5. At least
32once every six months, at the time of a regularly scheduled
33placement agency contact with the foster child,begin insert and at each
34placement change,end insert the child’s social worker or probation officer
35shall inform thebegin delete child of his or herend deletebegin insert child, the care provider, and
36the child and family team, if applicable, of the child’send insert rights as a
37foster child, as specified in Sectionbegin delete 16001.9.end deletebegin insert
16001.9, and shall
38provide a written copy of the rights to the child as part of the
39explanation.end insert The social worker or probation officer shall provide
40the information to the child in a manner appropriate to the age or
P35 1developmental level of the child.begin insert end insertbegin insertThe social worker or probation
2officer shall document in the case plan that he or she has informed
3the child of, and has provided the child with a written copy of, his
4or her rights.end insert
5(5) (A) When out-of-home services are used, the frequency of
6contact between the natural parents or legal guardians and the child
7shall be specified in the case plan. The frequency of those contacts
8shall reflect overall case goals, and
consider other principles
9outlined in this section.
10(B) Information regarding any court-ordered visitation between
11the child and the natural parents or legal guardians, and the terms
12and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting the
13safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
14caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
15(6) When out-of-home placement is made, the case plan shall
16include provisions for the development and maintenance of sibling
17relationships as specified in subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) of Section
1816002. If appropriate, when siblings who are dependents of the
19juvenile court are not placed together, the social worker for each
20child, if different, shall communicate with each of the other social
21workers and ensure that the child’s siblings are informed of
22significant life events that occur within their extended
family.
23Unless it has been determined that it is inappropriate in a particular
24case to keep siblings informed of significant life events that occur
25within the extended family, the social worker shall determine the
26appropriate means and setting for disclosure of this information
27to the child commensurate with the child’s age and emotional
28well-being. These significant life events shall include, but shall
29not be limited to, the following:
30(A) The death of an immediate relative.
31(B) The birth of a sibling.
32(C) Significant changes regarding a dependent child, unless the
33child objects to the sharing of the information with his or her
34siblings, including changes in placement, major medical or mental
35health diagnoses, treatments, or hospitalizations, arrests, and
36changes in the permanent plan.
37(7) If out-of-home placement is made in a foster family home,
38group home, or other child care institution that is either a
39substantial distance from the home of the child’s parent or out of
40state, the case plan shall specify the reasons why that placement
P36 1is in the best interest of the child. When an out-of-state group home
2placement is recommended or made, the case plan shall, in
3addition, specify compliance with Section 7911.1 of the Family
4Code.
5(8) A case plan shall ensure the educational stability of the child
6while in foster care and shall include both of the following:
7(A) An assurance that the placement takes into account the
8appropriateness of the current educational setting and the proximity
9to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement.
10(B) An assurance that the placement agency has coordinated
11with the person holding the right to make educational decisions
12for the child and appropriate local educational agencies to ensure
13that the child remains in the school in which the child is enrolled
14at the time of placement or, if remaining in that school is not in
15the best interests of the child, assurances by the placement agency
16and the local educational agency to provide immediate and
17appropriate enrollment in a new school and to provide all of the
18child’s educational records to the new school.
19(9) (A) If out-of-home services are used, or if parental rights
20have been terminated and the case plan is placement for adoption,
21the case plan shall include a recommendation regarding the
22appropriateness of unsupervised visitation between the child and
23any of the child’s siblings. This recommendation shall
include a
24statement regarding the child’s and the siblings’ willingness to
25participate in unsupervised visitation. If the case plan includes a
26recommendation for unsupervised sibling visitation, the plan shall
27also note that information necessary to accomplish this visitation
28has been provided to the child or to the child’s siblings.
29(B) Information regarding the schedule and frequency of the
30visits between the child and siblings, as well as any court-ordered
31terms and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting
32the safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
33caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
34(10) If out-of-home services are used and the goal is
35reunification, the case plan shall describe the services to be
36provided to assist in reunification and the services to be provided
37concurrently to achieve legal permanency if
efforts to reunify fail.
38The plan shall also consider in-state and out-of-state placements,
39the importance of developing and maintaining sibling relationships
40pursuant to Section 16002, and the desire and willingness of the
P37 1caregiver to provide legal permanency for the child if reunification
2is unsuccessful.
3(11) If out-of-home services are used, the child has been in care
4for at least 12 months, and the goal is not adoptive placement, the
5case plan shall include documentation of the compelling reason
6or reasons why termination of parental rights is not in the child’s
7best interest. A determination completed or updated within the
8past 12 months by the department when it is acting as an adoption
9agency or by a licensed adoption agency that it is unlikely that the
10child will be adopted, or that one of the conditions described in
11paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 366.26 applies, shall
12be deemed a compelling reason.
13(12) (A) Parents and legal guardians shall have an opportunity
14to review the case plan, and to sign it whenever possible, and then
15shall receive a copy of the plan. In a voluntary service or placement
16agreement, the parents or legal guardians shall be required to
17review and sign the case plan. Whenever possible, parents and
18legal guardians shall participate in the development of the case
19plan. Commencing January 1, 2012, for nonminor dependents, as
20defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who are receiving
21AFDC-FC or CalWORKs assistancebegin insert and who areend insert up to 21 years
22of age pursuant to Section 11403, the transitional independent
23living case plan, as set forth in subdivision (y) of Section 11400,
24shall be developed with, and signed by, the nonminor.
