Bill Text: MN HF1967 | 2011-2012 | 87th Legislature | Engrossed


Bill Title: Children and family services provisions modified, child safety and permanency reform provided including adoptions under guardianship of the commissioner, statutory provisions modified related to child support, child care provisions modified, fees modified, MFIP provisions modified, criminal penalties provided, and technical changes made.

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-1)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2012-04-19 - Author added Slawik [HF1967 Detail]

Download: Minnesota-2011-HF1967-Engrossed.html

1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to human services; modifying provisions related to children and family
1.3services; providing for child safety and permanency reform including adoptions
1.4under guardianship of the commissioner; modifying statutory provisions
1.5related to child support; modifying child care provisions; modifying fees;
1.6modifying MFIP provisions; providing criminal penalties; making technical
1.7changes;amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.46, subdivision 2;
1.813.461, subdivision 17; 13.465, by adding a subdivision; 119B.09, subdivision
1.97; 119B.12, subdivisions 1, 2; 119B.125, subdivisions 1a, 2, 6; 119B.13,
1.10subdivision 6; 145.902; 256.998, subdivisions 1, 5; 256J.08, subdivision 11;
1.11256J.24, subdivisions 2, 5; 256J.32, subdivision 6; 256J.575, subdivisions 1,
1.122, 5, 6, 8; 256J.621; 256J.68, subdivision 7; 256J.95, subdivision 3; 257.01;
1.13257.75, subdivision 7; 259.22, subdivision 2; 259.23, subdivision 1; 259.24,
1.14subdivisions 1, 3, 5, 6a, 7; 259.29, subdivision 2; 259.69; 259.73; 260.012;
1.15260.771, subdivision 3; 260C.001; 260C.007, subdivision 4, by adding
1.16subdivisions; 260C.101, subdivision 2; 260C.150, subdivision 1; 260C.157,
1.17subdivision 1; 260C.163, subdivisions 1, 4; 260C.178, subdivisions 1, 7;
1.18260C.193, subdivisions 3, 6; 260C.201, subdivisions 2, 10, 11a; 260C.212,
1.19subdivisions 1, 2, 5, 7; 260C.215, subdivisions 4, 6; 260C.217; 260C.301,
1.20subdivisions 1, 8; 260C.317, subdivisions 3, 4; 260C.325, subdivisions 1, 3, 4;
1.21260C.328; 260C.451; 260D.08; 518A.40, subdivision 4; 518C.205; 541.04;
1.22548.09, subdivision 1; 609.3785; 626.556, subdivisions 2, 10, 10e, 10f, 10i,
1.2310k, 11; Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, sections 119B.13, subdivision 1;
1.24256.01, subdivision 14b; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
1.25chapters 260C; 611; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter
1.26259A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 256.022; 259.67; 259.71;
1.27260C.201, subdivision 11; 260C.215, subdivision 2; 260C.456; Minnesota Rules,
1.28parts 9560.0071; 9560.0082; 9560.0083; 9560.0091; 9560.0093, subparts 1,
1.293, 4; 9560.0101; 9560.0102.
1.30BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:

1.31ARTICLE 1
1.32CHILDREN AND FAMILIES POLICY PROVISIONS

1.33    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
2.1    Subd. 2. General. (a) Unless the data is summary data or a statute specifically
2.2provides a different classification, data on individuals collected, maintained, used, or
2.3disseminated by the welfare system is private data on individuals, and shall not be
2.4disclosed except:
2.5    (1) according to section 13.05;
2.6    (2) according to court order;
2.7    (3) according to a statute specifically authorizing access to the private data;
2.8    (4) to an agent of the welfare system, including a law enforcement person, attorney,
2.9or investigator acting for it in the investigation or prosecution of a criminal or civil
2.10proceeding relating to the administration of a program;
2.11    (5) to personnel of the welfare system who require the data to verify an individual's
2.12identity; determine eligibility, amount of assistance, and the need to provide services to
2.13an individual or family across programs; evaluate the effectiveness of programs; assess
2.14parental contribution amounts; and investigate suspected fraud;
2.15    (6) to administer federal funds or programs;
2.16    (7) between personnel of the welfare system working in the same program;
2.17    (8) to the Department of Revenue to assess parental contribution amounts for
2.18purposes of section 252.27, subdivision 2a, administer and evaluate tax refund or tax credit
2.19programs and to identify individuals who may benefit from these programs. The following
2.20information may be disclosed under this paragraph: an individual's and their dependent's
2.21names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, income, addresses, and other data as
2.22required, upon request by the Department of Revenue. Disclosures by the commissioner
2.23of revenue to the commissioner of human services for the purposes described in this clause
2.24are governed by section 270B.14, subdivision 1. Tax refund or tax credit programs include,
2.25but are not limited to, the dependent care credit under section 290.067, the Minnesota
2.26working family credit under section 290.0671, the property tax refund and rental credit
2.27under section 290A.04, and the Minnesota education credit under section 290.0674;
2.28    (9) between the Department of Human Services, the Department of Employment
2.29and Economic Development, and when applicable, the Department of Education, for
2.30the following purposes:
2.31    (i) to monitor the eligibility of the data subject for unemployment benefits, for any
2.32employment or training program administered, supervised, or certified by that agency;
2.33    (ii) to administer any rehabilitation program or child care assistance program,
2.34whether alone or in conjunction with the welfare system;
2.35    (iii) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program or the child
2.36care assistance program by exchanging data on recipients and former recipients of food
3.1support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D, 256J, or 256K, child care assistance
3.2under chapter 119B, or medical programs under chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L; and
3.3    (iv) to analyze public assistance employment services and program utilization,
3.4cost, effectiveness, and outcomes as implemented under the authority established in Title
3.5II, Sections 201-204 of the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of
3.61999. Health records governed by sections 144.291 to 144.298 and "protected health
3.7information" as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, section 160.103, and
3.8governed by Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, parts 160-164, including health care
3.9claims utilization information, must not be exchanged under this clause;
3.10    (10) to appropriate parties in connection with an emergency if knowledge of
3.11the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the individual or other
3.12individuals or persons;
3.13    (11) data maintained by residential programs as defined in section 245A.02 may
3.14be disclosed to the protection and advocacy system established in this state according
3.15to Part C of Public Law 98-527 to protect the legal and human rights of persons with
3.16developmental disabilities or other related conditions who live in residential facilities for
3.17these persons if the protection and advocacy system receives a complaint by or on behalf
3.18of that person and the person does not have a legal guardian or the state or a designee of
3.19the state is the legal guardian of the person;
3.20    (12) to the county medical examiner or the county coroner for identifying or locating
3.21relatives or friends of a deceased person;
3.22    (13) data on a child support obligor who makes payments to the public agency
3.23may be disclosed to the Minnesota Office of Higher Education to the extent necessary to
3.24determine eligibility under section 136A.121, subdivision 2, clause (5);
3.25    (14) participant Social Security numbers and names collected by the telephone
3.26assistance program may be disclosed to the Department of Revenue to conduct an
3.27electronic data match with the property tax refund database to determine eligibility under
3.28section 237.70, subdivision 4a;
3.29    (15) the current address of a Minnesota family investment program participant
3.30may be disclosed to law enforcement officers who provide the name of the participant
3.31and notify the agency that:
3.32    (i) the participant:
3.33    (A) is a fugitive felon fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after
3.34conviction, for a crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony under the laws of the
3.35jurisdiction from which the individual is fleeing; or
3.36    (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal law;
4.1    (ii) the location or apprehension of the felon is within the law enforcement officer's
4.2official duties; and
4.3    (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of those duties;
4.4    (16) the current address of a recipient of general assistance or general assistance
4.5medical care may be disclosed to probation officers and corrections agents who are
4.6supervising the recipient and to law enforcement officers who are investigating the
4.7recipient in connection with a felony level offense;
4.8    (17) information obtained from food support applicant or recipient households may
4.9be disclosed to local, state, or federal law enforcement officials, upon their written request,
4.10for the purpose of investigating an alleged violation of the Food Stamp Act, according
4.11to Code of Federal Regulations, title 7, section 272.1 (c);
4.12    (18) the address, Social Security number, and, if available, photograph of any
4.13member of a household receiving food support shall be made available, on request, to a
4.14local, state, or federal law enforcement officer if the officer furnishes the agency with the
4.15name of the member and notifies the agency that:
4.16    (i) the member:
4.17    (A) is fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after conviction, for a
4.18crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony in the jurisdiction the member is fleeing;
4.19    (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal
4.20law; or
4.21    (C) has information that is necessary for the officer to conduct an official duty related
4.22to conduct described in subitem (A) or (B);
4.23    (ii) locating or apprehending the member is within the officer's official duties; and
4.24    (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of the officer's official
4.25duty;
4.26    (19) the current address of a recipient of Minnesota family investment program,
4.27general assistance, general assistance medical care, or food support may be disclosed to
4.28law enforcement officers who, in writing, provide the name of the recipient and notify the
4.29agency that the recipient is a person required to register under section 243.166, but is not
4.30residing at the address at which the recipient is registered under section 243.166;
4.31    (20) certain information regarding child support obligors who are in arrears may be
4.32made public according to section 518A.74;
4.33    (21) data on child support payments made by a child support obligor and data on
4.34the distribution of those payments excluding identifying information on obligees may be
4.35disclosed to all obligees to whom the obligor owes support, and data on the enforcement
5.1actions undertaken by the public authority, the status of those actions, and data on the
5.2income of the obligor or obligee may be disclosed to the other party;
5.3    (22) data in the work reporting system may be disclosed under section 256.998,
5.4subdivision 7
;
5.5    (23) to the Department of Education for the purpose of matching Department of
5.6Education student data with public assistance data to determine students eligible for free
5.7and reduced-price meals, meal supplements, and free milk according to United States
5.8Code, title 42, sections 1758, 1761, 1766, 1766a, 1772, and 1773; to allocate federal and
5.9state funds that are distributed based on income of the student's family; and to verify
5.10receipt of energy assistance for the telephone assistance plan;
5.11    (24) the current address and telephone number of program recipients and emergency
5.12contacts may be released to the commissioner of health or a local board of health as
5.13defined in section 145A.02, subdivision 2, when the commissioner or local board of health
5.14has reason to believe that a program recipient is a disease case, carrier, suspect case, or at
5.15risk of illness, and the data are necessary to locate the person;
5.16    (25) to other state agencies, statewide systems, and political subdivisions of this
5.17state, including the attorney general, and agencies of other states, interstate information
5.18networks, federal agencies, and other entities as required by federal regulation or law for
5.19the administration of the child support enforcement program;
5.20    (26) to personnel of public assistance programs as defined in section 256.741, for
5.21access to the child support system database for the purpose of administration, including
5.22monitoring and evaluation of those public assistance programs;
5.23    (27) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program by
5.24exchanging data between the Departments of Human Services and Education, on
5.25recipients and former recipients of food support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D,
5.26256J, or 256K, child care assistance under chapter 119B, or medical programs under
5.27chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L;
5.28    (28) to evaluate child support program performance and to identify and prevent
5.29fraud in the child support program by exchanging data between the Department of Human
5.30Services, Department of Revenue under section 270B.14, subdivision 1, paragraphs (a)
5.31and (b), without regard to the limitation of use in paragraph (c), Department of Health,
5.32Department of Employment and Economic Development, and other state agencies as is
5.33reasonably necessary to perform these functions;
5.34    (29) counties operating child care assistance programs under chapter 119B may
5.35disseminate data on program participants, applicants, and providers to the commissioner
5.36of education; or
6.1(30) child support data on the parents and the child may be disclosed to agencies
6.2administering programs under titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security Act, as provided
6.3only to the extent mandated by federal law. Data may be disclosed only to the extent
6.4necessary for the purpose of establishing parentage or for determining who has or may
6.5have parental rights with respect to a child, which could be related to permanency planning.
6.6    (b) Information on persons who have been treated for drug or alcohol abuse may
6.7only be disclosed according to the requirements of Code of Federal Regulations, title
6.842, sections 2.1 to 2.67.
6.9    (c) Data provided to law enforcement agencies under paragraph (a), clause (15),
6.10(16), (17), or (18), or paragraph (b), are investigative data and are confidential or protected
6.11nonpublic while the investigation is active. The data are private after the investigation
6.12becomes inactive under section 13.82, subdivision 5, paragraph (a) or (b).
6.13    (d) Mental health data shall be treated as provided in subdivisions 7, 8, and 9, but is
6.14not subject to the access provisions of subdivision 10, paragraph (b).
6.15    For the purposes of this subdivision, a request will be deemed to be made in writing
6.16if made through a computer interface system.

6.17    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.461, subdivision 17, is amended to read:
6.18    Subd. 17. Maltreatment review panels. Data of the vulnerable adult maltreatment
6.19review panel or the child maltreatment review panel are classified under section 256.021
6.20or 256.022.

6.21    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.465, is amended by adding a subdivision
6.22to read:
6.23    Subd. 5a. Adoptive parent. Certain data that may be disclosed to a prospective
6.24adoptive parent is governed by section 260C.613, subdivision 2.

