Colorado Code § 19-1-115

Legal custody - guardianship - placement out of the home - petition for review for need of placement - rules
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(1) (a) Except as otherwise provided by law, in awarding
legal custody of a child pursuant to this title 19, the court may, if in the best interests of the child,
give preference to the child's grandparent who is appropriate, capable, willing, and available to
care for the child, if the court finds that there is no suitable natural or adoptive parent available,
with due diligence having been exercised in attempting to locate any such natural or adoptive
parent. Any individual, agency, or institution vested by the court with legal custody of a child
has the rights and duties defined in section 19-1-103.
(b) Any individual, agency, or institution vested by the court with the guardianship of
the person of a child has the rights and duties defined in section 19-1-103; except that a guardian
of the person may not consent to the adoption of a child unless the court has expressly given that
authority.
(2) (a) If legal custody or guardianship of the person is vested in an agency or institution,
the court shall transmit, with the court order, copies of the social study, any clinical reports, and
other information concerning the care and treatment of the child.
(b) An individual, agency, or institution vested by the court with legal custody or
guardianship of the person of a child shall give the court any information concerning the child
which the court at any time may require.
(3) (a) Any agency vested by the court with legal custody of a child shall have the right,
subject to the approval of the court, to determine where and with whom the child shall live, but
this paragraph (a) shall not apply to placement of children committed to the department of
human services. In determining where and with whom a child shall live, if in the best interests of
the child, preference may be given to the child's grandparent who is appropriate, capable,
willing, and available to care for the child.
(b) No individual or agency vested by the court with legal custody of a child or with
which a child is placed pursuant to subsection (8) of this section shall remove the child from the
state for more than thirty days without court approval. When granting such approval, if
appropriate, the court shall enter an order that the individual or agency comply with the
requirements of the "Interstate Compact on Placement of Children" set forth in part 18 of article
60 of title 24, C.R.S.
(4) (a) A decree vesting legal custody of a child in an individual, institution, or agency or
providing for placement of a child pursuant to section 19-2.5-1102 or 19-3-403 or subsection (8)
of this section must be for a determinate period. The court shall review the decree no later than
three months after it is entered, except a decree vesting legal custody of a child with the
department of human services.
(b) The individual, institution, or agency vested with the legal custody of a child may
petition the court for renewal of the decree. The court, after notice and hearing, may renew the
decree for such additional determinate period as the court may determine if it finds such renewal
to be in the best interests of the child and of the community. The findings of the court and the
reasons therefor shall be entered with the order renewing or denying renewal of the decree.
(c) The court shall review any decree or, if there is no objection by any party to the
action, the court may, in its discretion, require an administrative review by the state department
of human services of any decree entered in accordance with this subsection (4) each six months
after the initial review provided in subsection (4)(a) of this section. In the event that an
administrative review is ordered, all counsel of record must be notified and may appear at said
review. Periodic reviews must include the determinations and projections required in section 19-
3-702.5.
(d) (I) When a decree is entered vesting legal custody of a child or youth or providing
for placement of a child or youth with an agency in which public money is expended and a
county department that delivers child welfare services determines that a referral is appropriate in
accordance with rules promulgated by the state board of human services, a delegate child support
enforcement unit may charge the parent of the child or youth a fee to cover the costs of
providing for residential care of the child or youth. When custody of the child or youth is given
to the county department, the fee for residential care must be in accordance with the fee
requirements provided by rule of the state board of human services, and the fee applies, to the
extent unpaid, to the entire period of placement. When a child or youth is committed to the state
department of human services, the fee for care and treatment must be in accordance with the fee
requirements provided by rule of the state board of human services, and the fee applies, to the
extent unpaid, to the entire period of placement.
(II) For an adoptive family who receives an approved Title IV-E adoption assistance
subsidy pursuant to the federal "Social Security Act", 42 U.S.C. sec. 673 et seq., or an approved
payment in subsidization of adoption pursuant to article 7 of title 26, the cost of care, as defined
in section 19-1-103, must not exceed the amount of the adoption assistance payment.