25(B) Parents and legal guardians shall be advised that, pursuant
26to Section 1228.1 of the Evidence Code, neither their signature on
27the child welfare services case plan nor their acceptance of any
28services prescribed in the child welfare services case plan shall
29constitute an admission of guilt or be used as evidence against the
30parent or legal guardian in a court of law. However, they shall also
31be advised that the parent’s or guardian’s failure to cooperate,
32except for good cause, in the provision of services specified in the
33child welfare services case plan may be used in any hearing held
34pursuant to Section 366.21, 366.22, or 366.25 of this code as
35evidence.
36(13) A child shall be given a meaningful opportunity to
37participate in the development of the case plan and state his or her
38preference for foster care placement. A child who is 12 years of
39age or older and in a permanent placement shall also be given the
P38 1opportunity to
review the case plan, sign the case plan, and receive
2a copy of the case plan.
3(14) The case plan shall be included in the court report and shall
4be considered by the court at the initial hearing and each review
5hearing. Modifications to the case plan made during the period
6between review hearings need not be approved by the court if the
7casework supervisor for that case determines that the modifications
8further the goals of the plan. If out-of-home services are used with
9the goal of family reunification, the case plan shall consider and
10describe the application of subdivision (b) of Section 11203.
11(15) (A) If the case plan has as its goal for the child a permanent
12plan of adoption or legal guardianship, it shall include a statement
13of the child’s wishes regarding their permanent placement plan
14and an assessment of those stated wishes. The agency shall also
15
include documentation of the steps the agency is taking to find an
16adoptive family or other permanent living arrangements for the
17child; to place the child with an adoptive family, an appropriate
18and willing relative, or a legal guardian, and to finalize the adoption
19or legal guardianship. At a minimum, the documentation shall
20include child-specific recruitment efforts, such as the use of state,
21regional, and national adoption exchanges, including electronic
22exchange systems, when the child has been freed for adoption.
23Regardless of whether the child has been freed for adoption,
24documentation shall include a description of any barriers to
25achieving legal permanence and the steps the agency will take to
26address those barriers. If the plan is for kinship guardianship, the
27case plan shall document how the child meets the kinship
28guardianship eligibility requirements.
29(B) When the child is 16 years of age or older and is in another
30planned
permanent living arrangement, the case plan shall identify
31the intensive and ongoing efforts to return the child to the home
32of the parent, place the child for adoption, place the child for tribal
33customary adoption in the case of an Indian child, establish a legal
34guardianship, or place the child nonminor dependent with a fit and
35willing relative, as appropriate. Efforts shall include the use of
36technology, including social media, to find biological family
37members of the child.
38(16) (A) (i) For a child who is 14 or 15 years of age, the case
39plan shall include a written description of the programs and services
40that will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests,
P39 1to prepare for the transition from foster care to successful
2adulthood. The description may be included in the document
3described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (18).
4(ii) When appropriate, for a child who is 16 years of age or older
5and, commencing January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, the
6case plan shall include the transitional independent living plan
7(TILP), a written description of the programs and services that
8will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests, to
9prepare for the transition from foster care to successful adulthood,
10and, in addition, whether the youth has an in-progress application
11pending for Title XVI Supplemental Security Income benefits or
12for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status or other applicable
13application for legal residency and an active dependency case is
14required for that application. When appropriate, for a nonminor
15dependent, the transitional independent living case plan, as
16described in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, shall include the
17TILP, a written description of the programs and services that will
18help the nonminor dependent, consistent with his or her best
19interests, to prepare for transition from
foster care and assist the
20youth in meeting the eligibility criteria set forth in paragraphs (1)
21to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (b) of Section 11403. If applicable,
22the case plan shall describe the individualized supervision provided
23in the supervised independent living placement as defined in
24subdivision (w) of Section 11400. The case plan shall be developed
25with the child or nonminor dependent and individuals identified
26as important to the child or nonminor dependent, and shall include
27steps the agency is taking to ensure that the child or nonminor
28dependent achieves permanence, including maintaining or
29obtaining permanent connections to caring and committed adults.
30(B) During the 90-day period prior to the participant attaining
3118 years of age or older as the state may elect under Section
32475(8)(B)(iii) of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.
33675(8)(B)(iii)), whether during that period foster care maintenance
34payments are being
made on the child’s behalf or the child is
35receiving benefits or services under Section 477 of the federal
36Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 677), a caseworker or other
37appropriate agency staff or probation officer and other
38representatives of the participant, as appropriate, shall provide the
39youth or nonminor dependent with assistance and support in
40developing the written 90-day transition plan, that is personalized
P40 1at the direction of the child, information as detailed as the
2participant elects that shall include, but not be limited to, options
3regarding housing, health insurance, education, local opportunities
4for mentors and continuing support services, and workforce
5supports and employment services, a power of attorney for health
6care, and information regarding the advance health care directive
7form.
8(C) For youth 14 years of age or older, the case plan shall
9include documentation that a consumer credit report was requested
10annually
from each of the three major credit reporting agencies at
11no charge to the youth and that any results were provided to the
12youth. For nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include
13documentation that the county assisted the nonminor dependent
14in obtaining his or her reports. The case plan shall include
15documentation of barriers, if any, to obtaining the credit reports.