6.25    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256.998, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
6.26    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) The definitions in this subdivision apply to this
6.27section.
6.28(b) "Date of hiring" means the earlier of: (1) the first day for which an employee is
6.29owed compensation by an employer; or (2) the first day that an employee reports to work
6.30or performs labor or services for an employer.
6.31(c) "Earnings" means payment owed by an employer for labor or services rendered
6.32by an employee.
7.1(d) "Employee" means a person who resides or works in Minnesota, performs
7.2services for compensation, in whatever form, for an employer and satisfies the criteria of
7.3an employee under chapter 24 of the Internal Revenue Code. Employee does not include:
7.4(1) persons hired for domestic service in the private home of the employer, as
7.5defined in the Federal Tax Code; or
7.6(2) an employee of the federal or state agency performing intelligence or
7.7counterintelligence functions, if the head of such agency has determined that reporting
7.8according to this law would endanger the safety of the employee or compromise an
7.9ongoing investigation or intelligence mission.
7.10(e) "Employer" means a person or entity located or doing business in this state that
7.11employs one or more employees for payment, and satisfies the criteria of an employer
7.12under chapter 24 of the Internal Revenue Code. Employer includes a labor organization as
7.13defined in paragraph (g). Employer also includes the state, political or other governmental
7.14subdivisions of the state, and the federal government.
7.15(f) "Hiring" means engaging a person to perform services for compensation and
7.16includes the reemploying or return to work of any previous employee who was laid off,
7.17furloughed, separated, granted a leave without pay, or terminated from employment when
7.18a period of 90 60 days elapses from the date of layoff, furlough, separation, leave, or
7.19termination to the date of the person's return to work.
7.20(g) "Labor organization" means entities located or doing business in this state that
7.21meet the criteria of labor organization under section 2(5) of the National Labor Relations
7.22Act. This includes any entity, that may also be known as a hiring hall, used to carry out
7.23requirements described in chapter 7 of the National Labor Relations Act.
7.24(h) "Payor" means a person or entity located or doing business in Minnesota who
7.25pays money to an independent contractor according to an agreement for the performance
7.26of services.

7.27    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256.998, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
7.28    Subd. 5. Report contents. Reports required under this section must contain: all
7.29the information required by federal law.
7.30(1) the employee's name, address, Social Security number, and date of birth when
7.31available, which can be handwritten or otherwise added to the W-4 form, W-9 form, or
7.32other document submitted; and
7.33(2) the employer's name, address, and federal identification number.

7.34    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.24, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
8.1    Subd. 5. MFIP transitional standard. The MFIP transitional standard is based
8.2on the number of persons in the assistance unit eligible for both food and cash assistance
8.3unless the restrictions in subdivision 6 on the birth of a child apply. The following table
8.4represents the transitional standards including a breakdown of the cash and food portions
8.5effective October 1, 2009.
8.6
Number of Eligible People
Transitional Standard
Cash Portion
Food Portion
8.7
1
$428:
$250
$178
8.8
2
$764:
$437
$327
8.9
3
$1,005:
$532
$473
8.10
4
$1,222:
$621
$601
8.11
5
$1,399:
$697
$702
8.12
6
$1,608:
$773
$835
8.13
7
$1,754:
$850
$904
8.14
8
$1,940:
$916
$1,024
8.15
9
$2,125:
$980
$1,145
8.16
10
$2,304:
$1,035
$1,269
8.17
over 10
add $178:
$53
$125
8.18
per additional member.
8.19The amount of the transitional standard is published annually by the Department of
8.20Human Services.

8.21    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.22, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
8.22    Subd. 2. Persons who may be adopted. No petition for adoption shall be filed
8.23unless the person sought to be adopted has been placed by the commissioner of human
8.24services, the commissioner's agent, or a licensed child-placing agency. The provisions of
8.25this subdivision shall not apply if:
8.26    (1) the person to be adopted is over 14 years of age;
8.27    (2) the child is sought to be adopted by an individual who is related to the child, as
8.28defined by section 245A.02, subdivision 13;
8.29    (3) the child has been lawfully placed under the laws of another state while the child
8.30and petitioner resided in that other state;
8.31    (4) the court waives the requirement of this subdivision in the best interests of the
8.32child or petitioners, provided that the adoption does not involve a placement as defined in
8.33section 259.21, subdivision 8; or
8.34    (5) the child has been lawfully placed under section 259.47.

8.35    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.23, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
9.1    Subdivision 1. Venue. (a) Except as provided in section 260C.101, subdivision 2,
9.2The juvenile court shall have original jurisdiction in all adoption proceedings. The proper
9.3venue for an adoption proceeding shall be the county of the petitioner's residence, except
9.4as provided in paragraph (b) section 260C.621, subdivision 2, for the adoption of children
9.5under the guardianship of the commissioner.
9.6(b) Venue for the adoption of a child committed to the guardianship of the
9.7commissioner of human services shall be the county with jurisdiction in the matter
9.8according to section 260C.317, subdivision 3.
9.9(c) Upon request of the petitioner, the court having jurisdiction over the matter under
9.10section 260C.317, subdivision 3, may transfer venue of an adoption proceeding involving
9.11a child under the guardianship of the commissioner to the county of the petitioner's
9.12residence upon determining that:
9.13(1) the commissioner has given consent to the petitioner's adoption of the child
9.14or that consent is unreasonably withheld;
9.15(2) there is no other adoption petition for the child that has been filed or is reasonably
9.16anticipated by the commissioner or the commissioner's delegate to be filed; and
9.17(3) transfer of venue is in the best interests of the child.
9.18Transfer of venue under this paragraph shall be according to the rules of adoption court
9.19procedure.
9.20(d) (b) In all other adoptions under this chapter, if the petitioner has acquired a new
9.21residence in another county and requests a transfer of the adoption proceeding, the court in
9.22which an adoption is initiated may transfer the proceeding to the appropriate court in the
9.23new county of residence if the transfer is in the best interests of the person to be adopted.
9.24The court transfers the proceeding by ordering a continuance and by forwarding to the
9.25court administrator of the appropriate court a certified copy of all papers filed, together
9.26with an order of transfer. The transferring court also shall forward copies of the order
9.27of transfer to the commissioner of human services and any agency participating in the
9.28proceedings. The judge of the receiving court shall accept the order of the transfer and any
9.29other documents transmitted and hear the case; provided, however, the receiving court
9.30may in its discretion require the filing of a new petition prior to the hearing.

9.31    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.24, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
9.32    Subdivision 1. Exceptions. (a) No child shall be adopted without the consent of the
9.33child's parents and the child's guardian, if there be one, except in the following instances
9.34consent is not required of a parent:
10.1(a) Consent shall not be required of a parent (1) who is not entitled to notice of the
10.2proceedings.;
10.3(b) Consent shall not be required of a parent (2) who has abandoned the child, or
10.4of a parent who has lost custody of the child through a divorce decree or a decree of
10.5dissolution, and upon whom notice has been served as required by section 259.49.; or
10.6(c) Consent shall not be required of a parent (3) whose parental rights to the child
10.7have been terminated by a juvenile court or who has lost custody of a child through a final
10.8commitment of the juvenile court or through a decree in a prior adoption proceeding.
10.9(d) If there be no parent or guardian qualified to consent to the adoption, the
10.10consent shall be given by the commissioner. After the court accepts a parent's consent
10.11to the adoption under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, consent by the commissioner
10.12or commissioner's delegate is also necessary. Agreement to the identified prospective
10.13adoptive parent by the responsible social services agency under section 260C.201,
10.14subdivision 11
, does not constitute the required consent.
10.15(e) (b) If there is no parent or guardian qualified to consent to the adoption, the
10.16commissioner or agency having authority to place a child for adoption pursuant to section
10.17259.25, subdivision 1 , shall have the exclusive right to consent to the adoption of such the
10.18child. The commissioner or agency shall make every effort to place siblings together for
10.19adoption. Notwithstanding any rule to the contrary, the commissioner may delegate the
10.20right to consent to the adoption or separation of siblings, if it is in the child's best interest,
10.21to a local social services agency.

10.22    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.24, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
10.23    Subd. 3. Child. When the child to be adopted is over 14 years of age, the child's
10.24written consent to adoption by a particular person is also necessary. A child of any age
10.25who is under the guardianship of the commissioner and is legally available for adoption
10.26may not refuse or waive the commissioner's agent's exhaustive efforts to recruit, identify,
10.27and place the child in an adoptive home required under section 260C.317, subdivision
10.283, paragraph (b), or sign a document relieving county social services agencies of all
10.29recruitment efforts on the child's behalf.

10.30    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.24, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
10.31    Subd. 5. Execution. All consents to an adoption shall be in writing, executed
10.32before two competent witnesses, and acknowledged by the consenting party. In addition,
10.33all consents to an adoption, except those by the commissioner, the commissioner's agent,
10.34a licensed child-placing agency, an adult adoptee, or the child's parent in a petition for
11.1adoption by a stepparent, shall be executed before a representative of the commissioner,
11.2the commissioner's agent, or a licensed child-placing agency. All consents by a parent
11.3to adoption under this chapter:
11.4(1) shall contain notice to the parent of the substance of subdivision 6a, providing
11.5for the right to withdraw consent unless the parent will not have the right to withdraw
11.6consent because consent was executed under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, following
11.7proper notice that consent given under that provision is irrevocable upon acceptance by
11.8the court as provided in subdivision 6a; and
11.9(2) shall contain the following written notice in all capital letters at least one-eighth
11.10inch high:
11.11"This The agency responsible for supervising the adoptive placement of the child
11.12will submit your consent to adoption to the court. If you are consenting to adoption by
11.13the child's stepparent, the consent will be submitted to the court by the petitioner in your
11.14child's adoption. The consent itself does not terminate your parental rights. Parental rights
11.15to a child may be terminated only by an adoption decree or by a court order terminating
11.16parental rights. Unless the child is adopted or your parental rights are terminated, you
11.17may be asked to support the child."
11.18Consents shall be filed in the adoption proceedings at any time before the matter
11.19is heard provided, however, that a consent executed and acknowledged outside of this
11.20state, either in accordance with the law of this state or in accordance with the law of the
11.21place where executed, is valid.

11.22    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.24, subdivision 6a, is amended to read:
11.23    Subd. 6a. Withdrawal of consent. Except for consents executed under section
11.24260C.201, subdivision 11, A parent's consent to adoption under this chapter may be
11.25withdrawn for any reason within ten working days after the consent is executed and
11.26acknowledged. No later than the tenth working day after the consent is executed and
11.27acknowledged, written notification of withdrawal of consent must be received by: (1)
11.28the agency to which the child was surrendered no later than the tenth working day after
11.29the consent is executed and acknowledged; (2) the agency supervising the adoptive
11.30placement of the child; or (3) in the case of adoption by the step parent or any adoption
11.31not involving agency placement or supervision, by the district court where the adopting
11.32stepparent or parent resides. On the day following the tenth working day after execution
11.33and acknowledgment, the consent shall become irrevocable, except upon order of a court
11.34of competent jurisdiction after written findings that consent was obtained by fraud. A
11.35consent to adopt executed under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, is irrevocable upon
12.1proper notice to both parents of the effect of a consent to adopt and acceptance by the
12.2court, except upon order of the same court after written findings that the consent was
12.3obtained by fraud. In proceedings to determine the existence of fraud, the adoptive parents
12.4and the child shall be made parties. The proceedings shall be conducted to preserve the
12.5confidentiality of the adoption process. There shall be no presumption in the proceedings
12.6favoring the birth parents over the adoptive parents.

12.7    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.24, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
12.8    Subd. 7. Withholding consent; reason. Consent to an adoption shall not be
12.9unreasonably withheld by a guardian, who is not a parent of the child, by the commissioner
12.10or by an agency.

12.11    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.29, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
12.12    Subd. 2. Placement with relative or friend. The authorized child-placing agency
12.13shall consider placement, consistent with the child's best interests and in the following
12.14order, with (1) a relative or relatives of the child, or (2) an important friend with whom the
12.15child has resided or had significant contact. In implementing this section, an authorized
12.16child-placing agency may disclose private or confidential data, as defined in section 13.02,
12.17to relatives of the child for the purpose of locating a suitable adoptive home. The agency
12.18shall disclose only data that is necessary to facilitate implementing the preference.
12.19If the child's birth parent or parents explicitly request that placement with relatives a
12.20specific relative or important friends friend not be considered, the authorized child-placing
12.21agency shall honor that request if it is consistent with the best interests of the child and
12.22consistent with the requirements of sections 260C.212, subdivision 2, and 260C.221.
12.23If the child's birth parent or parents express a preference for placing the child in an
12.24adoptive home of the same or a similar religious background to that of the birth parent
12.25or parents, the agency shall place the child with a family that meets the birth parent's
12.26religious preference.
12.27This subdivision does not affect the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States
12.28Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923, and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation
12.29Act, sections 260.751 to 260.835.

12.30    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260.771, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
12.31    Subd. 3. Transfer of proceedings. In a proceeding for (1) the termination of
12.32parental rights or, (2) the involuntary foster care placement of an Indian child not within
12.33the jurisdiction of subdivision 1, or (3) the preadoptive placement or adoptive placement
13.1of an Indian child not within the jurisdiction of subdivision 1, the court, in the absence of
13.2good cause to the contrary, shall transfer the proceeding to the jurisdiction of the tribe
13.3absent objection by either parent, upon the petition of either parent or the Indian custodian
13.4or the Indian child's tribe. The transfer shall be subject to declination by the tribal court
13.5of such tribe. For purposes of this subdivision, "preadoptive placement" and "adoptive
13.6placement" have the meanings given in section 260.755, subdivision 3.

13.7    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.193, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
13.8    Subd. 3. Best interest of the child in foster care or residential care. (a) The
13.9policy of the state is to ensure that the best interests of children in foster or residential care
13.10are met by requiring individualized determinations under section 260C.212, subdivision 2,
13.11paragraph (b), of the needs of the child and of how the selected placement will serve the
13.12needs of the child in foster care placements.
13.13(b) The court shall review whether the responsible social services agency made
13.14efforts as required under section 260C.212, subdivision 5 260C.221, and made an
13.15individualized determination as required under section 260C.212, subdivision 2. If
13.16the court finds the agency has not made efforts as required under section 260C.212,
13.17subdivision 5
260C.221, and there is a relative who qualifies to be licensed to provide
13.18family foster care under chapter 245A, the court may order the child placed with the
13.19relative consistent with the child's best interests.
13.20(c) If the child's birth parent or parents explicitly request that a relative or important
13.21friend not be considered, the court shall honor that request if it is consistent with the
13.22best interests of the child and consistent with the requirements of section 260C.221. If
13.23the child's birth parent or parents express a preference for placing the child in a foster or
13.24adoptive home of the same or a similar religious background to that of the birth parent
13.25or parents, the court shall order placement of the child with an individual who meets the
13.26birth parent's religious preference.
13.27(d) Placement of a child cannot be delayed or denied based on race, color, or national
13.28origin of the foster parent or the child.
13.29(e) Whenever possible, siblings requiring foster care placement should be placed
13.30together unless it is determined not to be in the best interests of a sibling after weighing
13.31the benefits of separate placement against the benefits of sibling connections for each
13.32sibling. If siblings are not placed together according to section 260C.212, subdivision 2,
13.33paragraph (d), the responsible social services agency shall report to the court the efforts
13.34made to place the siblings together and why the efforts were not successful. If the court is
13.35not satisfied with the agency's efforts to place siblings together, the court may order the
14.1agency to make further efforts. If siblings are not placed together the court shall review
14.2the responsible social services agency's plan for visitation among siblings required as part
14.3of the out-of-home placement plan under section 260C.212.
14.4(f) This subdivision does not affect the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States
14.5Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923, and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation
14.6Act, sections 260.751 to 260.835.

