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A child protective proceeding is a
proceeding designed to help protect a child from injury or maltreatment
and help safeguard the child's mental and emotional health.
It provides due process of law for determining when the State
may intervene against the wishes of a parent on behalf of the
child so that the child's needs are properly met.
A law guardian will
be assigned to represent the child. A law guardian is
an independent attorney who represents the interests of the
child.
Allegations of abuse
and or neglect must be proved at a fact-finding hearing. If
the court finds that there has been abuse or neglect, the court
will then hold a dispositional hearing to determine what order
of disposition should be made. At this hearing, the court
will consider the seriousness of the abuse or neglect, the potential
danger to the child and the child's best interests.
If the parent or guardian
is found to have neglected or abused the child, the court may
enter an order of disposition suspending judgment against the
parent or guardian for up to one year on certain conditions,
release the child to the custody of his or her parent(s), place
the child in the custody of a relative or other suitable person
or the Commission of Social Services, make an order of protection
which sets forth reasonable conditions of behavior to be observed
by the parent or person legally responsible for the child, or
place the person before the court under supervision of a child
protective agency.
At the end of the
one-year placement, the child may be returned to the parent
or guardian. However, the child protective agency may file
a petition to extend the child's stay in foster care. The child
protective agency must explain why it feels the child should
not be returned to the parent or guardian at that time and must
present a plan for the permanent care of the child. The
plan may include a later return of the child to the parent or
guardian or the filing of a petition to terminate the rights
of the parents and approve the release of the child for adoption. The
court must review the plan for the child every year, and may
continue the child in placement until the child reaches the
age of 18.
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