16If the consumer credit report reveals any accounts, the case plan
17shall detail how the county ensured the youth received assistance
18with interpreting the credit report and resolving any inaccuracies,
19including any referrals made for the assistance.
20(17) For youth 14 years of age or older and nonminor
21dependents, the case plan shall be developed in consultation with
22the youth. At the youth’s option, the consultation may include up
23to two members of the case planning team who are chosen by the
24youth and who are not foster parents of, or caseworkers for, the
25youth. The agency, at
any time, may reject an individual selected
26by the youth to be a member of the case planning team if the
27agency has good cause to believe that the individual would not act
28in the youth’s best interest. One individual selected by the youth
29to be a member of the case planning team may be designated to
30be the youth’s adviser and advocate with respect to the application
31of the reasonable and prudent parent standard to the youth, as
32necessary.
33(18) For youth in foster care 14 years of age and older and
34nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include both of the
35following:
36(A) A document that describes the youth’s rights with respect
37to education, health, visitation, and court participation, the right
38to be annually provided with copies of his or her credit reports at
39no cost while in foster care pursuant to Section 10618.6, and the
40right to stay safe and avoid exploitation.
P41 1(B) A signed acknowledgment by the youth that he or she has
2been provided a copy of the document and that the rights described
3in the document have been explained to the youth in an
4age-appropriate manner.
5(19) The case plan for a child or nonminor dependent who is,
6or who is at risk of becoming, the victim of commercial sexual
7exploitation, shall document the services provided to address that
8issue.
9(h) If the court finds, after considering the case plan, that
10unsupervised sibling visitation is appropriate and has been
11consented to, the court shall order that the child or the child’s
12siblings, the child’s current caregiver, and the child’s prospective
13adoptive parents, if applicable, be provided with information
14necessary to accomplish this visitation. This section does not
15require or prohibit the social worker’s
facilitation, transportation,
16or supervision of visits between the child and his or her siblings.
17(i) The case plan documentation on sibling placements required
18under this section shall not require modification of existing case
19plan forms until the Child Welfarebegin delete Service/Caseend deletebegin insert Services/Caseend insert
20 Management System (CWS/CMS) is implemented on a statewide
21basis.
22(j) When a child is 10 years of age or older and has been in
23out-of-home placement for six months or longer, the case plan
24shall include an identification of individuals, other than the child’s
25siblings, who are important to the child and actions necessary to
26maintain the child’s relationship with those individuals, provided
27that those
relationships are in the best interest of the child. The
28social worker or probation officer shall ask every child who is 10
29years of age or older and who has been in out-of-home placement
30for six months or longer to identify individuals other than the
31child’s siblings who are important to the child, and may ask any
32other child to provide that information, or may seek that
33information from the child and family team, as appropriate. The
34social worker or probation officer shall make efforts to identify
35other individuals who are important to the child, consistent with
36the child’s best interests.
37(k) The child’s caregiver shall be provided a copy of a plan
38outlining the child’s needs and services. The nonminor dependent’s
39caregiver shall be provided with a copy of the nonminor’s TILP.
P42 1(l) Each county shall ensure that the total number of visits made
2by caseworkers on a monthly basis to
children in foster care during
3a federal fiscal year is not less than 95 percent of the total number
4of those visits that would occur if each child were visited once
5every month while in care and that the majority of the visits occur
6in the residence of the child. The county child welfare and
7probation departments shall comply with data reporting
8requirements that the department deems necessary to comply with
9the federal Child and Family Services Improvement Act of 2006
10(Public Law 109-288) and the federal Child and Family Services
11Improvement and Innovation Act of 2011 (Public Law 112-34).
12(l)
end delete
13begin insert(m)end insert The implementation and operation of the amendments to
14subdivision (i) enacted
at the 2005-06 Regular Session shall be
15subject to appropriation through the budget process and by phase,
16as provided in Section 366.35.
begin insertSection 16501.1 of the end insertbegin insertWelfare and Institutions Codeend insert
18
begin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) The Legislature finds and declares that the
20foundation and central unifying tool in child welfare services is
21the case plan.
22(2) The Legislature further finds and declares that a case plan
23ensures that the child receives protection and safe and proper care
24and case management, and that services are provided to the child
25and parents or other caretakers, as appropriate, in order to improve
26conditions in the parent’s home, to facilitate the safe return of the
27child to a safe home or the permanent placement of the child, and
28to address the needs of the child while in foster care.
29(3) The agency shall consider the recommendations of the child
30and family team, as defined
inbegin delete paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) ofend delete
31
Section 16501, if any are available. The agency shall document
32the rationale for any inconsistencies between the case plan and the
33child and family team recommendations.
34(b) (1) A case plan shall be based upon the principles of this
35section and the input from the child and family team.
36(2) The case plan shall document that a preplacement assessment
37of the service needs of the child and family, and preplacement
38preventive services, have been provided, and that reasonable efforts
39to prevent out-of-home placement have been made. Preplacement
40services may include intensive mental health services in the home
P43 1or a community setting and the reasonable efforts made to prevent
2out-of-home placement.