14.7    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.201, subdivision 11a, is amended to
14.8read:
14.9    Subd. 11a. Permanency progress review for children under eight in foster care
14.10for six months. (a) If the child was under eight years of age at the time the petition
14.11was filed alleging the child was in need of protection or services, and the When a child
14.12continues in placement out of the home of the parent or guardian from whom the child
14.13was removed, no later than six months after the child's placement the court shall conduct a
14.14permanency progress hearing to review:
14.15(1) the progress of the case, the parent's progress on the case plan or out-of-home
14.16placement plan, and whichever is applicable;
14.17(2) the agency's reasonable, or in the case of an Indian child, active efforts for
14.18reunification and its provision of services.;
14.19(3) the agency's reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child
14.20under section 260.012, paragraph (e), and to make a placement as required under section
14.21260C.212, subdivision 2, in a home that will commit to being the legally permanent
14.22family for the child in the event the child cannot return home according to the timelines
14.23in this section; and
14.24(4) in the case of an Indian child, active efforts to prevent the breakup of the Indian
14.25family and to make a placement according to the placement preferences under United
14.26States Code, title 25, chapter 21, section 1915.
14.27(b) Based on its assessment of the parent's or guardian's progress on the out-of-home
14.28placement plan, the responsible social services agency must ask the county attorney to file
14.29a petition for termination of parental rights, a petition for transfer of permanent legal and
14.30physical custody to a relative, or the report required under juvenile court rules.
14.31(b) The court shall ensure that notice of the hearing is sent to any relative who:
14.32(1) responded to the agency's notice provided under section 260C.221, indicating an
14.33interest in participating in planning for the child or being a permanency resource for the
14.34child and who has kept the court apprised of the relative's address; or
15.1(2) asked to be notified of court proceedings regarding the child as is permitted in
15.2section 260C.152, subdivision 5.
15.3(c)(1) If the parent or guardian has maintained contact with the child and is
15.4complying with the court-ordered out-of-home placement plan, and if the child would
15.5benefit from reunification with the parent, the court may either:
15.6(i) return the child home, if the conditions which led to the out-of-home placement
15.7have been sufficiently mitigated that it is safe and in the child's best interests to return
15.8home; or
15.9(ii) continue the matter up to a total of six additional months. If the child has not
15.10returned home by the end of the additional six months, the court must conduct a hearing
15.11according to subdivision 11.
15.12(2) If the court determines that the parent or guardian is not complying with the
15.13out-of-home placement plan or is not maintaining regular contact with the child as outlined
15.14in the visitation plan required as part of the out-of-home placement plan under section
15.15260C.212 , the court may order the responsible social services agency:
15.16(i) to develop a plan for legally permanent placement of the child away from the
15.17parent and;
15.18(ii) to consider, identify, recruit, and support one or more permanency resources
15.19from the child's relatives and foster parent to be the legally permanent home in the event
15.20the child cannot be returned to the parent. Any relative or the child's foster parent may
15.21ask the court to order the agency to consider them for permanent placement of the child
15.22in the event the child cannot be returned to the parent. A relative or foster parent who
15.23wants to be considered under this item shall cooperate with the background study required
15.24under section 245C.08, if the individual has not already done so, and with the home study
15.25process required under chapter 245A for providing child foster care and for adoption
15.26under section 259.41. The home study referred to in this item shall be a single-home study
15.27in the form required by the commissioner of human services or similar study required
15.28by the individual's state of residence when the subject of the study is not a resident of
15.29Minnesota. The court may order the responsible social services agency to make a referral
15.30under the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children when necessary to obtain a
15.31home study for an individual who wants to be considered for transfer of permanent legal
15.32and physical custody or adoption of the child; and
15.33(iii) to file a petition to support an order for the legally permanent placement plan.
15.34(d) Following the review under paragraphs (b) and (c) this subdivision:
15.35(1) if the court has either returned the child home or continued the matter up to a
15.36total of six additional months, the agency shall continue to provide services to support the
16.1child's return home or to make reasonable efforts to achieve reunification of the child and
16.2the parent as ordered by the court under an approved case plan;
16.3(2) if the court orders the agency to develop a plan for the transfer of permanent
16.4legal and physical custody of the child to a relative, a petition supporting the plan shall be
16.5filed in juvenile court within 30 days of the hearing required under this subdivision and a
16.6trial on the petition held within 30 60 days of the filing of the pleadings; or
16.7(3) if the court orders the agency to file a termination of parental rights, unless the
16.8county attorney can show cause why a termination of parental rights petition should not be
16.9filed, a petition for termination of parental rights shall be filed in juvenile court within
16.1030 days of the hearing required under this subdivision and a trial on the petition held
16.11within 90 60 days of the filing of the petition.

16.12    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
16.13    Subdivision 1. Out-of-home placement; plan. (a) An out-of-home placement plan
16.14shall be prepared within 30 days after any child is placed in foster care by court order or a
16.15voluntary placement agreement between the responsible social services agency and the
16.16child's parent pursuant to subdivision 8 or chapter 260D.
16.17    (b) An out-of-home placement plan means a written document which is prepared by
16.18the responsible social services agency jointly with the parent or parents or guardian of the
16.19child and in consultation with the child's guardian ad litem, the child's tribe, if the child
16.20is an Indian child, the child's foster parent or representative of the residential foster care
16.21facility, and, where appropriate, the child. For a child in voluntary foster care for treatment
16.22under chapter 260D, preparation of the out-of-home placement plan shall additionally
16.23include the child's mental health treatment provider. As appropriate, the plan shall be:
16.24    (1) submitted to the court for approval under section 260C.178, subdivision 7;
16.25    (2) ordered by the court, either as presented or modified after hearing, under section
16.26260C.178 , subdivision 7, or 260C.201, subdivision 6; and
16.27    (3) signed by the parent or parents or guardian of the child, the child's guardian ad
16.28litem, a representative of the child's tribe, the responsible social services agency, and, if
16.29possible, the child.
16.30    (c) The out-of-home placement plan shall be explained to all persons involved in its
16.31implementation, including the child who has signed the plan, and shall set forth:
16.32    (1) a description of the residential facility foster care home or facility selected
16.33including how the out-of-home placement plan is designed to achieve a safe placement
16.34for the child in the least restrictive, most family-like, setting available which is in close
16.35proximity to the home of the parent or parents or guardian of the child when the case plan
17.1goal is reunification, and how the placement is consistent with the best interests and
17.2special needs of the child according to the factors under subdivision 2, paragraph (b);
17.3    (2) the specific reasons for the placement of the child in a residential facility foster
17.4care, and when reunification is the plan, a description of the problems or conditions in the
17.5home of the parent or parents which necessitated removal of the child from home and the
17.6changes the parent or parents must make in order for the child to safely return home;
17.7    (3) a description of the services offered and provided to prevent removal of the child
17.8from the home and to reunify the family including:
17.9    (i) the specific actions to be taken by the parent or parents of the child to eliminate
17.10or correct the problems or conditions identified in clause (2), and the time period during
17.11which the actions are to be taken; and
17.12    (ii) the reasonable efforts, or in the case of an Indian child, active efforts to be made
17.13to achieve a safe and stable home for the child including social and other supportive
17.14services to be provided or offered to the parent or parents or guardian of the child, the
17.15child, and the residential facility during the period the child is in the residential facility;
17.16    (4) a description of any services or resources that were requested by the child or the
17.17child's parent, guardian, foster parent, or custodian since the date of the child's placement
17.18in the residential facility, and whether those services or resources were provided and if
17.19not, the basis for the denial of the services or resources;
17.20    (5) the visitation plan for the parent or parents or guardian, other relatives as defined
17.21in section 260C.007, subdivision 27, and siblings of the child if the siblings are not placed
17.22together in foster care, and whether visitation is consistent with the best interest of the
17.23child, during the period the child is in foster care;
17.24    (6) documentation of steps to finalize the adoption or legal guardianship of the child
17.25if the court has issued an order terminating the rights of both parents of the child or of the
17.26only known, living parent of the child. At a minimum, the documentation must include
17.27child-specific recruitment efforts such as relative search and the use of state, regional, and
17.28national adoption exchanges to facilitate orderly and timely placements in and outside
17.29of the state. A copy of this documentation shall be provided to the court in the review
17.30required under section 260C.317, subdivision 3, paragraph (b);
17.31    (7) efforts to ensure the child's educational stability while in foster care, including:
17.32(i) efforts to ensure that the child in placement remains in the same school in which
17.33the child was enrolled prior to placement or upon the child's move from one placement
17.34to another, including efforts to work with the local education authorities to ensure the
17.35child's educational stability; or
18.1(ii) if it is not in the child's best interest to remain in the same school that the child
18.2was enrolled in prior to placement or move from one placement to another, efforts to
18.3ensure immediate and appropriate enrollment for the child in a new school;
18.4(8) the educational records of the child including the most recent information
18.5available regarding:
18.6    (i) the names and addresses of the child's educational providers;
18.7    (ii) the child's grade level performance;
18.8    (iii) the child's school record;
18.9    (iv) a statement about how the child's placement in foster care takes into account
18.10proximity to the school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement; and
18.11(v) any other relevant educational information;
18.12    (9) the efforts by the local agency to ensure the oversight and continuity of health
18.13care services for the foster child, including:
18.14(i) the plan to schedule the child's initial health screens;
18.15(ii) how the child's known medical problems and identified needs from the screens,
18.16including any known communicable diseases, as defined in section 144.4172, subdivision
18.172, will be monitored and treated while the child is in foster care;
18.18(iii) how the child's medical information will be updated and shared, including
18.19the child's immunizations;
18.20(iv) who is responsible to coordinate and respond to the child's health care needs,
18.21including the role of the parent, the agency, and the foster parent;
18.22(v) who is responsible for oversight of the child's prescription medications;
18.23(vi) how physicians or other appropriate medical and nonmedical professionals
18.24will be consulted and involved in assessing the health and well-being of the child and
18.25determine the appropriate medical treatment for the child; and
18.26(vii) the responsibility to ensure that the child has access to medical care through
18.27either medical insurance or medical assistance;
18.28(10) the health records of the child including information available regarding:
18.29(i) the names and addresses of the child's health care and dental care providers;
18.30(ii) a record of the child's immunizations;
18.31(iii) the child's known medical problems, including any known communicable
18.32diseases as defined in section 144.4172, subdivision 2;
18.33(iv) the child's medications; and
18.34(v) any other relevant health care information such as the child's eligibility for
18.35medical insurance or medical assistance;
19.1(11) an independent living plan for a child age 16 or older who is in placement as
19.2a result of a permanency disposition. The plan should include, but not be limited to,
19.3the following objectives:
19.4    (i) educational, vocational, or employment planning;
19.5    (ii) health care planning and medical coverage;
19.6    (iii) transportation including, where appropriate, assisting the child in obtaining a
19.7driver's license;
19.8    (iv) money management, including the responsibility of the agency to ensure that
19.9the youth annually receives, at no cost to the youth, a consumer report as defined under
19.10section 13C.001 and assistance in interpreting and resolving any inaccuracies in the report;
19.11    (v) planning for housing;
19.12    (vi) social and recreational skills; and
19.13    (vii) establishing and maintaining connections with the child's family and
19.14community; and
19.15    (12) for a child in voluntary foster care for treatment under chapter 260D, diagnostic
19.16and assessment information, specific services relating to meeting the mental health care
19.17needs of the child, and treatment outcomes.
19.18    (d) The parent or parents or guardian and the child each shall have the right to legal
19.19counsel in the preparation of the case plan and shall be informed of the right at the time
19.20of placement of the child. The child shall also have the right to a guardian ad litem.
19.21If unable to employ counsel from their own resources, the court shall appoint counsel
19.22upon the request of the parent or parents or the child or the child's legal guardian. The
19.23parent or parents may also receive assistance from any person or social services agency
19.24in preparation of the case plan.
19.25    After the plan has been agreed upon by the parties involved or approved or ordered
19.26by the court, the foster parents shall be fully informed of the provisions of the case plan
19.27and shall be provided a copy of the plan.
19.28    Upon discharge from foster care, the parent, adoptive parent, or permanent legal and
19.29physical custodian, as appropriate, and the child, if appropriate, must be provided with
19.30a current copy of the child's health and education record.