(III) The state department of human services shall convene a working group of
geographically and demographically diverse partners and stakeholders to provide feedback and
recommendations regarding the collection of fees for the residential care of children or youth in
out-of-home placement who are not adjudicated dependent or neglected pursuant to section 19-
3-102, ensuring compliance with federal law, including but not limited to Title IV of the federal
"Social Security Act". On or before March 31, 2022, the state department shall submit a report of
the recommendations of the working group to the public behavioral health care and human
services committee of the house of representatives and the health and human services committee
of the senate, or their successor committees.
(e) When a child, juvenile, or youth has been committed to the division of youth services
and the court no longer has ongoing jurisdiction, the administrative review division shall review
the placement of that child, juvenile, or youth in a qualified residential treatment program within
sixty days after placement. When the child, juvenile, or youth has not been committed to the
division of youth services and the court has ongoing jurisdiction, within sixty days after a
placement of that child, juvenile, or youth in a qualified residential treatment program, or within
thirty days after a placement when the qualified individual does not support the qualified
residential treatment program level of care or the child, juvenile, youth, guardian ad litem, or any
party objects to the placement, a juvenile court shall review that placement. In both instances,
the juvenile court or the administrative review division of the state department shall:
(I) Consider the assessment, determination, and documentation made by the qualified
individual;
(II) Determine whether the needs of the child, juvenile, or youth can be met through
placement with a parent, legal guardian, legal custodian, kin caregiver, or in a foster care home,
or whether placement of the child, juvenile, or youth in a qualified residential treatment program
provides the most effective and appropriate level of care for the child, juvenile, or youth in the
least restrictive environment, and whether that placement is consistent with the short- and long-
term goals, including mental, behavioral, and physical health goals, for the child, juvenile, or
youth as specified in the permanency plan for the child, juvenile, or youth or as outlined in the
family services plan or division of youth services plan; and
(III) Approve or disapprove of the placement.
(f) As long as a child, juvenile, or youth remains in a qualified residential treatment
program, the county department or the division of youth services shall submit evidence:
(I) Demonstrating that ongoing assessment of the strengths and needs of the child,
juvenile, or youth continues to support the determination that the needs of the child, juvenile, or
youth cannot be met through placement with a parent, legal guardian, legal custodian, kin
caregiver, or in a foster family home; that the placement in a qualified residential treatment
program provides the most effective and appropriate level of care for the child, juvenile, or youth
in the least restrictive environment; and that the placement is consistent with the short- and long-
term goals for the child, juvenile, or youth as specified in the permanency plan for the child,
juvenile, or youth, or as outlined in the family services plan;
(II) Documenting the specific treatment or service needs that will be met for the child,
juvenile, or youth in the placement and the length of time the child, juvenile, or youth is
expected to need treatment or services; and
(III) Documenting the efforts made by the county department to prepare the child,
juvenile, or youth to return home or to be placed with a fit and willing kin caregiver, a legal
guardian, legal custodian, or an adoptive parent, or in a foster family.
(g) The evidence required pursuant to subsection (4)(f) of this section must be submitted
at each subsequent review and each subsequent permanency hearing held concerning the child,
juvenile, or youth. The evidence must not be submitted less frequently than every ninety days
during the duration of the placement of the child, juvenile, or youth in the qualified residential
treatment program. The evidence must be submitted to the court or to the administrative review
division of the state department of human services if parties consent to the latter. The court shall
review the evidence submitted pursuant to subsection (4)(f) of this section at each subsequent
permanency and status review hearing at least every ninety days during the duration of the
placement of the child, juvenile, or youth in the qualified residential treatment program. If the
parties consent to a review by the administrative review division, attorneys of record must be
notified and may appear at the review. The administrative review division shall review the
evidence submitted pursuant to subsection (4)(f) of this section at least every ninety days during
the duration of the placement of the child, juvenile, or youth in the qualified residential treatment
program.