3(3) In determining the reasonable services to be offered or
4provided, the child’s health
and safety shall be the paramount
5concerns.
6(4) Upon a determination pursuant to paragraph (1) of
7subdivision (e) of Section 361.5 that reasonable services will be
8offered to a parent who is incarcerated in a county jail or state
9prison, detained by the United States Department of Homeland
10Security, or deported to his or her country of origin, the case plan
11shall include information, to the extent possible, about a parent’s
12incarceration in a county jail or the state prison, detention by the
13United States Department of Homeland Security, or deportation
14during the time that a minor child of that parent is involved in
15dependency care.
16(5) Reasonable services shall be offered or provided to make it
17possible for a child to return to a safe home environment, unless,
18pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (e) of Section 361.5, the court
19determines that reunification services shall not be
provided.
20(6) If reasonable services are not ordered, or are terminated,
21reasonable efforts shall be made to place the child in a timely
22manner in accordance with the permanent plan and to complete
23all steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child.
24(c) If out-of-home placement is used to attain case plan goals,
25the case plan shall consider the recommendations of the child and
26family team.
27(d) (1) The case plan shall include a description of the type of
28home or institution in which the child is to be placed, and the
29reasons for that placement decision. The decision regarding choice
30of placement shall be based upon selection of a safe setting that is
31the least restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
32experiences and the most appropriate setting that meets the
child’s
33individual needs and is available, in proximity to the parent’s home,
34in proximity to the child’s school, and consistent with the selection
35of the environment best suited to meet the child’s special needs
36and best interests. The selection shall consider, in order of priority,
37placement with relatives, nonrelated extended family members,
38and tribal members; foster family homes, resource families, and
39nontreatment certified homes of foster family agencies; followed
40by treatment and intensive treatment certified homes of foster
P44 1family agencies; or multidimensional treatment foster care homes
2or therapeutic foster care homes; group care placements in the
3order of short-term residentialbegin delete treatment centers,end deletebegin insert
therapeutic
4programs,end insert group homes, community treatment facilities, and
5out-of-state residential treatment pursuant to Part 5 (commencing
6with Section 7900) of Division 12 of the Family Code.
7(2) If a short-termbegin delete intensive treatment centerend deletebegin insert residential
8therapeutic programend insert placement is selected for a child, the case
9plan shall indicate the needs of the child that necessitate this
10placement, the plan for transitioning the child to a less restrictive
11environment, and the projected timeline by which the child will
12be transitioned to a less restrictive environment. This section of
13the case plan shall be reviewed and updated at least semiannually.
14(A) The
case plan for placements in a group home, or
15commencing January 1, 2017, in a short-term residentialbegin delete treatment begin insert therapeutic program,end insert shall indicate that the county has
16center,end delete
17taken into consideration Section 16010.8.
18(B) After January 1, 2017, a child and family team meeting as
19begin delete definedend deletebegin insert describedend insert in Section 16501 shall be convened by the county
20placing agency for the purpose of identifying the supports and
21services needed to achieve permanency and enable the child or
22youth to be placed in the least restrictive family setting that
23promotes normal childhood
experiences.
24(3) On or after January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, as
25defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who is receiving
26AFDC-FC benefitsbegin insert and who isend insert up to 21 years of age pursuant to
27Section 11403, in addition to the above requirements, the selection
28of the placement, including a supervised independent living
29placement, as described in subdivision (w) of Section 11400, shall
30also be based upon the developmental needs of young adults by
31providing opportunities to have incremental responsibilities that
32prepare a nonminor dependent to transition to successful adulthood.
33If admission to, or continuation in, a group home or short-term
34residentialbegin delete treatment centerend deletebegin insert
therapeutic programend insert placement is
35being considered for a nonminor dependent, the group home or
36short-term residentialbegin delete treatment centerend deletebegin insert therapeutic programend insert
37 placement approval decision shall include a youth-driven,
38team-based case planning process, as defined by the department,
39in consultation with stakeholders. The case plan shall consider the
40full range of placement options, and shall specify why admission
P45 1to, or continuation in, a group home placement is the best
2alternative available at the time to meet the special needs or
3well-being of the nonminor dependent, and how the placement
4will contribute to the nonminor dependent’s transition to successful
5adulthood. The case plan shall specify the treatment strategies that
6will be used to prepare the nonminor dependent for
discharge to
7a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal childhood
8experiences, including a target date for discharge from the group
9home placement. The placement shall be reviewed and updated
10on a regular, periodic basis to ensure that continuation in the group
11home placement remains in the best interests of the nonminor
12dependent and that progress is being made in achieving case plan
13goals leading to successful adulthood. The group home placement
14planning process shall begin as soon as it becomes clear to the
15county welfare department or probation office that a foster child
16in group home placement is likely to remain in group home
17placement on his or her 18th birthday, in order to expedite the
18transition to a less restrictive family setting that promotes normal
19childhood experiences, if he or she becomes a nonminor dependent.