19.31    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
19.32    Subd. 2. Placement decisions based on best interest of the child. (a) The policy
19.33of the state of Minnesota is to ensure that the child's best interests are met by requiring an
19.34individualized determination of the needs of the child and of how the selected placement
19.35will serve the needs of the child being placed. The authorized child-placing agency shall
20.1place a child, released by court order or by voluntary release by the parent or parents, in
20.2a family foster home selected by considering placement with relatives and important
20.3friends in the following order:
20.4    (1) with an individual who is related to the child by blood, marriage, or adoption; or
20.5    (2) with an individual who is an important friend with whom the child has resided or
20.6had significant contact.
20.7    (b) Among the factors the agency shall consider in determining the needs of the
20.8child are the following:
20.9    (1) the child's current functioning and behaviors;
20.10    (2) the medical, needs of the child;
20.11(3) the educational, and needs of the child;
20.12(4) the developmental needs of the child;
20.13    (3) (5) the child's history and past experience;
20.14    (4) (6) the child's religious and cultural needs;
20.15    (5) (7) the child's connection with a community, school, and faith community;
20.16    (6) (8) the child's interests and talents;
20.17    (7) (9) the child's relationship to current caretakers, parents, siblings, and relatives;
20.18and
20.19    (8) (10) the reasonable preference of the child, if the court, or the child-placing
20.20agency in the case of a voluntary placement, deems the child to be of sufficient age to
20.21express preferences.
20.22    (c) Placement of a child cannot be delayed or denied based on race, color, or national
20.23origin of the foster parent or the child.
20.24    (d) Siblings should be placed together for foster care and adoption at the earliest
20.25possible time unless it is documented that a joint placement would be contrary to the
20.26safety or well-being of any of the siblings or unless it is not possible after reasonable
20.27efforts by the responsible social services agency. In cases where siblings cannot be placed
20.28together, the agency is required to provide frequent visitation or other ongoing interaction
20.29between siblings unless the agency documents that the interaction would be contrary to
20.30the safety or well-being of any of the siblings.
20.31    (e) Except for emergency placement as provided for in section 245A.035, a
20.32completed background study is required under section 245C.08 before the approval of a
20.33foster placement in a related or unrelated home.

20.34    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
21.1    Subd. 5. Relative search. (a) The responsible social services agency shall exercise
21.2due diligence to identify and notify adult relatives prior to placement or within 30 days
21.3after the child's removal from the parent. The county agency shall consider placement
21.4with a relative under subdivision 2 section 260C.221 without delay. The relative search
21.5required by this section shall be reasonable and comprehensive in scope and may last up
21.6to six months or until a fit and willing relative is identified. The relative search required by
21.7this section shall include both maternal relatives of the child and paternal relatives of the
21.8child, if paternity is adjudicated. The relatives must be notified:
21.9(1) of the need for a foster home for the child, the option to become a placement
21.10resource for the child, and the possibility of the need for a permanent placement for the
21.11child;
21.12(2) of their responsibility to keep the responsible social services agency and the court
21.13informed of their current address in order to receive notice in the event that a permanent
21.14placement is sought for the child and to receive notice of the permanency progress review
21.15hearing under section 260C.204. A relative who fails to provide a current address to the
21.16responsible social services agency and the court forfeits the right to receive notice of
21.17the possibility of permanent placement and of the permanency progress review hearing
21.18under section 260C.204. A decision by a relative not to be a placement resource at the
21.19beginning of the case shall not affect whether the relative is considered for placement of
21.20the child with that relative later;
21.21(3) that the relative may participate in the care and planning for the child, including
21.22that the opportunity for such participation may be lost by failing to respond to the notice
21.23sent under this subdivision; and
21.24(4) of the family foster care licensing requirements, including how to complete an
21.25application and how to request a variance from licensing standards that do not present a
21.26safety or health risk to the child in the home under section 245A.04 and supports that are
21.27available for relatives and children who reside in a family foster home.
21.28(b) A responsible social services agency may disclose private or confidential data,
21.29as defined in section 13.02, to relatives of the child for the purpose of locating a suitable
21.30placement. The agency shall disclose only data that is necessary to facilitate possible
21.31placement with relatives. If the child's parent refuses to give the responsible social
21.32services agency information sufficient to identify the maternal and paternal relatives of the
21.33child, the agency shall ask the juvenile court to order the parent to provide the necessary
21.34information. If a parent makes an explicit request that relatives or a specific relative not
21.35be contacted or considered for placement due to safety reasons including past family or
21.36domestic violence, the agency shall bring the parent's request to the attention of the court
22.1to determine whether the parent's request is consistent with the best interests of the child
22.2and the agency shall not contact relatives or a the specific relative unless authorized to do
22.3so by when the juvenile court finds that contacting the specific relative would endanger
22.4the parent, guardian, child, sibling, or any family member.
22.5(c) When the placing agency determines that a permanent placement hearing is
22.6necessary because there is a likelihood that the child will not return to a parent's care, the
22.7agency may send the notice provided in paragraph (d), may ask the court to modify the
22.8requirements of the agency under this paragraph, or may ask the court to completely
22.9relieve the agency of the requirements of this paragraph (d). The relative notification
22.10requirements of this paragraph do not apply when the child is placed with an appropriate
22.11relative or a foster home that has committed to being the permanent legal placement for
22.12the child and the agency approves of that foster home for permanent placement of the
22.13child. The actions ordered by the court under this section must be consistent with the best
22.14interests, safety, and welfare of the child.
22.15(d) Unless required under the Indian Child Welfare Act or relieved of this duty by the
22.16court under paragraph (c), when the agency determines that it is necessary to prepare for
22.17the permanent placement determination hearing, or in anticipation of filing a termination
22.18of parental rights petition, the agency shall send notice to the relatives, any adult with
22.19whom the child is currently residing, any adult with whom the child has resided for one
22.20year or longer in the past, and any adults who have maintained a relationship or exercised
22.21visitation with the child as identified in the agency case plan. The notice must state that a
22.22permanent home is sought for the child and that the individuals receiving the notice may
22.23indicate to the agency their interest in providing a permanent home. The notice must state
22.24that within 30 days of receipt of the notice an individual receiving the notice must indicate
22.25to the agency the individual's interest in providing a permanent home for the child or that
22.26the individual may lose the opportunity to be considered for a permanent placement.
22.27(e) The Department of Human Services shall develop a best practices guide and
22.28specialized staff training to assist the responsible social services agency in performing and
22.29complying with the relative search requirements under this subdivision.

22.30    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
22.31    Subd. 7. Administrative or court review of placements. (a) There shall be an
22.32administrative review of the out-of-home placement plan of each child placed in foster
22.33care no later than 180 days after the initial placement of the child in foster care and at least
22.34every six months thereafter if the child is not returned to the home of the parent or parents
22.35within that time. The out-of-home placement plan must be monitored and updated at each
23.1administrative review. The administrative review shall be conducted by the responsible
23.2social services agency using a panel of appropriate persons at least one of whom is not
23.3responsible for the case management of, or the delivery of services to, either the child or
23.4the parents who are the subject of the review. The administrative review shall be open to
23.5participation by the parent or guardian of the child and the child, as appropriate.
23.6    (b) As an alternative to the administrative review required in paragraph (a), the court
23.7may, as part of any hearing required under the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection
23.8Procedure, conduct a hearing to monitor and update the out-of-home placement plan
23.9pursuant to the procedure and standard in section 260C.201, subdivision 6, paragraph (d).
23.10The party requesting review of the out-of-home placement plan shall give parties to the
23.11proceeding notice of the request to review and update the out-of-home placement plan.
23.12A court review conducted pursuant to section 260C.193; 260C.201, subdivision 1 or 11;
23.13260C.141 , subdivision 2; 260C.317; or 260D.06 shall satisfy the requirement for the
23.14review so long as the other requirements of this section are met.
23.15    (c) As appropriate to the stage of the proceedings and relevant court orders, the
23.16responsible social services agency or the court shall review:
23.17    (1) the safety, permanency needs, and well-being of the child;
23.18    (2) the continuing necessity for and appropriateness of the placement;
23.19    (3) the extent of compliance with the out-of-home placement plan;
23.20    (4) the extent of progress which has been made toward alleviating or mitigating the
23.21causes necessitating placement in foster care;
23.22    (5) the projected date by which the child may be returned to and safely maintained in
23.23the home or placed permanently away from the care of the parent or parents or guardian;
23.24and
23.25    (6) the appropriateness of the services provided to the child.
23.26    (d) When a child is age 16 or older, in addition to any administrative review
23.27conducted by the agency, at the in-court review required under section 260C.201,
23.28subdivision 11, or 260C.317, subdivision 3, clause (3), the court shall review the
23.29independent living plan required under subdivision 1, paragraph (c), clause (11), and the
23.30provision of services to the child related to the well-being of the child as the child prepares
23.31to leave foster care. The review shall include the actual plans related to each item in the
23.32plan necessary to the child's future safety and well-being when the child is no longer
23.33in foster care.
23.34    (1) At the court review, the responsible social services agency shall establish that it
23.35has given the notice required under section 260C.456 or Minnesota Rules, part 9560.0660,
23.36regarding the right to continued access to services for certain children in foster care past
24.1age 18 and of the right to appeal a denial of social services under section 256.045. If the
24.2agency is unable to establish that the notice, including the right to appeal a denial of social
24.3services, has been given, the court shall require the agency to give it.
24.4    (2) Consistent with the requirements of the independent living plan, the court shall
24.5review progress toward or accomplishment of the following goals:
24.6    (i) the child has obtained a high school diploma or its equivalent;
24.7    (ii) the child has completed a driver's education course or has demonstrated the
24.8ability to use public transportation in the child's community;
24.9    (iii) the child is employed or enrolled in postsecondary education;
24.10    (iv) the child has applied for and obtained postsecondary education financial aid for
24.11which the child is eligible;
24.12    (v) the child has health care coverage and health care providers to meet the child's
24.13physical and mental health needs;
24.14    (vi) the child has applied for and obtained disability income assistance for which
24.15the child is eligible;
24.16    (vii) the child has obtained affordable housing with necessary supports, which does
24.17not include a homeless shelter;
24.18    (viii) the child has saved sufficient funds to pay for the first month's rent and a
24.19damage deposit;
24.20    (ix) the child has an alternative affordable housing plan, which does not include a
24.21homeless shelter, if the original housing plan is unworkable;
24.22    (x) the child, if male, has registered for the Selective Service; and
24.23    (xi) the child has a permanent connection to a caring adult.
24.24    (3) The court shall ensure that the responsible agency in conjunction with the
24.25placement provider assists the child in obtaining the following documents prior to the
24.26child's leaving foster care: a Social Security card; the child's birth certificate; a state
24.27identification card or driver's license, green card, or school visa; the child's school,
24.28medical, and dental records; a contact list of the child's medical, dental, and mental health
24.29providers; and contact information for the child's siblings, if the siblings are in foster care.
24.30    (e) When a child is age 17 or older, during the 90-day period immediately prior to
24.31the date the child is expected to be discharged from foster care, the responsible social
24.32services agency is required to provide the child with assistance and support in developing
24.33a transition plan that is personalized at the direction of the child. The transition plan
24.34must be as detailed as the child may elect and include specific options on housing, health
24.35insurance, education, local opportunities for mentors and continuing support services, and
24.36work force supports and employment services. The agency shall ensure that the youth
25.1receives, at no cost to the youth, a copy of the youth's consumer credit report as defined
25.2in section 13C.001 and assistance in interpreting and resolving any inaccuracies in the
25.3report. The county agency shall also provide the individual youth with appropriate contact
25.4information if the individual youth needs more information or needs help dealing with a
25.5crisis situation through age 21.

25.6    Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.317, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
25.7    Subd. 3. Order; retention of jurisdiction. (a) A certified copy of the findings and
25.8the order terminating parental rights, and a summary of the court's information concerning
25.9the child shall be furnished by the court to the commissioner or the agency to which
25.10guardianship is transferred.
25.11(b) The orders shall be on a document separate from the findings. The court shall
25.12furnish the individual to whom guardianship is transferred guardian a copy of the order
25.13terminating parental rights.
25.14    (b) (c) When the court orders guardianship pursuant to this section, the court
25.15shall retain jurisdiction in a case where adoption is the intended permanent placement
25.16disposition until the child's adoption is finalized, the child is 18 years of age, or, for
25.17children in foster care beyond age 18 pursuant to section 260C.451, until the individual
25.18becomes 21 years of age according to the provisions set forth in sections 260C.193,
25.19subdivision 6, and 260C.451. The guardian ad litem and counsel for the child shall
25.20continue on the case until an adoption decree is entered. An in-court appearance hearing
25.21must be held every 90 days following termination of parental rights for the court to review
25.22progress toward an adoptive placement and the specific recruitment efforts the agency
25.23has taken to find an adoptive family or other placement living arrangement for the child
25.24and to finalize the adoption or other permanency plan. Review of the progress toward
25.25adoption of a child under guardianship of the commissioner of human services shall be
25.26conducted according to section 260C.607.
25.27    (c) The responsible social services agency may make a determination of compelling
25.28reasons for a child to be in long-term foster care when the agency has made exhaustive
25.29efforts to recruit, identify, and place the child in an adoptive home, and the child continues
25.30in foster care for at least 24 months after the court has issued the order terminating
25.31parental rights. A child of any age who is under the guardianship of the commissioner of
25.32the Department of Human Services and is legally available for adoption may not refuse
25.33or waive the commissioner's agent's exhaustive efforts to recruit, identify, and place the
25.34child in an adoptive home required under paragraph (b) or sign a document relieving
25.35county social services agencies of all recruitment efforts on the child's behalf. Upon
26.1approving the agency's determination of compelling reasons, the court may order the child
26.2placed in long-term foster care. At least every 12 months thereafter as long as the child
26.3continues in out-of-home placement, the court shall conduct an in-court permanency
26.4review hearing to determine the future status of the child using the review requirements of
26.5section 260C.201, subdivision 11, paragraph (g).
26.6    (d) Upon terminating parental rights or upon a parent's consent to adoption
26.7under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, resulting in an order for guardianship to the
26.8commissioner of human services, the court shall retain jurisdiction:
26.9(1) until the child is adopted;
26.10(2) through the child's minority in a case where long-term; or
26.11(3) as long as the child continues in or reenters foster care is the permanent
26.12disposition whether under paragraph (c) or section 260C.201, subdivision 11, or, for
26.13children in foster care age 18 or older under section 260C.451, until the individual
26.14becomes 21 years of age according to the provisions in sections 260C.193, subdivision 6,
26.15and 260C.451.