(h) In making a decision as to proper placement in a qualified residential treatment
program, the court or the administrative review division shall consider the assessment provided
by the qualified individual and the most recent assessment, as described in subsection (4)(e) of
this section, and shall give great weight to the recommendation in the assessment when making a
qualified residential treatment program placement decision. An assessment prepared by the
qualified individual must identify whether a qualified residential treatment program is the most
effective, appropriate, and least restrictive placement for the child or youth. The assessment must
also identify child- or youth-specific short- and long-term goals for the child or youth and the
family. If the court or administrative review division deviates from the qualified individual's
assessment and recommendation, the court or the administrative review division shall make
specific findings of fact regarding the most effective, appropriate, and least restrictive placement
for the child or youth and whether the placement is consistent with child- or youth-specific short-
and long-term goals for the child or youth and the family. When making such findings of fact,
the court or administrative review division shall consider all relevant information, including:
(I) Whether the protocol for the qualified residential treatment program assessment was
followed;
(II) The strengths and specific treatment or service needs of the child or youth and the
family;
(III) The expected length of stay; and
(IV) The placement preference of the child or youth and the family.
(4.5) The department of human services shall implement the provisions of subsections
(4)(e) and (4)(f) of this section when the federal government approves Colorado's five-year Title
IV-E prevention plan, at which time the department of human services may submit a budget
request to the joint budget committee for necessary funding to implement the plan.
(5) No legal custodian or guardian of the person may be removed without his consent
until given notice and an opportunity to be heard by the court if he so requests.
(6) Any time the court enters an order awarding legal custody of a child or youth to the
department of human services or to a county department pursuant to the provisions of this title
19, even temporarily, the order must contain specific findings, if warranted by the evidence, as
follows:
(a) That continuation of the child in the home would be contrary to the child's best
interests;
(b) That there has been compliance with reasonable efforts requirements regarding
removal of the child from the home, as follows:
(I) That reasonable efforts have been made to prevent or eliminate the need for removal
of the child from the home; or
(II) That an emergency situation exists which requires the immediate temporary removal
of the child from the home and it is reasonable that preventive efforts not be made due to the
emergency situation; or
(III) That reasonable efforts to prevent the child's removal from the home are not
required because of the existence of a circumstance described in subsection (7) of this section;
(c) That reasonable efforts have been made or will be made to reunite the child and the
family or that efforts to reunite the child and the family have failed or that reasonable efforts to
reunite the child and the family are not required pursuant to subsection (7) of this section; and
(d) That procedural safeguards with respect to parental rights have been applied in
connection with the removal of the child or youth from the home, a change in the child's or
youth's placement out of the home, and any determination affecting family time.
(6.5) Any time the court enters an order continuing a child or youth in a placement out of
the home pursuant to this title 19, the order must contain specific findings, if warranted by the
evidence, as follows:
(a) The continuation of the child in out-of-home placement is in the best interests of the
child;
(b) That reasonable efforts have been made to reunite the child and the family or that
reasonable efforts to reunite the child and the family are not required pursuant to subsection (7)
of this section; and
(c) That procedural safeguards with respect to parental rights have been applied in
connection with the continuation of the child or youth in out-of-home placement, a change in the
child's or youth's placement out of the home, and any determination affecting family time.
(6.7) Any time the court enters an order related to out-of-home placement pursuant to
subsections (6)(a) to (6)(c) or subsection (6.5)(b) of this section; subsection (8)(f) of this section;
section 19-2.5-305 (3)(a)(XI)(A) and (3)(a)(XI)(B); section 19-2.5-1116 (1)(a), (1)(b), and
(3)(a)(III); or sections 19-3-702 (3)(b) and 19-3-702.5 (1)(b), the order is effective as of the date
the findings were made by the court, notwithstanding the date that a written order may be signed
by the court. Written orders entered pursuant to subsections (6)(a) to (6)(c) or subsection (6.5)(b)
of this section; subsection (8)(f) of this section; section 19-2.5-305 (3)(a)(XI)(A) and
(3)(a)(XI)(B); section 19-2.5-1116 (1)(a), (1)(b), and (3)(a)(III); or sections 19-3-702 (3)(b) and
19-3-702.5 (1)(b) must state "the effective date of this order is" and must not use the words
"nunc pro tunc".