20The case planning process shall include informing the youth of all
21of his or her options, including, but not limited to, admission to
22or continuation in a group home
placement. Consideration for
23continuation of existing group home placement for a nonminor
24dependent under 19 years of age may include the need to stay in
25the same placement in order to complete high school. After a
26nonminor dependent either completes high school or attains his or
27her 19th birthday, whichever is earlier, continuation in or admission
28to a group home placement is prohibited unless the nonminor
29dependent satisfies the conditions of paragraph (5) of subdivision
30(b) of Section 11403, and group home placement functions as a
31short-term transition to the appropriate system of care. Treatment
32services provided by the group home placement to the nonminor
33dependent to alleviate or ameliorate the medical condition, as
34described in paragraph (5) of subdivision (b) of Section 11403,
35shall not constitute the sole basis to disqualify a nonminor
36dependent from the group home placement.
37(4) In addition to the requirements of paragraphs (1) to
(3),
38inclusive, and taking into account other statutory considerations
39regarding placement, the selection of the most appropriate home
40that will meet the child’s special needs and best interests shall also
P46 1promote educational stability by taking into consideration
2proximity to the child’s school of origin, and school attendance
3area, the number of school transfers the child has previously
4experienced, and the child’s school matriculation schedule, in
5addition to other indicators of educational stability that the
6Legislature hereby encourages the State Department of Social
7Services and the State Department of Education to develop.
8(e) A written case plan shall be completed within a maximum
9of 60 days of the initial removal of the child or of the in-person
10response required under subdivision (f) of Section 16501 if the
11child has not been removed from his or her home, or by the date
12of the dispositional hearing pursuant to Section 358, whichever
13
occurs first. The case plan shall be updated, as the service needs
14of the child and family dictate. At a minimum, the case plan shall
15be updated in conjunction with each status review hearing
16conducted pursuant to Sections 364, 366, 366.3, and 366.31, and
17the hearing conducted pursuant to Section 366.26, but no less
18frequently than once every six months. Each updated case plan
19shall include a description of the services that have been provided
20to the child under the plan and an evaluation of the appropriateness
21and effectiveness of those services.
22(1) It is the intent of the Legislature that extending the maximum
23time available for preparing a written case plan from 30 to 60 days
24will afford caseworkers time to actively engage families, and to
25solicit and integrate into the case plan the input of the child and
26the child’s family, as well as the input of relatives and other
27interested parties.
28(2) The extension of the maximum time available for preparing
29a written case plan frombegin delete theend delete
30 to 60 days shall be effective 90
30days after the date that the department gives counties written notice
31that necessary changes have been made to the Child Welfare
32Services/Case Management System (CWS/CMS) to account for
33the 60-day timeframe for preparing a written case plan.
34(f) The child welfare services case plan shall be comprehensive
35enough to meet the juvenile court dependency proceedings
36requirements pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section 300)
37of Chapter 2 of Part 1 of Division 2.
38(g) The case plan shall be developed considering the
39recommendations of the child and family team, as follows:
P47 1(1) The case plan shall be based upon an assessment of the
2circumstances that required child welfare services intervention.
3The child shall be involved in developing the case plan as age and
4
developmentally appropriate.
5(2) The case plan shall identify specific goals and the
6appropriateness of the planned services in meeting those goals.
7(3) The case plan shall identify the original allegations of abuse
8or neglect, as defined in Article 2.5 (commencing with Section
911164) of Chapter 2 of Title 1 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, or the
10conditions cited as the basis for declaring the child a dependent of
11the court pursuant to Section 300, or all of these, and the other
12precipitating incidents that led to child welfare services
13intervention.
14(4) The case plan shall include a description of the schedule of
15the placement agency contacts with the child and the family or
16other caretakers. The frequency of these contacts shall be in
17accordance with regulations adopted by the State Department of
18Social Services. If
the child has been placed in foster care out of
19state, the county social worker or probation officer, or a social
20worker or probation officer on the staff of the agency in the state
21in which the child has been placed, shall visit the child in a foster
22family home or the home of a relative, consistent with federal law
23and in accordance with the department’s approved state plan. For
24children in out-of-state group home facilities, visits shall be
25conducted at least monthly, pursuant to Section 16516.5. At least
26once every six months, at the time of a regularly scheduled
27placement agency contact with the foster child,begin insert and at each
28placement change,end insert the child’s social worker or probation officer
29shall inform thebegin delete child of his or herend deletebegin insert
child, the care provider, and
30the child and family team, if applicable, of the child’send insert rights as a
31foster child, as specified in Sectionbegin delete 16001.9.end deletebegin insert 16001.9, and shall
32provide a written copy of the rights to the child as part of the
33explanation.end insert The social worker or probation officer shall provide
34the information to the child in a manner appropriate to the age or
35developmental level of the child.begin insert The social worker or probation
36officer shall document in the case plan that he or she has informed
37the child of, and has provided the child with a written copy of, his
38or her rights.end insert
39(5) (A) When
out-of-home services are used, the frequency of
40contact between the natural parents or legal guardians and the child
P48 1shall be specified in the case plan. The frequency of those contacts
2shall reflect overall case goals, and consider other principles
3outlined in this section.
4(B) Information regarding any court-ordered visitation between
5the child and the natural parents or legal guardians, and the terms
6and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting the
7safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
8caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
9(6) When out-of-home placement is made, the case plan shall
10include provisions for the development and maintenance of sibling
11relationships as specified in subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) of Section
1216002. If appropriate, when siblings who are dependents of the
13juvenile court are not placed
together, the social worker for each
14child, if different, shall communicate with each of the other social
15workers and ensure that the child’s siblings are informed of
16significant life events that occur within their extended family.