26.16    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.317, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
26.17    Subd. 4. Rights of terminated parent. (a) Upon entry of an order terminating the
26.18parental rights of any person who is identified as a parent on the original birth record of
26.19the child as to whom the parental rights are terminated, the court shall cause written
26.20notice to be made to that person setting forth:
26.21(1) the right of the person to file at any time with the state registrar of vital statistics
26.22a consent to disclosure, as defined in section 144.212, subdivision 11;
26.23(2) the right of the person to file at any time with the state registrar of vital statistics
26.24an affidavit stating that the information on the original birth record shall not be disclosed
26.25as provided in section 144.2252; and
26.26(3) the effect of a failure to file either a consent to disclosure, as defined in section
26.27144.212, subdivision 11 , or an affidavit stating that the information on the original birth
26.28record shall not be disclosed.
26.29(b) A parent whose rights are terminated under this section shall retain the ability to
26.30enter into a contact or communication agreement under section 260C.619 if an agreement
26.31is determined by the court to be in the best interests of the child. The agreement shall be
26.32filed with the court at or prior to the time the child is adopted. An order for termination of
26.33parental rights shall not be conditioned on an agreement under section 260C.619.

26.34    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.325, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
27.1    Subdivision 1. Transfer of custody Guardianship. (a) If When the court terminates
27.2parental rights of both parents or of the only known living legal parent, the court shall
27.3order the guardianship and the legal custody of the child transferred to:
27.4    (1) the commissioner of human services;
27.5    (2) a licensed child-placing agency; or
27.6    (3) an individual who is willing and capable of assuming the appropriate duties
27.7and responsibilities to the child.
27.8    (b) The court shall order transfer of guardianship and legal custody of a child to
27.9the commissioner of human services only when the responsible county social services
27.10agency had legal responsibility for planning for the permanent placement of the child and
27.11the child was in foster care under the legal responsibility of the responsible county social
27.12services agency at the time the court orders guardianship and legal custody transferred to
27.13the commissioner. The court shall not order guardianship to the commissioner under any
27.14other circumstances, except as provided in subdivision 3.

27.15    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.325, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
27.16    Subd. 3. Both parents deceased. (a) If upon petition to the juvenile court for
27.17guardianship by a reputable person, including but not limited to an the responsible social
27.18services agency as agent of the commissioner of human services, and upon hearing in
27.19the manner provided in section 260C.163, the court finds that both parents or the only
27.20known legal parent are or is deceased and no appointment has been made or petition for
27.21appointment filed pursuant to sections 524.5-201 to 524.5-317, the court shall order the
27.22guardianship and legal custody of the child transferred to:
27.23    (1) the commissioner of human services; or
27.24    (2) a licensed child-placing agency; or
27.25    (3) (2) an individual who is willing and capable of assuming the appropriate duties
27.26and responsibilities to the child.
27.27    (b) The court shall order transfer of guardianship and legal custody of a child to the
27.28commissioner of human services only if there is no individual who is willing and capable
27.29of assuming the appropriate duties and responsibilities to the child.

27.30    Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.325, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
27.31    Subd. 4. Guardian's responsibilities. (a) A guardian appointed under the
27.32provisions of this section has legal custody of a ward unless the court which appoints
27.33the guardian gives legal custody to some other person. If the court awards custody to a
27.34person other than the guardian, the guardian nonetheless has the right and responsibility of
28.1reasonable visitation, except as limited by court order. the child and the right to visit the
28.2child in foster care, the adoptive placement, or any other suitable setting at any time prior
28.3to finalization of the adoption of the child. When the child is under the guardianship of the
28.4commissioner, the responsible social services agency, as agent of the commissioner, has
28.5the right to visit the child.
28.6(b) When the guardian is a licensed child-placing agency, the guardian may shall
28.7make all major decisions affecting the person of the ward child, including, but not limited
28.8to, giving consent, (when consent is legally required), to the marriage, enlistment in
28.9the armed forces, medical, surgical, or psychiatric treatment, or adoption of the ward
28.10child. When, pursuant to this section, the commissioner of human services is appointed
28.11guardian, the commissioner may delegate to the responsible social services agency of
28.12the county in which, after the appointment, the ward resides, the authority to act for the
28.13commissioner in decisions affecting the person of the ward, including but not limited
28.14to giving consent to the marriage, enlistment in the armed forces, medical, surgical, or
28.15psychiatric treatment of the ward.
28.16(c) When the commissioner is appointed guardian, the duties of the commissioner of
28.17human services are established under sections 260C.601 to 260C.635.
28.18(c) (d) A guardianship created under the provisions of this section shall not of itself
28.19include the guardianship of the estate of the ward child.
28.20(e) The commissioner of human services, through the responsible social services
28.21agency, or a licensed child-placing agency who is a guardian or who has authority and
28.22responsibility for planning for the adoption of the child under section 259.25 or 259.47,
28.23has the duty to make reasonable efforts to finalize the adoption of the child.

28.24    Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.328, is amended to read:
28.25260C.328 CHANGE OF GUARDIAN; TERMINATION OF GUARDIANSHIP.
28.26(a) Upon its own motion or upon petition of an interested party, the juvenile court
28.27having jurisdiction of the child may, after notice to the parties and a hearing, remove
28.28the guardian appointed by the juvenile court and appoint a new guardian in accordance
28.29with the provisions of section 260C.325, subdivision 1., clause (a), (b), or (c). Upon a
28.30showing that the child is emancipated, the court may discharge the guardianship. Any
28.31child 14 years of age or older who is not adopted but who is placed in a satisfactory foster
28.32home, may, with the consent of the foster parents, join with the guardian appointed by the
28.33juvenile court in a petition to the court having jurisdiction of the child to discharge the
28.34existing guardian and appoint the foster parents as guardians of the child.
29.1(b) The authority of a guardian appointed by the juvenile court terminates when the
29.2individual under guardianship is no longer a minor or when guardianship is otherwise
29.3discharged. becomes age 18. However, an individual who has been under the guardianship
29.4of the commissioner and who has not been adopted may continue in foster care or reenter
29.5foster care pursuant to section 260C.451 and the responsible social services agency has
29.6continuing legal responsibility for the placement of the individual.

29.7    Sec. 28. [260C.601] ADOPTION OF CHILDREN UNDER GUARDIANSHIP
29.8OF COMMISSIONER.
29.9    Subdivision 1. Review and finalization requirements; adoption procedures. (a)
29.10Sections 260C.601 to 260C.635 establish:
29.11(1) the requirements for court review of children under the guardianship of the
29.12commissioner; and
29.13(2) procedures for timely finalizing adoptions in the best interests of children under
29.14the guardianship of the commissioner.
29.15(b) Adoption proceedings for children not under the guardianship of the
29.16commissioner are governed by chapter 259.
29.17    Subd. 2. Duty of responsible agency. The responsible social services agency has
29.18the duty to act as the commissioner's agent in making reasonable efforts to finalize the
29.19adoption of all children under the guardianship of the commissioner pursuant to section
29.20260C.325. In implementing these duties, the agency shall ensure that:
29.21(1) the best interests of the child are met in the planning and granting of adoptions;
29.22(2) a child under the guardianship of the commissioner is appropriately involved
29.23in planning for adoption;
29.24(3) the diversity of Minnesota's population and diverse needs including culture,
29.25religion, and language of persons affected by adoption are recognized and respected; and
29.26(4) the court has the timely information it needs to make a decision that is in the best
29.27interests of the child in reviewing the agency's planning for adoption and when ordering
29.28the adoption of the child.
29.29    Subd. 3. Background study. Consistent with section 245C.33 and United States
29.30Code, title 42, section 671, a completed background study is required before the adoptive
29.31placement of the child in a related or an unrelated home.

29.32    Sec. 29. [260C.603] DEFINITIONS.
29.33    Subdivision 1. Scope. For the purposes of sections 260C.601 to 260C.635, the terms
29.34defined in this section have the meanings given them.
30.1    Subd. 2. Adopting parent. "Adopting parent" means an adult who has signed
30.2an adoption placement agreement regarding the child and has the same meaning as
30.3preadoptive parent under section 259A.01, subdivision 23.
30.4    Subd. 3. Adoption placement agreement. "Adoption placement agreement" means
30.5the written agreement between the responsible social services agency, the commissioner,
30.6and the adopting parent which reflects the intent of all the signatories to the agreement that
30.7the adopting parent establish a parent and child relationship by adoption with the child
30.8who is under the guardianship of the commissioner. The adoptive placement agreement
30.9must be in the commissioner's designated format.
30.10    Subd. 4. Adoptive parent. "Adoptive parent" has the meaning given in section
30.11259A.01, subdivision 3.
30.12    Subd. 5. Adoptive placement. "Adoptive placement" means a placement made by
30.13the responsible social services agency upon a fully executed adoption placement agreement
30.14including the signatures of the adopting parent, the responsible social services agency, and
30.15the commissioner of human services according to section 260C.613, subdivision 1.
30.16    Subd. 6. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human
30.17services or any employee of the Department of Human Services to whom the commissioner
30.18has delegated authority regarding children under the commissioner's guardianship.
30.19    Subd. 7. Guardianship. "Guardianship" has the meaning given in section 259A.01,
30.20subdivision 17; 260C.325; or 260C.515, subdivision 3.
30.21    Subd. 8. Prospective adoptive parent. "Prospective adoptive parent" means an
30.22individual who may become an adopting parent regardless of whether the individual
30.23has an adoption study approving the individual for adoption, but who has not signed an
30.24adoption placement agreement.

30.25    Sec. 30. [260C.605] REASONABLE EFFORTS TO FINALIZE AN ADOPTION.
30.26    Subdivision 1. Requirements. (a) Reasonable efforts to finalize the adoption of a
30.27child under the guardianship of the commissioner shall be made by the responsible social
30.28services agency responsible for permanency planning for the child.
30.29(b) Reasonable efforts to make a placement in a home according to the placement
30.30considerations under section 260C.212, subdivision 2, with a relative or foster parent
30.31who will commit to being the permanent resource for the child in the event the child
30.32cannot be reunified with a parent are required under section 260.012 and may be made
30.33concurrently with reasonable, or if the child is an Indian child, active efforts to reunify
30.34the child with the parent.
31.1(c) Reasonable efforts under paragraph (b) must begin as soon as possible when the
31.2child is in foster care under this chapter, but not later than the hearing required under
31.3section 260C.204.
31.4(d) Reasonable efforts to finalize the adoption of the child include:
31.5(1) using age-appropriate engagement strategies to plan for adoption with the child;
31.6(2) identifying an appropriate prospective adoptive parent for the child by updating
31.7the child's identified needs using the factors in section 260C.212, subdivision 2;
31.8(3) making an adoptive placement that meets the child's needs by:
31.9(i) completing or updating the relative search required under section 260C.221 and
31.10giving notice of the need for an adoptive home for the child to:
31.11(A) relatives who have kept the agency or the court apprised of their whereabouts
31.12and who have indicated an interest in adopting the child; or
31.13(B) relatives of the child who are located in an updated search;
31.14(ii) an updated search is required whenever:
31.15(A) there is no identified prospective adoptive placement for the child
31.16notwithstanding a finding by the court that the agency made diligent efforts under section
31.17260C.221, in a hearing required under section 260C.202;
31.18(B) the child is removed from the home of an adopting parent; or
31.19(C) the court determines a relative search by the agency is in the best interests of
31.20the child;
31.21(iii) engaging child's foster parent and the child's relatives identified as an adoptive
31.22resource during the search conducted under section 260C.221, to commit to being the
31.23prospective adoptive parent of the child; or
31.24(iv) when there is no identified prospective adoptive parent:
31.25(A) registering the child on the state adoption exchange as required in section 259.75
31.26unless the agency documents to the court an exception to placing the child on the state
31.27adoption exchange reported to the commissioner;
31.28(B) reviewing all families with approved adoption home studies associated with the
31.29responsible social services agency;
31.30(C) presenting the child to adoption agencies and adoption personnel who may assist
31.31with finding an adoptive home for the child;
31.32(D) using newspapers and other media to promote the particular child;
31.33(E) using a private agency under grant contract with the commissioner to provide
31.34adoption services for intensive child-specific recruitment efforts; and
31.35(F) making any other efforts or using any other resources reasonably calculated to
31.36identify a prospective adoption parent for the child;
32.1(4) updating and completing the social and medical history required under sections
32.2259.43 and 260C.609;
32.3(5) making, and keeping updated, appropriate referrals required by section 260.851,
32.4the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children;
32.5(6) giving notice regarding the responsibilities of an adoptive parent to any
32.6prospective adoptive parent as required under section 259.35;
32.7(7) offering the adopting parent the opportunity to apply for or decline adoption
32.8assistance under chapter 259A;
32.9(8) certifying the child for adoption assistance, assessing the amount of adoption
32.10assistance, and ascertaining the status of the commissioner's decision on the level of
32.11payment if the adopting parent has applied for adoption assistance;
32.12(9) placing the child with siblings. If the child is not placed with siblings, the agency
32.13must document reasonable efforts to place the siblings together, as well as the reason for
32.14separation. The agency may not cease reasonable efforts to place siblings together for final
32.15adoption until the court finds further reasonable efforts would be futile or that placement
32.16together for purposes of adoption is not in the best interests of one of the siblings; and
32.17(10) working with the adopting parent to file a petition to adopt the child and with
32.18the court administrator to obtain a timely hearing to finalize the adoption.
32.19    Subd. 2. No waiver. (a) The responsible social services agency shall make
32.20reasonable efforts to recruit, assess, and match an adoptive home for any child under
32.21the guardianship of the commissioner and reasonable efforts shall continue until an
32.22adoptive placement is made and adoption finalized or until the child is no longer under the
32.23guardianship of the commissioner.
32.24(b) A child of any age who is under the guardianship of the commissioner and is
32.25legally available for adoption may not refuse or waive the responsible social services
32.26agency's reasonable efforts to recruit, identify, and place the child in an adoptive home
32.27required under this section. The agency has an ongoing responsibility to work with the
32.28child to explore the child's opportunities for adoption, and what adoption means for the
32.29child, and may not accept a child's refusal to consider adoption as an option.
32.30(c) The court may not relieve or otherwise order the responsible social services
32.31agency to cease fulfilling the responsible social services agency's duty regarding
32.32reasonable efforts to recruit, identify, and place the child in an adoptive home.