(7) Reasonable efforts are not required to prevent the child's removal from the home or
to reunify the child and the family in the following circumstances:
(a) When the court finds that the parent has subjected the child to aggravated
circumstances as described in sections 19-3-604 (1) and (2); or
(b) When the parental rights of the parent with respect to a sibling of the child have been
involuntarily terminated; unless the prior sibling termination resulted from a parent delivering a
child to a firefighter or a staff member of a hospital or community clinic emergency center, as
defined in section 19-3-304.5 (9), pursuant to the provisions of section 19-3-304.5; or
(c) When the court finds that the parent has been convicted of any of the following
crimes:
(I) Murder of another child of the parent;
(II) Voluntary manslaughter of another child of the parent;
(III) Aiding, abetting, or attempting the commission of or conspiring or soliciting to
commit the crimes in subparagraphs (I) and (II) of this paragraph (c); or
(IV) A felony assault that resulted in serious bodily injury to the child or to another child
of the parent.
(8) (a) Whenever it appears necessary that the placement of a child out of the home will
be for longer than ninety days, the placement is voluntary and not court-ordered, and the
placement involves the direct expenditure of funds appropriated by the general assembly to the
department of human services, a petition for review of need for placement shall be filed by the
department or agency with which the child has been placed before the expiration of ninety days
in the placement. A decree providing for voluntary placement of a child with an agency in which
public money is expended must be renewable in circumstances when there is documentation that
the child has an emotional, a physical, or an intellectual disability that necessitates care and
treatment for a longer duration than ninety days as provided pursuant to this subsection (8)(a).
The court shall not transfer or require relinquishment of legal custody of, or otherwise terminate
the parental rights with respect to, a child who has an emotional, a physical, or an intellectual
disability and who was voluntarily placed out of the home for the purposes of obtaining special
treatment or care solely because the parent or legal guardian is unable to provide the treatment or
care. Whenever a child fifteen years of age or older consents to placement in a mental health
facility pursuant to section 27-65-104, the review pursuant to section 27-65-104 (4) must be
conducted in lieu of and must fulfill the requirements for review under this subsection (8)(a).
(b) (I) The petition and all subsequent court documents in any proceedings brought
under paragraph (a) of this subsection (8) shall be titled "The People of the State of Colorado, in
the Interest of , a child (or children) and Concerning , Respondent." The
petition shall be verified, and the statements in the petition may be made upon information and
belief.
(II) The petition shall set forth plainly the facts that bring the child within the court's
jurisdiction, specifying that the child is subject to immediate placement out of the home or has
been in voluntary placement out of the home and it appears that continuation of the placement is
necessary for a time exceeding ninety days and continuation of the placement is necessary and is
in the best interest of the child, the family, and the community. The petition shall also state the
name, age, and residence of the child and the names and residences of his or her parents,
guardian, or other legal custodian or of his or her nearest known relative if no parent, guardian,
or other legal custodian is known.
(III) All petitions filed pursuant to this subsection (8) shall include the following
statement: "If the child is placed out of the home for a period of twelve months or longer, the
court shall hold a permanency hearing within said twelve months to determine the future status
of the child. The review of any decree of placement of a child subsequent to the three-month
review required by section 19-1-115 (4)(a), Colorado Revised Statutes, may be conducted as an
administrative review by the department of human services. If you are a party to the action, you
have a right to object to an administrative review, and, if you object, the review shall be
conducted by the court."