17Unless it has been determined that it is inappropriate in a particular
18case to keep siblings informed of significant life events that occur
19within the extended family, the social worker shall determine the
20appropriate means and setting for disclosure of this information
21to the child commensurate with the child’s age and emotional
22well-being. These significant life events shall include, but shall
23not be limited to, the following:
24(A) The death of an immediate relative.
25(B) The birth of a sibling.
26(C) Significant changes regarding a dependent child, unless the
27child objects to the sharing of
the information with his or her
28siblings, including changes in placement, major medical or mental
29health diagnoses, treatments, or hospitalizations, arrests, and
30changes in the permanent plan.
31(7) If out-of-home placement is made in a foster family home,
32group home, or other child care institution that is either a
33substantial distance from the home of the child’s parent or out of
34state, the case plan shall specify the reasons why that placement
35is in the best interest of the child. When an out-of-state group home
36placement is recommended or made, the case plan shall, in
37addition, specify compliance with Section 7911.1 of the Family
38Code.
39(8) A case plan shall ensure the educational stability of the child
40while in foster care and shall include both of the following:
P49 1(A) An assurance that the placement takes into
account the
2appropriateness of the current educational setting and the proximity
3to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement.
4(B) An assurance that the placement agency has coordinated
5with the person holding the right to make educational decisions
6for the child and appropriate local educational agencies to ensure
7that the child remains in the school in which the child is enrolled
8at the time of placement or, if remaining in that school is not in
9the best interests of the child, assurances by the placement agency
10and the local educational agency to provide immediate and
11appropriate enrollment in a new school and to provide all of the
12child’s educational records to the new school.
13(9) (A) If out-of-home services are used, or if parental rights
14have been terminated and the case plan is placement for adoption,
15the case plan shall
include a recommendation regarding the
16appropriateness of unsupervised visitation between the child and
17any of the child’s siblings. This recommendation shall include a
18statement regarding the child’s and the siblings’ willingness to
19participate in unsupervised visitation. If the case plan includes a
20recommendation for unsupervised sibling visitation, the plan shall
21also note that information necessary to accomplish this visitation
22has been provided to the child or to the child’s siblings.
23(B) Information regarding the schedule and frequency of the
24visits between the child and siblings, as well as any court-ordered
25terms and conditions needed to facilitate the visits while protecting
26the safety of the child, shall be provided to the child’s out-of-home
27caregiver as soon as possible after the court order is made.
28(10) If out-of-home services are used and the goal is
29reunification,
the case plan shall describe the services to be
30provided to assist in reunification and the services to be provided
31concurrently to achieve legal permanency if efforts to reunify fail.
32The plan shall also consider in-state and out-of-state placements,
33the importance of developing and maintaining sibling relationships
34pursuant to Section 16002, and the desire and willingness of the
35caregiver to provide legal permanency for the child if reunification
36is unsuccessful.
37(11) If out-of-home services are used, the child has been in care
38for at least 12 months, and the goal is not adoptive placement, the
39case plan shall include documentation of the compelling reason
40or reasons why termination of parental rights is not in the child’s
P50 1best interest. A determination completed or updated within the
2past 12 months by the department when it is acting as an adoption
3agency or by a licensed adoption agency that it is unlikely that the
4child will be adopted, or
that one of the conditions described in
5paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 366.26 applies, shall
6be deemed a compelling reason.
7(12) (A) Parents and legal guardians shall have an opportunity
8to review the case plan, and to sign it whenever possible, and then
9shall receive a copy of the plan. In a voluntary service or placement
10agreement, the parents or legal guardians shall be required to
11review and sign the case plan. Whenever possible, parents and
12legal guardians shall participate in the development of the case
13plan. Commencing January 1, 2012, for nonminor dependents, as
14defined in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, who are receiving
15AFDC-FC or CalWORKs assistancebegin insert and who areend insert up to 21 years
16of age pursuant to Section 11403, the transitional independent
17living case plan, as set forth in subdivision (y) of
Section 11400,
18shall be developed with, and signed by, the nonminor.
19(B) Parents and legal guardians shall be advised that, pursuant
20to Section 1228.1 of the Evidence Code, neither their signature on
21the child welfare services case plan nor their acceptance of any
22services prescribed in the child welfare services case plan shall
23constitute an admission of guilt or be used as evidence against the
24parent or legal guardian in a court of law. However, they shall also
25be advised that the parent’s or guardian’s failure to cooperate,
26except for good cause, in the provision of services specified in the
27child welfare services case plan may be used in any hearing held
28pursuant to Section 366.21, 366.22, or 366.25 of this code as
29evidence.
30(13) A child shall be given a meaningful opportunity to
31participate in the development of the case plan and state his or her
32preference for foster care
placement. A child who is 12 years of
33age or older and in a permanent placement shall also be given the
34opportunity to review the case plan, sign the case plan, and receive
35a copy of the case plan.
36(14) The case plan shall be included in the court report and shall
37be considered by the court at the initial hearing and each review
38hearing. Modifications to the case plan made during the period
39between review hearings need not be approved by the court if the
40casework supervisor for that case determines that the modifications
P51 1further the goals of the plan. If out-of-home services are used with
2the goal of family reunification, the case plan shall consider and
3describe the application of subdivision (b) of Section 11203.