32.33    Sec. 31. [260C.607] REVIEW OF PROGRESS TOWARD ADOPTION.
32.34    Subdivision 1. Review hearings. (a) The court shall conduct a review of the
32.35responsible social services agency's reasonable efforts to finalize adoption for any child
33.1under the guardianship of the commissioner and of the progress of the case toward
33.2adoption at least every 90 days after the court issues an order that the commissioner is
33.3the guardian of the child.
33.4(b) The review of progress toward adoption shall continue notwithstanding that an
33.5appeal is made of the order for guardianship.
33.6(c) The agency's reasonable efforts to finalize the adoption must continue during the
33.7pendency of the appeal and all progress toward adoption shall continue except that the
33.8court may not finalize an adoption while the appeal is pending.
33.9    Subd. 2. Notice. Notice of review hearings shall be given by the court to:
33.10(1) the responsible social services agency;
33.11(2) the child, if the child is age ten and older;
33.12(3) the child's guardian ad litem;
33.13(4) relatives of the child who have kept the court informed of their whereabouts
33.14as required in section 260C.221 and who have responded to the agency's notice under
33.15section 260C.221, indicating a willingness to provide an adoptive home for the child
33.16unless the relative has been previously ruled out by the court as a suitable foster parent or
33.17permanency resource for the child;
33.18(5) the current foster or adopting parent of the child;
33.19(6) any foster or adopting parents of siblings of the child; and
33.20(7) the Indian child's tribe.
33.21    Subd. 3. Right to participate. Any individual or entity listed in subdivision 2 may
33.22participate in the continuing reviews conducted under this section. No other individual
33.23or entity is required to be given notice or to participate in the reviews unless the court
33.24specifically orders that notice be given or participation in the reviews be required.
33.25    Subd. 4. Content of review. (a) The court shall review:
33.26(1) the agency's reasonable efforts under section 260C.605 to finalize an adoption
33.27for the child as appropriate to the stage of the case; and
33.28(2) the child's current out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212,
33.29subdivision 1, to ensure the child is receiving all services and supports required to meet
33.30the child's needs as they relate to the child's:
33.31(i) placement;
33.32(ii) visitation and contact with siblings;
33.33(iii) visitation and contact with relatives;
33.34(iv) medical, mental, and dental health; and
33.35(v) education.
34.1(b) When the child is age 16 and older, and as long as the child continues in foster
34.2care, the court shall also review the agency's planning for the child's independent living
34.3after leaving foster care including how the agency is meeting the requirements of section
34.4260C.212, subdivision 1, paragraph (c), clause (11). The court shall use the review
34.5requirements of section 260C.203, in any review conducted under this paragraph.
34.6    Subd. 5. Required placement by responsible social services agency. (a) No
34.7petition for adoption shall be filed for a child under the guardianship of the commissioner
34.8unless the child sought to be adopted has been placed for adoption with the adopting
34.9parent by the responsible social services agency. The court may order the agency to make
34.10an adoptive placement using standards and procedures under subdivision 6.
34.11(b) Any relative or the child's foster parent who believes the responsible agency
34.12has not reasonably considered their request to be considered for adoptive placement as
34.13required under section 260C.212, subdivision 2, and who wants to be considered for
34.14adoptive placement of the child shall bring their request for consideration to the attention
34.15of the court during a review required under this section. The child's guardian ad litem and
34.16the child may also bring a request for a relative or the child's foster parent to be considered
34.17for adoptive placement. After hearing from the agency, the court may order the agency to
34.18take appropriate action regarding the relative's or foster parent's request for consideration
34.19under section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b).
34.20    Subd. 6. Motion and hearing to order adoptive placement. (a) At any time after
34.21the district court orders the child under the guardianship of the commissioner of human
34.22services, but not later than 30 days after receiving notice required under section 260C.613,
34.23subdivision 1, paragraph (c), that the agency has made an adoptive placement, a relative
34.24or the child's foster parent may file a motion for an order for adoptive placement of a
34.25child who is under the guardianship of the commissioner if the relative or the child's
34.26foster parent:
34.27(1) has an adoption home study under section 259.41 approving the relative or foster
34.28parent for adoption and has been a resident of Minnesota for at least six months before
34.29filing the motion; the court may waive the residency requirement for the moving party
34.30if there is a reasonable basis to do so; or
34.31(2) is not a resident of Minnesota, but has an approved adoption home study by
34.32an agency licensed or approved to complete an adoption home study in the state of the
34.33individual's residence and the study is filed with the motion for adoptive placement.
34.34(b) The motion shall be filed with the court conducting reviews of the child's
34.35progress toward adoption under this section. The motion and supporting documents must
34.36make a prima facie showing that the agency has been unreasonable in failing to make the
35.1requested adoptive placement. The motion must be served according to the requirements
35.2for motions under the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure and shall be
35.3made on all individuals and entities listed in subdivision 2.
35.4(c) If the motion and supporting documents do not make a prima facie showing for
35.5the court to determine whether the agency has been unreasonable in failing to make the
35.6requested adoptive placement, the court shall dismiss the motion. If the court determines a
35.7prima facie basis is made, the court shall set the matter for evidentiary hearing.
35.8(d) At the evidentiary hearing the responsible social services agency shall proceed
35.9first with evidence about the reason for not making the adoptive placement proposed by the
35.10moving party. The moving party then has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the
35.11evidence that the agency has been unreasonable in failing to make the adoptive placement.
35.12(e) At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, if the court finds that the agency
35.13has been unreasonable in failing to make the adoptive placement and that the relative or
35.14the child's foster parent is the most suitable adoptive home to meet the child's needs
35.15using the factors in section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b), the court may order
35.16the responsible social services agency to make an adoptive placement in the home of the
35.17relative or the child's foster parent.
35.18    (f) If, in order to ensure that a timely adoption may occur, the court orders the
35.19responsible social services agency to make an adoptive placement under this subdivision,
35.20the agency shall:
35.21    (1) make reasonable efforts to obtain a fully executed adoption placement agreement;
35.22    (2) work with the moving party regarding eligibility for adoption assistance as
35.23required under chapter 259A; and
35.24    (3) if the moving party is not a resident of Minnesota, timely refer the matter for
35.25approval of the adoptive placement through the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
35.26Children.
35.27(g) Denial or granting of a motion for an order for adoptive placement after an
35.28evidentiary hearing is an order which may be appealed by the responsible social services
35.29agency, the moving party, the child, when age ten or over, the child's guardian ad litem,
35.30and any individual who had a fully executed adoption placement agreement regarding
35.31the child at the time the motion was filed if the court's order has the effect of terminating
35.32the adoption placement agreement. An appeal shall be conducted according to the
35.33requirements of the Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure.
35.34    Subd. 7. Changing adoptive plan when parent has consented to adoption.
35.35When the child's parent has consented to adoption under section 260C.515, subdivision 3,
35.36only the person identified by the parent and agreed to by the agency as the prospective
36.1adoptive parent qualifies for adoptive placement of the child until the responsible social
36.2services agency has reported to the court and the court has found in a hearing under this
36.3section that it is not possible to finalize an adoption by the identified prospective adoptive
36.4parent within 12 months of the execution of the consent to adopt under section 260C.515,
36.5subdivision 3, unless the responsible social services agency certifies that the failure to
36.6finalize is not due to either an action or a failure to act by the prospective adoptive parent.
36.7    Subd. 8. Timing modified. (a) The court may review the responsible social services
36.8agency's reasonable efforts to finalize an adoption more frequently than every 90 days
36.9whenever a more frequent review would assist in finalizing the adoption.
36.10(b) In appropriate cases, the court may review the responsible social services
36.11agency's reasonable efforts to finalize an adoption less frequently than every 90 days. The
36.12court shall not find it appropriate to review progress toward adoption less frequently
36.13than every 90 days except when:
36.14(1) the court has approved the agency's reasonable efforts to recruit, identify, and
36.15place the child in an adoptive home on a continuing basis for at least 24 months after the
36.16court has issued the order for guardianship;
36.17(2) the child is at least 16 years old; and
36.18(3) the child's guardian ad litem agrees that review less frequently than every 90
36.19days is in the child's best interests.
36.20(c) In no event shall the court's review be less frequent than every six months.

36.21    Sec. 32. [260C.609] SOCIAL AND MEDICAL HISTORY.
36.22(a) The responsible social services agency shall work with the birth family of the
36.23child, foster family, medical and treatment providers, and the child's school to ensure there
36.24is a detailed, thorough, and currently up-to-date social and medical history of the child as
36.25required under section 259.43 on the forms required by the commissioner.
36.26(b) When the child continues in foster care, the agency's reasonable efforts to
36.27complete the history shall begin no later than the permanency progress review hearing
36.28required under section 260C.204 or six months after the child's placement in foster care.
36.29(c) The agency shall thoroughly discuss the child's history with the adopting parent
36.30of the child and shall give a copy of the report of the child's social and medical history
36.31to the adopting parent. A copy of the child's social and medical history may also be
36.32given to the child as appropriate.
36.33(d) The report shall not include information that identifies birth relatives. Redacted
36.34copies of all the child's relevant evaluations, assessments, and records must be attached
36.35to the social and medical history.

37.1    Sec. 33. [260C.611] ADOPTION STUDY REQUIRED.
37.2An adoption study under section 259.41 approving placement of the child in the
37.3home of the prospective adoptive parent shall be completed before placing any child
37.4under the guardianship of the commissioner in a home for adoption. If a prospective
37.5adoptive parent has previously held a foster care license or adoptive home study, any
37.6update necessary to the foster care license, or updated or new adoptive home study, if not
37.7completed by the licensing authority responsible for the previous license or home study,
37.8shall include collateral information from the previous licensing or approving agency, if
37.9available.

37.10    Sec. 34. [260C.613] SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY AS COMMISSIONER'S
37.11AGENT.
37.12    Subdivision 1. Adoptive placement decisions. (a) The responsible social services
37.13agency has exclusive authority to make an adoptive placement of a child under the
37.14guardianship of the commissioner. The child shall be considered placed for adoption when
37.15the adopting parent, the agency, and the commissioner have fully executed an adoption
37.16placement agreement on the form prescribed by the commissioner.
37.17(b) The responsible social services agency shall use an individualized determination
37.18of the child's current needs pursuant to section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b), to
37.19determine the most suitable adopting parent for the child in the child's best interests.
37.20(c) The responsible social services agency shall notify the court and parties entitled
37.21to notice under section 260C.607, subdivision 2, when there is a fully executed adoption
37.22placement agreement for the child.
37.23(d) In the event an adoption placement agreement terminates, the responsible
37.24social services agency shall notify the court, the parties entitled to notice under section
37.25260C.607, subdivision 2, and the commissioner that the agreement and the adoptive
37.26placement have terminated.
37.27    Subd. 2. Disclosure of data permitted to identify adoptive parent. The
37.28responsible social services agency may disclose private data, as defined in section 13.02, to
37.29prospective adoptive parents for the purpose of identifying an adoptive parent willing and
37.30able to meet the child's needs as outlined in section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b).
37.31    Subd. 3. Siblings placed together. The responsible social services agency shall
37.32place siblings together for adoption according to section 260.012, paragraph (e), clause
37.33(4), unless:
37.34(1) the court makes findings required under section 260C.617; and
38.1(2) the court orders that the adoption or progress toward adoption of the child under
38.2the court's jurisdiction may proceed notwithstanding that the adoption will result in
38.3siblings being separated.
38.4    Subd. 4. Other considerations. Placement of a child cannot be delayed or denied
38.5based on the race, color, or national origin of the prospective parent or the child.
38.6    Subd. 5. Required record keeping. The responsible social services agency
38.7shall document, in the records required to be kept under section 259.79, the reasons
38.8for the adoptive placement decision regarding the child, including the individualized
38.9determination of the child's needs based on the factors in section 260C.212, subdivision
38.102, paragraph (b), and the assessment of how the selected adoptive placement meets the
38.11identified needs of the child. The responsible social services agency shall retain in the
38.12records required to be kept under section 259.79, copies of all out-of-home placement
38.13plans made since the child was ordered under guardianship of the commissioner and all
38.14court orders from reviews conducted pursuant to section 260C.607.
38.15    Subd. 6. Death notification. (a) The agency shall inform the adoptive parents
38.16that the adoptive parents of an adopted child under age 19 or an adopted person age 19
38.17or older may maintain a current address on file with the agency and indicate a desire to
38.18be notified if the agency receives information of the death of a birth parent. The agency
38.19shall notify birth parents of the child's death and the cause of death, if known, provided
38.20that the birth parents desire notice and maintain current addresses on file with the agency.
38.21The agency shall inform birth parents entitled to notice under section 259.27, that they
38.22may designate individuals to notify the agency if a birth parent dies and that the agency
38.23receiving information of the birth parent's death will share the information with adoptive
38.24parents, if the adopted person is under age 19, or an adopted person age 19 or older who
38.25has indicated a desire to be notified of the death of a birth parent and who maintains
38.26a current address on file with the agency.
38.27(b) Notice to a birth parent that a child has died or to the adoptive parents or an
38.28adopted person age 19 or older that a birth parent has died shall be provided by an
38.29employee of the agency through personal and confidential contact, but not by mail.
38.30    Subd. 7. Terminal illness notification. If a birth parent or the child is terminally ill,
38.31the responsible social services agency shall inform the adoptive parents and birth parents
38.32of a child who is adopted that the birth parents, the adoptive parents of an adopted person
38.33under age 19, or an adopted person age 19 or older may request to be notified of the
38.34terminal illness. The agency shall notify the other parties if a request is received under
38.35this subdivision and upon a party's request the agency shall share information regarding a
38.36terminal illness with the adoptive or birth parents or an adopted person age 19 or older.
39.1    Subd. 8. Postadoption search services. The responsible social services agency
39.2shall respond to requests from adopted persons age 19 years and over, adoptive parents
39.3of a minor child, and birth parents for social and medical history and genetic health
39.4conditions of the adopted person's birth family and genetic sibling information according
39.5to section 259.83.

