Foster Care for Children Licensing Standards 622-05

PI 16-40 Foster Care Licensing Forms

PI 16-40 Attachment A SFN 890

PI 16-40 Attachment B SFN 1941

PI 16-40 Attachment C SFN 400(2)

PI 16-40 Attachment D SFN 889

PI 16-40 Attachment E SFN 893

 

Definitions 622-05-05

(Revised 2/15/14 ML #3398)

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PI 16-39

PI 16-39 Attachment A

PI 16-39 Attachment B

 

 

N.D.C.C. 50-11-00.1

 

  1. Authorized agent

Authorized agent means the county social service board, unless another entity is designated by the department.

  1. Department

Department means North Dakota Department of Human Services (NDDHS) including its regional human service centers.

  1. Supervising Agency

Supervising agency means the agency or person having care, custody, and control of the foster child as ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction or the designee of that agency or person.  (NDAC 75-03-14-01)

  1. Applicant

Individuals who have completed, signed, dated, and submitted to the agency an application form to provide foster care in a manner and form prescribed by the Department.

  1. Director

The Executive Director of the Department.

  1. Foster Care for Children

Foster care for children means the provision of substitute parental child care to those children described in North Dakota Century Code 50-11; and includes the provision of food, shelter, security and safety, guidance and comfort on a twenty-four hour basis, to one or more children under twenty-one years of age to safeguard the child’s growth and development and to minimize and counteract hazards to the child’s emotional health inherent in the separation from the child’s family. Foster care may be provided in a foster family home, group home or residential child care facility.

  1. Foster Family Home

Foster family home means an occupied private residence in which foster care is regularly provided by the owner or leasee thereof to no more than four children, unless all the children in foster care are related to each other by blood or marriage, or unless the department approves otherwise for the placement of siblings, in which case the limitation in this subsection does not apply.

  1. Group Home

An occupied private residence, in which foster care is regularly provided for more than four, but less than ten, unrelated children.

  1. Foster Home License

The document issued by the Department which authorizes the applicant to provide foster care subject to the limitations as specific on the license; i.e. a license limited to a specific child(ren), age group, sex of child(ren), for a one-year period or less.

  1. License Capacity

The maximum number of foster children who can live in a foster home at any given time.

  1. License Requirement

No person may furnish foster care for children for more than 30 days during a calendar year without first procuring a license to do so from the department. The mandatory provisions of this section requiring licensure do not apply when the care is provided in: (NDCC 50-11-01.)

  1. The home of a person related to the child by blood or marriage.
  2. A home or institution under the management and control of the state or a political subdivision.
  3. A home or facility furnishing room and board primarily to accommodate the child’s educational or career and technical education needs.

(NOTE: Public funds may be used only if the home is licensed or approved. NDCC 50-11-03.2.)

  1. Permanency Planning

Permanency planning occurs during Foster Care Child & Family Team meetings. Foster Care Child & Family Team meetings develop procedures that are followed during the time a placement is being planned for the child, during the time a child is in foster care, and until the child has achieved reunification or an alternate permanent plan. This includes returning to the parent(s), adoption, guardianship, relative care, or another planned permanent living arrangement. Permanency plans are developed in accordance with DHHS Manual Chapter 624-05.

  1. Provider

The licensed family or person providing foster care to children. The provider is responsible for meeting and maintaining minimum licensing requirements and to follow the policies of the supervising agency, working in cooperation with the agency.

  1. Relative
  1. The child’s grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, half-sibling, aunt, great-aunt, uncle, great-uncle, nephew, niece, or first cousin;
  2. An individual with a relationship to the child, derived through a current or former spouse of the child’s parent, similar to a relationship described in subdivision a;
  3. An individual recognized in the child’s community as having a relationship with the child similar to a relationship described I subdivision a; or
  4. The child’s stepparent.
  1. Maintenance Payment - (Family)

The foster care payment made to the foster parents to meet the needs of the child(ren) placed in the foster home.

  1. Specialized Family Foster Care Payments

An excess maintenance payment (EMP) made to qualified foster parents to meet the needs of children with special needs, in accordance with North Dakota Department of Human Services Manual Chapter 624-05 and 623-05.

  1. Substitute Caregiver

A substitute care giver is a responsible adult, age 21 or older, temporarily providing care for a foster child in the absence of the foster parents.  When a foster child is placed in substitute care during the absence of the foster parents, prior approval of the substitute care must be given by the supervising agency. Prior approval is not required for short periods of substitute care such as a portion of one day. The foster child may not be removed from this state without the prior approval of the supervising agency.

  1. The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (ASFA)

The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (ASFA) seeks to ensure safety, permanency, and well-being for children. Foster care provides a safe, alternate setting for a child when the child’s family cannot provide care. ASFA emphasizes the need for the foster care experience to be brief, but more intense in terms of planning with the family and others to achieve permanency for the child. ASFA imposed strict timelines on states for meeting certain milestones in foster care case activity. It discourages long-term foster care, and eliminates that as one of the permanency options for children. Encouraged are reunification, relative care, guardianship, and adoption. Other options are considered before termination of parental rights and adoption. Concurrent planning is used when appropriate:  the agency works on two goals for the child simultaneously; for example, reunification and relative care. Services are provided to the family to ready them for reunification. If that doesn’t happen, the relative care option is ready, and the child’s permanency is achieved in a more timely manner.

 

During the time the child is in foster care, she/he needs a safe setting. NDCC 50-11 requires licensure for foster parents.  N.D. Admin. Code 75-03-14 is the rule with the minimum requires for family foster care. This NDDHS 622-05 manual is the working policy related to family foster homes. The intent of this structure is to provide a safe, quality foster care experience for children.

  1. Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 (Fostering Connections)

The Fostering Connections Act includes important improvements for children who enter foster care or are at risk of entering foster care. The act offers vulnerable children meaningful family connections and important protections and support, including promoting permanent families for them through relative guardianship and adoption and improving education and healthcare.

  1. ND Rules of Juvenile Procedure, Rules 4 and 15.

(www.ndcourts.gov)

 

RULE 4. INTERESTED PERSONS

 

Persons who may participate in a juvenile matter include:

(1) the parties as defined in Rule 3(b);

(2) the child’s guardian ad litem;

(3) in the case of an Indian child, the child’s Indian custodian and Indian tribe through the tribal representative;

(4) in the case of a foster child, the child’s foster parents, pre-adoptive parents and relatives providing care for the child;

(5) any other person who is named by the court to be important to a resolution that is in the best interests of the child.

 

RULE 15. NOTICE

(a) In General. Within five days of filing a written order, decision or judgment in a juvenile matter, a copy must be served on all parties as directed by the court.

(b) Modification Proceedings. A party seeking review or modification of an existing order must serve notice under Rule 7 of any hearing or proceeding on all parties.

(c) Children in Foster Care. In any matter involving a child in foster care under the responsibility of the state, the state must notify the child’s foster parents, pre-adoptive parents and relatives providing care for the child whenever any proceeding is held with respect to the child.

(d) Guardian ad Litem. If a guardian ad litem has been appointed for a child, notice under Rule 15(a), (b), and (c) must be provided to the guardian ad litem.