4(15) (A) If the case plan has as its goal for the child a permanent
5plan of adoption or legal guardianship, it shall include a statement
6of the
child’s wishes regarding their permanent placement plan
7and an assessment of those stated wishes. The agency shall also
8include documentation of the steps the agency is taking to find an
9adoptive family or other permanent living arrangements for the
10child; to place the child with an adoptive family, an appropriate
11and willing relative, or a legal guardian, and to finalize the adoption
12or legal guardianship. At a minimum, the documentation shall
13include child-specific recruitment efforts, such as the use of state,
14regional, and national adoption exchanges, including electronic
15exchange systems, when the child has been freed for adoption.
16Regardless of whether the child has been freed for adoption,
17documentation shall include a description of any barriers to
18achieving legal permanence and the steps the agency will take to
19address those barriers. If the plan is for kinship guardianship, the
20case plan shall document how the child meets the kinship
21guardianship eligibility requirements.
22(B) When the child is 16 years of age or older and is in another
23planned permanent living arrangement, the case plan shall identify
24the intensive and ongoing efforts to return the child to the home
25of the parent, place the child for adoption, place the child for tribal
26customary adoption in the case of an Indian child, establish a legal
27guardianship, or place the child nonminor dependent with a fit and
28willing relative, as appropriate. Efforts shall include the use of
29technology, including social media, to find biological family
30members of the child.
31(16) (A) (i) For a child who is 14 or 15 years of age, the case
32plan shall include a written description of the programs and services
33that will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests,
34to prepare for the transition from foster care to successful
35adulthood. The description may
be included in the document
36described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (18).
37(ii) When appropriate, for a child who is 16 years of age or older
38and, commencing January 1, 2012, for a nonminor dependent, the
39case plan shall include the transitional independent living plan
40(TILP), a written description of the programs and services that
P52 1will help the child, consistent with the child’s best interests, to
2prepare for the transition from foster care to successful adulthood,
3and, in addition, whether the youth has an in-progress application
4pending for Title XVI Supplemental Security Income benefits or
5for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status or other applicable
6application for legal residency and an active dependency case is
7required for that application. When appropriate, for a nonminor
8dependent, the transitional independent living case plan, as
9described in subdivision (v) of Section 11400, shall include the
10TILP, a written description of the
programs and services that will
11help the nonminor dependent, consistent with his or her best
12interests, to prepare for transition from foster care and assist the
13youth in meeting the eligibility criteria set forth in paragraphs (1)
14to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (b) of Section 11403. If applicable,
15the case plan shall describe the individualized supervision provided
16in the supervised independent living placement as defined in
17subdivision (w) of Section 11400. The case plan shall be developed
18with the child or nonminor dependent and individuals identified
19as important to the child or nonminor dependent, and shall include
20steps the agency is taking to ensure that the child or nonminor
21dependent achieves permanence, including maintaining or
22obtaining permanent connections to caring and committed adults.
23(B) During the 90-day period prior to the participant attaining
2418 years of age or older as the state may elect under Section
25475(8)(B)(iii) of
the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec.
26675(8)(B)(iii)), whether during that period foster care maintenance
27payments are being made on the child’s behalf or the child is
28receiving benefits or services under Section 477 of the federal
29Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 677), a caseworker or other
30appropriate agency staff or probation officer and other
31representatives of the participant, as appropriate, shall provide the
32youth or nonminor dependent with assistance and support in
33developing the written 90-day transition plan, that is personalized
34at the direction of the child, information as detailed as the
35participant elects that shall include, but not be limited to, options
36regarding housing, health insurance, education, local opportunities
37for mentors and continuing support services, and workforce
38supports and employment services, a power of attorney for health
39care, and information regarding the advance health care directive
40form.begin insert
Information provided regarding health insurance options
P53 1shall include verification that the eligible youth or nonminor is
2enrolled in Medi-Cal and a description of the steps that have been
3or will be taken by the youth’s social worker or probation officer
4to ensure that the eligible youth or nonminor is transitioned into
5the Medi-Cal program for former foster youth upon case closure
6with no interruption in coverage and with no new application
7being required, as provided in Section 14005.28.end insert
8(C) For youth 14 years of age or older, the case plan shall
9include documentation that a consumer credit report was requested
10annually from each of the three major credit reporting agencies at
11no charge to the youth and that any results were provided to the
12youth. For nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include
13documentation that the county assisted the nonminor dependent
14in obtaining his or her reports. The
case plan shall include
15documentation of barriers, if any, to obtaining the credit reports.
16If the consumer credit report reveals any accounts, the case plan
17shall detail how the county ensured the youth received assistance
18with interpreting the credit report and resolving any inaccuracies,
19including any referrals made for the assistance.
20(17) For youth 14 years of age or older and nonminor
21dependents, the case plan shall be developed in consultation with
22the youth. At the youth’s option, the consultation may include up
23to two members of the case planning team who are chosen by the
24youth and who are not foster parents of, or caseworkers for, the
25youth. The agency, at any time, may reject an individual selected
26by the youth to be a member of the case planning team if the
27agency has good cause to believe that the individual would not act
28in the youth’s best interest. One individual selected by the youth
29to be a member of the case planning team
may be designated to
30be the youth’s adviser and advocate with respect to the application
31of the reasonable and prudent parent standard to the youth, as
32necessary.