39.6    Sec. 35. [260C.615] DUTIES OF COMMISSIONER.
39.7    Subdivision 1. Duties. (a) For any child who is under the guardianship of the
39.8commissioner, the commissioner has the exclusive rights to consent to:
39.9(1) the medical care plan for the treatment of a child who is at imminent risk of death
39.10or who has a chronic disease that, in a physician's judgment, will result in the child's death
39.11in the near future including a physician's order not to resuscitate or intubate the child; and
39.12(2) the child donating a part of the child's body to another person while the child is
39.13living; the decision to donate a body part under this clause shall take into consideration
39.14the child's wishes and the child's culture.
39.15(b) In addition to the exclusive rights under paragraph (a), the commissioner has
39.16a duty to:
39.17(1) process any complete and accurate request for home study and placement
39.18through the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children under section 260.851;
39.19(2) process any complete and accurate application for adoption assistance forwarded
39.20by the responsible social services agency according to chapter 259A;
39.21(3) complete the execution of an adoption placement agreement forwarded to the
39.22commissioner by the responsible social services agency and return it to the agency in a
39.23timely fashion; and
39.24(4) maintain records as required in chapter 259.
39.25    Subd. 2. Duties not reserved. All duties, obligations, and consents not specifically
39.26reserved to the commissioner in this section are delegated to the responsible social
39.27services agency.

39.28    Sec. 36. [260C.617] SIBLING PLACEMENT.
39.29(a) The responsible social services agency shall make every effort to place siblings
39.30together for adoption.
39.31(b) The court shall review any proposal by the responsible social services agency to
39.32separate siblings for purposes of adoption.
39.33(c) If there is venue in more than one county for matters regarding siblings who are
39.34under the guardianship of the commissioner, the judges conducting reviews regarding
40.1the siblings shall communicate with each other about the siblings' needs and, where
40.2appropriate, shall conduct review hearings in a manner that ensures coordinated planning
40.3by agencies involved in decision making for the siblings.
40.4(d) After notice to the individuals and entities listed in section 260C.627, the foster
40.5or prospective adoptive parent of the child, and any foster, adopting, or adoptive parents
40.6of the child's siblings, or relatives with permanent legal and physical custody of the
40.7child's sibling, and upon hearing, the court may determine that a child under the court's
40.8jurisdiction may be separated from the child's sibling for adoption when:
40.9(1) the responsible social services agency has made reasonable efforts to place the
40.10siblings together, and after finding reasonable efforts have been made, the court finds
40.11further efforts would significantly delay the adoption of one or more of the siblings and
40.12are therefore not in the best interests of one or more of the siblings; or
40.13(2) the court determines it is not in the best interests of one or more of the siblings to
40.14be placed together after reasonable efforts by the responsible social services agency to
40.15place the siblings together.

40.16    Sec. 37. [260C.619] COMMUNICATION AND CONTACT AGREEMENTS.
40.17(a) An adopting parent and a relative or foster parent of the child may enter into an
40.18agreement regarding communication with or contact between the adopted child, adopting
40.19parent, and the relative or foster parent. An agreement may be entered between:
40.20(1) an adopting parent and a birth parent;
40.21(2) an adopting parent and any relative or foster parent with whom the child resided
40.22before being adopted; and
40.23(3) an adopting parent and the parent or legal custodian of a sibling of the child, if
40.24the sibling is a minor, or any adult sibling of the child.
40.25(b) An agreement regarding communication with or contact between the child,
40.26adoptive parents, and a relative or foster parent, is enforceable when the terms of the
40.27agreement are contained in a written court order. The order must be issued before or at the
40.28time of the granting of the decree of adoption. The order granting the communication,
40.29contact, or visitation shall be filed in the adoption file.
40.30(c) The court shall mail a certified copy of the order to the parties to the agreement or
40.31their representatives at the addresses provided by the parties to the agreement. Service shall
40.32be completed in a manner that maintains the confidentiality of confidential information.
40.33(d) The court shall not enter a proposed order unless the terms of the order have been
40.34approved in writing by the prospective adoptive parents, the birth relative, the foster
41.1parent, or the birth parent or legal custodian of the child's sibling who desires to be a party
41.2to the agreement, and the responsible social services agency.
41.3(e) An agreement under this section need not disclose the identity of the parties to be
41.4legally enforceable and when the identity of the parties to the agreement is not disclosed,
41.5data about the identities in the adoption file shall remain confidential.
41.6(f) The court shall not enter a proposed order unless the court finds that the
41.7communication or contact between the minor adoptee, the adoptive parents, and the
41.8relative, foster parents, or siblings as agreed upon and contained in the proposed order,
41.9would be in the child's best interests.
41.10(g) Failure to comply with the terms of an order regarding communication or contact
41.11that has been entered by the court under this section is not grounds for:
41.12(1) setting aside an adoption decree; or
41.13(2) revocation of a written consent to an adoption after that consent has become
41.14irrevocable.
41.15(h) An order regarding communication or contact entered under this section may be
41.16enforced by filing a motion in the existing adoption file with the court that entered the
41.17contact agreement. Any party to the communication or contact order or the child who is
41.18the subject of the order has standing to file the motion to enforce the order. The prevailing
41.19party may be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs.
41.20(i) The court shall not modify an order under this section unless it finds that the
41.21modification is necessary to serve the best interests of the child, and:
41.22(1) the modification is agreed to by the parties to the agreement; or
41.23(2) exceptional circumstances have arisen since the order was entered that justified
41.24modification of the order.

41.25    Sec. 38. [260C.621] JURISDICTION AND VENUE.
41.26    Subdivision 1. Jurisdiction. (a) The juvenile court has original jurisdiction for all
41.27adoption proceedings involving the adoption of a child under the guardianship of the
41.28commissioner, including when the commissioner approves the placement of the child
41.29through the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children under section 260.851 for
41.30adoption outside the state of Minnesota and an adoption petition is filed in Minnesota.
41.31(b) The receiving state also has jurisdiction to conduct an adoption proceeding for a
41.32child under the guardianship of the commissioner when the adopting home was approved
41.33by the receiving state through the interstate compact.
42.1    Subd. 2. Venue. (a) Venue for the adoption of a child committed to the guardianship
42.2of the commissioner of human services shall be the court conducting reviews in the matter
42.3according to section 260C.607.
42.4(b) Upon request of the responsible social services agency, the court conducting
42.5reviews under section 260C.607 may order that filing an adoption petition involving a
42.6child under the guardianship of the commissioner be permitted in the county where the
42.7adopting parent resides upon determining that:
42.8(1) there is no motion for an order for adoptive placement of the child that has been
42.9filed or is reasonably anticipated by the responsible social services agency to be filed; and
42.10(2) filing the petition in the adopting parent's county of residence will expedite the
42.11proceedings and serve the best interests of the child.
42.12(c) When the court issues an order under paragraph (b), a copy of the court order
42.13shall be filed together with the adoption petition in the court of the adopting parent's
42.14county of residence.
42.15(d) The court shall notify the court conducting reviews under section 260C.607 when
42.16the adoption is finalized so that the court conducting reviews under section 260C.607 may
42.17close its jurisdiction and the court record, including the court's electronic case record, in
42.18the county conducting the reviews, shall reflect that adoption of the child was finalized.

42.19    Sec. 39. [260C.623] ADOPTION PETITION.
42.20    Subdivision 1. Who may petition. (a) The responsible social services agency may
42.21petition for the adopting parent to adopt a child who is under the guardianship of the
42.22commissioner. The petition shall contain or have attached a statement certified by the
42.23adopting parent that the adopting parent desires that the relationship of parent and child
42.24be established between the adopting parent and the child and that adoption is in the best
42.25interests of the child.
42.26(b) The adopting parent may petition the court for adoption of the child.
42.27(c) An adopting parent must be at least 21 years of age at the time the adoption
42.28petition is filed unless the adopting parent is an individual related to the child, as defined
42.29by section 245A.02, subdivision 13.
42.30(d) The petition may be filed in Minnesota by an adopting parent who resides within
42.31or outside the state.
42.32    Subd. 2. Time for filing petition. (a) An adoption petition shall be filed not later
42.33than nine months after the date of the fully executed adoption placement agreement unless
42.34the court finds that:
43.1(1) the time for filing a petition be extended because of the child's special needs
43.2as defined under title IV-E of the federal Social Security Act, United States Code, title
43.342, section 672; or
43.4(2) based on a written plan for completing filing of the petition, including a specific
43.5timeline, to which the adopting parent has agreed, the time for filing a petition be extended
43.6long enough to complete the plan because an extension is in the best interests of the child
43.7and additional time is needed for the child to adjust to the adoptive home.
43.8(b) If an adoption petition is not filed within nine months of the execution of the
43.9adoption placement agreement as required under section 260C.613, subdivision 1, and
43.10after giving the adopting parent written notice of its request together with the date and
43.11time of the hearing set to consider its report, the responsible social services agency shall
43.12file a report requesting an order for one of the following:
43.13(1) that the time for filing a petition be extended because of the child's special needs
43.14as defined under title IV-E of the federal Social Security Act, United States Code, title
43.1542, section 673;
43.16(2) that, based on a written plan for completing filing of the petition, including a
43.17specific timeline, to which the adopting parent has agreed, the time for filing a petition can
43.18be extended long enough to complete the plan because an extension is in the best interests
43.19of the child and additional time is needed for the child to adjust to the adoptive home; or
43.20(3) that the child can be removed from the adopting home.
43.21(c) At the conclusion of the review, the court shall issue findings, appropriate orders
43.22for the parties to take action or steps required to advance the case toward a finalized
43.23adoption, and set the date and time for the next review hearing.
43.24    Subd. 3. Requirements of petition. (a) The petition shall be captioned in the legal
43.25name of the child as that name is reflected on the child's birth record prior to adoption and
43.26shall be entitled "Petition to Adopt Child under the Guardianship of the Commissioner
43.27of Human Services." The actual name of the child shall be supplied to the court by the
43.28responsible social services agency if unknown to the individual with whom the agency
43.29has made the adoptive placement.
43.30(b) The adoption petition shall be verified as required in section 260C.141,
43.31subdivision 4, and, if filed by the responsible social services agency, signed and approved
43.32by the county attorney.
43.33(c) The petition shall state:
43.34(1) the full name, age, and place of residence of the adopting parent;
43.35(2) if the adopting parents are married, the date and place of marriage;
43.36(3) the date the adopting parent acquired physical custody of the child;
44.1(4) the date of the adoptive placement by the responsible social services agency;
44.2(5) the date of the birth of the child, if known, and the county, state, and country
44.3where born;
44.4(6) the name to be given the child, if a change of name is desired;
44.5(7) the description and value of any real or personal property owned by the child;
44.6(8) the relationship of the adopting parent to the child prior to adoptive placement, if
44.7any;
44.8(9) whether the Indian Child Welfare Act does or does not apply; and
44.9(10) the name and address of:
44.10(i) the child's guardian ad litem;
44.11(ii) the adoptee, if age ten or older;
44.12(iii) the child's Indian tribe, if the child is an Indian child; and
44.13(iv) the responsible social services agency.
44.14(d) A petition may ask for the adoption of two or more children.
44.15(e) If a petition is for adoption by a married person, both spouses must sign the
44.16petition indicating willingness to adopt the child and the petition must ask for adoption by
44.17both spouses unless the court approves adoption by only one spouse when spouses do not
44.18reside together or for other good cause shown.
44.19(f) If the petition is for adoption by a person residing outside the state, the adoptive
44.20placement must have been approved by the state where the person is a resident through the
44.21Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children, sections 260.851 to 260.92.
44.22    Subd. 4. Attachments to the petition. The following must be filed with the petition:
44.23(1) the adoption study report required under section 259.41;
44.24(2) the social and medical history required under sections 259.43 and 260C.609; and
44.25(3) a document prepared by the petitioner that establishes who must be given notice
44.26under section 260C.627, subdivision 1, that includes the names and mailing addresses of
44.27those to be served by the court administrator.

44.28    Sec. 40. [260C.625] DOCUMENTS FILED BY SOCIAL SERVICES AGENCY.
44.29(a) The following shall be filed by the responsible social services agency prior to
44.30finalization of the adoption:
44.31(1) a certified copy of the child's birth record;
44.32(2) a certified copy of the findings and order terminating parental rights or order
44.33accepting the parent's consent to adoption under section 260C.515, subdivision 3, and for
44.34guardianship to the commissioner;
44.35(3) a copy of any communication or contact agreement under section 260C.619;
45.1(4) certification that the Minnesota Fathers' Adoption Registry has been searched
45.2which requirement may be met according to the requirements of the Minnesota Rules of
45.3Adoption Procedure, Rule 32.01, subdivision 2;
45.4(5) the original of each consent to adoption required, if any, unless the original was
45.5filed in the permanency proceeding conducted under section 260C.515, subdivision 3, and
45.6the order filed under clause (2) has a copy of the consent attached; and
45.7(6) the postplacement assessment report required under section 259.53, subdivision
45.82.
45.9(b) The responsible social services agency shall provide any known aliases of the
45.10child to the court.

45.11    Sec. 41. [260C.627] NOTICE OF ADOPTION PROCEEDINGS.
45.12    Subdivision 1. To whom given. (a) Notice of the adoption proceedings shall not
45.13be given to any parent whose rights have been terminated or who has consented to the
45.14adoption of the child under this chapter.
45.15(b) Notice of the adoption proceedings shall be given to the following:
45.16(1) the child's tribe if the child is an Indian child;
45.17(2) the responsible social services agency;
45.18(3) the child's guardian ad litem;
45.19(4) the child, if the child is age ten or over;
45.20(5) the child's attorney; and
45.21(6) the adopting parent.
45.22(c) Notice of a hearing regarding the adoption petition shall have a copy of the
45.23petition attached unless service of the petition has already been accomplished.
45.24    Subd. 2. Method of service. Notice of adoption proceedings for a child under the
45.25guardianship of the commissioner may be served by United States mail or any other
45.26method approved by the Minnesota Rules of Adoption Procedure.