(c) After a petition has been filed, the court shall promptly issue a summons reciting
briefly the substance of the petition. The summons must be substantially in the form specified in
section 19-3-502 and be dealt with in the manner provided in section 19-3-503 and must set forth
the constitutional and legal rights of the child, the child's parents or guardian, and any other
respondent, including the right to have an attorney present at the hearing on the petition. The
petitioner shall send the summons to the child and the child's parents, guardian, or legal
custodian by certified mail. The court shall give notice of the hearing to the director of the
facility or agency in which the child is placed and any person who has physical custody of the
child and any attorney or guardian ad litem or counsel for youth of record. Nothing in this
subsection (8) requires the presence of any person before the court unless the court so directs.
(d) The court shall appoint a guardian ad litem for a child under twelve years of age, or
counsel for youth if the youth is twelve years of age or older, to protect the interest of any child
or youth who is the subject of a petition for review of placement, unless the court makes specific
findings that no useful purpose would be served by such appointment. The court may appoint
both a guardian ad litem and a counsel for youth if a youth is twelve years of age or older and the
appointment of a guardian ad litem is necessary because the youth has diminished capacity.
(e) For purposes of determining proper placement of the child, the petition for review of
placement or social study shall be accompanied by an evaluation for placement prepared by the
department or agency that recommends placement or with which the child has been placed. The
evaluation for placement shall include an assessment of the child's physical and mental health,
developmental status, family and social history, and educational status. The petition shall also be
accompanied by recommended placements for the child and the monthly cost of each and a
treatment plan that contains, at a minimum, the goals to be achieved by the placement; the
services to be provided; the intensity, duration, and provider of the services; identification of the
services that can be provided only in a residential setting; and the recommended duration of the
placement. The petition or social study shall also be accompanied by the required fee to be
charged to the parents pursuant to paragraph (d) of subsection (4) of this section. In addition, if a
change in legal custody is recommended, the evaluation for placement shall include other
alternatives that have been explored and the reason for their rejection, and the evaluation for
placement shall contain an explanation of any particular placements that were considered and
rejected and the reason for their rejection.
(f) The petition for review of need for placement shall request the court to determine, by
a preponderance of the evidence, whether placement or continued placement is necessary and in
the best interest of the child, the family, and the community and whether reasonable efforts have
been made to return the child to a safe home or whether the child should be permanently
removed from his or her home. If the court makes such findings, it shall enter a decree ordering
the child's placement out of the home in the facility or setting that most appropriately meets the
needs of the child, the family, and the community. In making its decision as to proper placement,
the court shall utilize the evaluation for placement prepared pursuant to section 19-1-107 or the
evaluation for placement required by paragraph (e) of this subsection (8) that shall state the cost
of recommended placement. If the evaluation for placement recommends placement in a facility
located in Colorado that can provide appropriate treatment and that will accept the child, then the
court shall not place the child in a facility outside this state. If the court deviates from the
recommendations of the evaluation for placement in a manner that results in a difference in the
cost of the disposition ordered by the court and the cost of the disposition recommended in the
evaluation, the court shall make specific findings of fact relating to its decision, including the
monthly cost of the placement, if ordered. A copy of such findings shall be sent to the chief
justice of the Colorado supreme court, who shall report annually to the joint budget committee
and the health and human services committees of the house of representatives and senate of the
general assembly, or any successor committees, on such orders. If the court commits the child to
the department of human services, it shall not make a specific placement, nor shall the provisions
of this paragraph (f) relating to specific findings of fact be applicable. If the court makes a
finding that continued placement is not necessary and is not in the best interest of the child, the
family, and the community, the court shall dismiss the petition for review of need for placement
and shall order that the child be returned home. The court may require a continued hearing of the
petition for review of need for placement for a period not to exceed fourteen days if it finds that
the materials submitted are insufficient to make a finding as provided in this paragraph (f).
(g) A petition for review of need for placement shall not be handled as an informal
adjustment in accordance with the provisions of section 19-3-501 (2).

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