33(18) For youth in foster care 14 years of age and older and
34nonminor dependents, the case plan shall include both of the
35following:
36(A) A document that describes the youth’s rights with respect
37to education, health, visitation, and court participation, the right
38to be annually provided with copies of his or her credit reports at
39no cost while in foster care pursuant to Section 10618.6, and the
40right to stay safe and avoid exploitation.
P54 1(B) A signed acknowledgment by the youth that he or she has
2been provided a copy of the document and that the rights described
3in the document have been explained to the youth in an
4age-appropriate manner.
5(19) The case plan for a child or nonminor dependent who is,
6or who is at risk of becoming, the victim of commercial sexual
7exploitation, shall document the services provided to address that
8issue.
9(h) If the court finds, after considering the case plan, that
10unsupervised sibling visitation is appropriate and has been
11consented to, the court shall order that the child or the child’s
12siblings, the child’s current caregiver, and the child’s prospective
13adoptive parents, if applicable, be provided with information
14necessary to accomplish this visitation. This section does not
15require or prohibit the social worker’s facilitation, transportation,
16or supervision of visits between the child and his or her siblings.
17(i) The case plan documentation on sibling placements required
18under this section shall not require modification
of existing case
19plan forms until the Child Welfarebegin delete Service/Caseend deletebegin insert Services/Caseend insert
20 Management System (CWS/CMS) is implemented on a statewide
21basis.
22(j) When a child is 10 years of age or older and has been in
23out-of-home placement for six months or longer, the case plan
24shall include an identification of individuals, other than the child’s
25siblings, who are important to the child and actions necessary to
26maintain the child’s relationship with those individuals, provided
27that those relationships are in the best interest of the child. The
28social worker or probation officer shall ask every child who is 10
29years of age or older and who has been in out-of-home placement
30for six months or longer to identify individuals other than the
31child’s siblings who are
important to the child, and may ask any
32other child to provide that information, or may seek that
33information from the child and family team, as appropriate. The
34social worker or probation officer shall make efforts to identify
35other individuals who are important to the child, consistent with
36the child’s best interests.
37(k) The child’s caregiver shall be provided a copy of a plan
38outlining the child’s needs and services. The nonminor dependent’s
39caregiver shall be provided with a copy of the nonminor’s TILP.
P55 1(l) Each county shall ensure that the total number of visits made
2by caseworkers on a monthly basis to children in foster care during
3a federal fiscal year is not less than 95 percent of the total number
4of those visits that would occur if each child were visited once
5every month while in care and that the majority of the visits occur
6in the residence of the child. The county
child welfare and
7probation departments shall comply with data reporting
8requirements that the department deems necessary to comply with
9the federal Child and Family Services Improvement Act of 2006
10(Public Law 109-288) and the federal Child and Family Services
11Improvement and Innovation Actbegin delete of 2011end delete (Public Law 112-34).
12(l)
end delete
13begin insert(end insertbegin insertm)end insert The implementation and operation of the amendments to
14subdivision (i) enacted at the 2005-06 Regular Session shall be
15subject to appropriation through the budget
process and by phase,
16as provided in Section 366.35.
(a) Section 2.1 of this bill incorporates amendments
18to Section 16501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code proposed
19by both this bill and Assembly Bill 1849. It shall only become
20operative if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or
21before January 1, 2017, (2) each bill amends Section 16501.1 of
22the Welfare and Institutions Code, and (3) Assembly Bill 1997 is
23not enacted or as enacted does not amend that section, and (4)
24this bill is enacted after Assembly Bill 1849, in which case Sections
252, 2.2, and 2.3 of this bill shall not become operative.
26
(b) Section 2.2 of this bill incorporates amendments to Section
2716501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code proposed by both
28this bill and Assembly Bill 1997. It shall only become operative if
29(1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or before
30January 1, 2017, (2) each bill amends Section 16501.1 of the
31Welfare and Institutions Code, (3) Assembly Bill 1849 is not
32enacted or as enacted does not amend that section, and (4) this
33bill is enacted after Assembly Bill 1997, in which case Sections 2,
342.1, and 2.3 of this bill shall not become operative.
35
(c) Section 2.3 of this bill incorporates amendments to Section
3616501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code proposed by this bill,
37Assembly Bill 1849, and Assembly Bill 1997. It shall only become
38operative if (1) all three bills are enacted and become effective on
39or before January 1, 2017, (2) all three bills amend Section
40
16501.1 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, and (3) this bill is
P56 1enacted after Assembly Bill 1849 and Assembly Bill 1997, in which
2case Sections 2, 2.1, and 2.2 of this bill shall not become operative.
To the extent that this act has an overall effect of
5increasing the costs already borne by a local agency for programs
6or levels of service mandated by the 2011 Realignment Legislation
7within the meaning of Section 36 of Article XIII of the California
8Constitution, it shall apply to local agencies only to the extent that
9the state provides annual funding for the cost increase. Any new
10program or higher level of service provided by a local agency
11pursuant to this act above the level for which funding has been
12provided
shall not require a subvention of funds by the state nor
13otherwise be subject to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
14Constitution.
O
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