45.27    Sec. 42. [260C.629] FINALIZATION HEARING.
45.28    Subdivision 1. Consent. (a) A parent whose rights to the child have not been
45.29terminated must consent to the adoption of the child. A parent may consent to the adoption
45.30of the child under section 260C.515, subdivision 3, and that consent shall be irrevocable
45.31upon acceptance by the court except as otherwise provided in section 260C.515,
45.32subdivision 3, clause (2)(i). A parent of an Indian child may consent to the adoption of
45.33the child according to United States Code, title 25, section 1913, and that consent may be
45.34withdrawn for any reason at any time before the entry of a final decree of adoption.
46.1(b) When the child to be adopted is age 14 years or older, the child's written consent
46.2to adoption by the adopting parent is required.
46.3(c) Consent by the responsible social services agency or the commissioner is not
46.4required because the adoptive placement has been made by the responsible social services
46.5agency.
46.6    Subd. 2. Required documents. In order to issue a decree for adoption and enter
46.7judgment accordingly, the court must have the following documents in the record:
46.8(1) original birth record of the child;
46.9(2) adoption study report including a background study required under section
46.10259.41;
46.11(3) a certified copy of the findings and order terminating parental rights or order
46.12accepting the parent's consent to adoption under section 260C.515, subdivision 3, and for
46.13guardianship to the commissioner;
46.14(4) any consents required under subdivision 1;
46.15(5) child's social and medical history under section 260C.609;
46.16(6) postplacement assessment report required under section 259.53, subdivision 2,
46.17unless waived by the court on the record at a hearing under section 260C.607; and
46.18(7) report from the child's guardian ad litem.

46.19    Sec. 43. [260C.631] JUDGMENT AND DECREE.
46.20(a) After taking testimony from the responsible social services agency, which may
46.21be by telephone or affidavit if the court has transferred venue of the matter to a county
46.22not conducting the posttermination of parental rights reviews under section 260C.607,
46.23and the adopting parent, if the court finds that it is in the best interests of the child that
46.24the petition be granted, a decree of adoption shall be issued ordering that the child to be
46.25adopted shall be the child of the adopting parent. In the decree, the court may change the
46.26name of the adopted child, if a name change is requested.
46.27(b) After the decree is granted, the court administrator shall mail a copy of the decree
46.28to the commissioner of human services.

46.29    Sec. 44. [260C.633] ADOPTION DENIED.
46.30(a) If the court is not satisfied that the proposed adoption is in the best interests of
46.31the child to be adopted, the court shall deny the petition, and order the responsible social
46.32services agency to take appropriate action for the protection and safety of the child. If
46.33venue has been transferred under section 260C.621, subdivision 2, the court denying
47.1the petition shall notify the court originally conducting the guardianship reviews under
47.2section 260C.607.
47.3    (b) The court responsible for conducting reviews under section 260C.607 shall set a
47.4hearing within 30 days of receiving notice of denial of the petition.
47.5    (c) Any appeal of the denial of an adoption petition under this section shall be made
47.6according to the requirements of the Minnesota Rules of Adoption Procedure.

47.7    Sec. 45. [260C.635] EFFECT OF ADOPTION.
47.8    Subdivision 1. Legal effect. (a) Upon adoption, the adopted child becomes the legal
47.9child of the adopting parent and the adopting parent becomes the legal parent of the child
47.10with all the rights and duties between them of a birth parent and child.
47.11(b) The child shall inherit from the adoptive parent and the adoptive parent's
47.12relatives the same as though the child were the birth child of the parent, and in case of the
47.13child's death intestate, the adoptive parent and the adoptive parent's relatives shall inherit
47.14the child's estate as if the child had been the adoptive parent's birth child.
47.15(c) After a decree of adoption is entered, the birth parents or previous legal parents
47.16of the child shall be relieved of all parental responsibilities for the child except child
47.17support that has accrued to the date of the order for guardianship to the commissioner
47.18which continues to be due and owing. The child's birth or previous legal parent shall not
47.19exercise or have any rights over the adopted child or the adopted child's property, person,
47.20privacy, or reputation.
47.21(d) The adopted child shall not owe the birth parents or the birth parent's relatives
47.22any legal duty nor shall the adopted child inherit from the birth parents or kindred unless
47.23otherwise provided for in a will of the birth parent or kindred.
47.24    (e) Upon adoption, the court shall complete a certificate of adoption form and mail
47.25the form to the Office of the State Registrar at the Minnesota Department of Health. Upon
47.26receiving the certificate of adoption, the state registrar shall register a replacement vital
47.27record in the new name of the adopted child as required under section 144.218.
47.28    Subd. 2. Enrollment in American Indian tribe. Notwithstanding the provisions
47.29of subdivision 1, the adoption of a child whose birth parent or parents are enrolled in an
47.30American Indian tribe shall not change the child's enrollment in that tribe.
47.31    Subd. 3. Communication or contact agreements. This section does not prohibit
47.32birth parents, relatives, birth or legal siblings, and adoptive parents from entering a
47.33communication or contact agreement under section 260C.619.

48.1    Sec. 46. [260C.637] ACCESS TO ORIGINAL BIRTH RECORD
48.2INFORMATION.
48.3    An adopted person may ask the commissioner of health to disclose the information
48.4on the adopted person's original birth record according to section 259.89.

48.5    Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 541.04, is amended to read:
48.6541.04 JUDGMENTS, TEN OR 20 YEARS.
48.7No action shall be maintained upon a judgment or decree of a court of the United
48.8States, or of any state or territory thereof, unless begun within ten years after the entry of
48.9such judgment or, in the case of a judgment for child support, including a judgment by
48.10operation of law, unless begun within 20 years after entry of the judgment.
48.11EFFECTIVE DATE.The amendments to this section are effective retroactively
48.12from April 15, 2010, the date the language stricken in this section was finally enacted.

48.13    Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 548.09, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
48.14    Subdivision 1. Entry and docketing; survival of judgment. Except as provided
48.15in section 548.091, every judgment requiring the payment of money shall be entered
48.16by the court administrator when ordered by the court and will be docketed by the court
48.17administrator upon the filing of an affidavit as provided in subdivision 2. Upon a transcript
48.18of the docket being filed with the court administrator in any other county, the court
48.19administrator shall also docket it. From the time of docketing the judgment is a lien, in
48.20the amount unpaid, upon all real property in the county then or thereafter owned by the
48.21judgment debtor, but it is not a lien upon registered land unless it is also recorded pursuant
48.22to sections 508.63 and 508A.63. The judgment survives, and the lien continues, for ten
48.23years after its entry or, in the case of a judgment for child support, including a judgment
48.24by operation of law, for 20 years after its entry. Child support judgments may be renewed
48.25pursuant to section 548.091.
48.26EFFECTIVE DATE.The amendments to this section are effective retroactively
48.27from April 15, 2010, the date the language stricken in this section was finally enacted.

48.28    Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
48.29    Subd. 2. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have the meanings
48.30given them unless the specific content indicates otherwise:
48.31    (a) "Family assessment" means a comprehensive assessment of child safety, risk
48.32of subsequent child maltreatment, and family strengths and needs that is applied to a
49.1child maltreatment report that does not allege substantial child endangerment. Family
49.2assessment does not include a determination as to whether child maltreatment occurred
49.3but does determine the need for services to address the safety of family members and the
49.4risk of subsequent maltreatment.
49.5    (b) "Investigation" means fact gathering related to the current safety of a child
49.6and the risk of subsequent maltreatment that determines whether child maltreatment
49.7occurred and whether child protective services are needed. An investigation must be used
49.8when reports involve substantial child endangerment, and for reports of maltreatment in
49.9facilities required to be licensed under chapter 245A or 245B; under sections 144.50 to
49.10144.58 and 241.021; in a school as defined in sections 120A.05, subdivisions 9, 11, and
49.1113, and 124D.10; or in a nonlicensed personal care provider association as defined in
49.12sections 256B.04, subdivision 16, and 256B.0625, subdivision 19a.
49.13    (c) "Substantial child endangerment" means a person responsible for a child's care,
49.14and in the case of sexual abuse includes a person who has a significant relationship to the
49.15child as defined in section 609.341, or a person in a position of authority as defined in
49.16section 609.341, who by act or omission commits or attempts to commit an act against a
49.17child under their care that constitutes any of the following:
49.18    (1) egregious harm as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 14;
49.19    (2) sexual abuse as defined in paragraph (d);
49.20    (3) abandonment under section 260C.301, subdivision 2;
49.21    (4) neglect as defined in paragraph (f), clause (2), that substantially endangers the
49.22child's physical or mental health, including a growth delay, which may be referred to as
49.23failure to thrive, that has been diagnosed by a physician and is due to parental neglect;
49.24    (5) murder in the first, second, or third degree under section 609.185, 609.19, or
49.25609.195 ;
49.26    (6) manslaughter in the first or second degree under section 609.20 or 609.205;
49.27    (7) assault in the first, second, or third degree under section 609.221, 609.222, or
49.28609.223 ;
49.29    (8) solicitation, inducement, and promotion of prostitution under section 609.322;
49.30    (9) criminal sexual conduct under sections 609.342 to 609.3451;
49.31    (10) solicitation of children to engage in sexual conduct under section 609.352;
49.32    (11) malicious punishment or neglect or endangerment of a child under section
49.33609.377 or 609.378;
49.34    (12) use of a minor in sexual performance under section 617.246; or
50.1    (13) parental behavior, status, or condition which mandates that the county attorney
50.2file a termination of parental rights petition under section 260C.301, subdivision 3,
50.3paragraph (a).
50.4    (d) "Sexual abuse" means the subjection of a child by a person responsible for the
50.5child's care, by a person who has a significant relationship to the child, as defined in
50.6section 609.341, or by a person in a position of authority, as defined in section 609.341,
50.7subdivision 10, to any act which constitutes a violation of section 609.342 (criminal sexual
50.8conduct in the first degree), 609.343 (criminal sexual conduct in the second degree),
50.9609.344 (criminal sexual conduct in the third degree), 609.345 (criminal sexual conduct
50.10in the fourth degree), or 609.3451 (criminal sexual conduct in the fifth degree). Sexual
50.11abuse also includes any act which involves a minor which constitutes a violation of
50.12prostitution offenses under sections 609.321 to 609.324 or 617.246. Sexual abuse includes
50.13threatened sexual abuse.
50.14    (e) "Person responsible for the child's care" means (1) an individual functioning
50.15within the family unit and having responsibilities for the care of the child such as a
50.16parent, guardian, or other person having similar care responsibilities, or (2) an individual
50.17functioning outside the family unit and having responsibilities for the care of the child
50.18such as a teacher, school administrator, other school employees or agents, or other lawful
50.19custodian of a child having either full-time or short-term care responsibilities including,
50.20but not limited to, day care, babysitting whether paid or unpaid, counseling, teaching,
50.21and coaching.
50.22    (f) "Neglect" means the commission or omission of any of the acts specified under
50.23clauses (1) to (9), other than by accidental means:
50.24    (1) failure by a person responsible for a child's care to supply a child with necessary
50.25food, clothing, shelter, health, medical, or other care required for the child's physical or
50.26mental health when reasonably able to do so;
50.27    (2) failure to protect a child from conditions or actions that seriously endanger the
50.28child's physical or mental health when reasonably able to do so, including a growth delay,
50.29which may be referred to as a failure to thrive, that has been diagnosed by a physician and
50.30is due to parental neglect;
50.31    (3) failure to provide for necessary supervision or child care arrangements
50.32appropriate for a child after considering factors as the child's age, mental ability, physical
50.33condition, length of absence, or environment, when the child is unable to care for the
50.34child's own basic needs or safety, or the basic needs or safety of another child in their care;
51.1    (4) failure to ensure that the child is educated as defined in sections 120A.22 and
51.2260C.163, subdivision 11 , which does not include a parent's refusal to provide the parent's
51.3child with sympathomimetic medications, consistent with section 125A.091, subdivision 5;
51.4    (5) nothing in this section shall be construed to mean that a child is neglected solely
51.5because the child's parent, guardian, or other person responsible for the child's care in
51.6good faith selects and depends upon spiritual means or prayer for treatment or care of
51.7disease or remedial care of the child in lieu of medical care; except that a parent, guardian,
51.8or caretaker, or a person mandated to report pursuant to subdivision 3, has a duty to report
51.9if a lack of medical care may cause serious danger to the child's health. This section does
51.10not impose upon persons, not otherwise legally responsible for providing a child with
51.11necessary food, clothing, shelter, education, or medical care, a duty to provide that care;
51.12    (6) prenatal exposure to a controlled substance, as defined in section 253B.02,
51.13subdivision 2, used by the mother for a nonmedical purpose, as evidenced by withdrawal
51.14symptoms in the child at birth, results of a toxicology test performed on the mother at
51.15delivery or the child at birth, or medical effects or developmental delays during the child's
51.16first year of life that medically indicate prenatal exposure to a controlled substance;
51.17    (7) "medical neglect" as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 6, clause (5);
51.18    (8) chronic and severe use of alcohol or a controlled substance by a parent or
51.19person responsible for the care of the child that adversely affects the child's basic needs
51.20and safety; or
51.21    (9) emotional harm from a pattern of behavior which contributes to impaired
51.22emotional functioning of the child which may be demonstrated by a substantial and
51.23observable effect in the child's behavior, emotional response, or cognition that is not
51.24within the normal range for the child's age and stage of development, with due regard to
51.25the child's culture.
51.26    (g) "Physical abuse" means any physical injury, mental injury, or threatened injury,
51.27inflicted by a person responsible for the child's care on a child other than by accidental
51.28means, or any physical or mental injury that cannot reasonably be explained by the child's
51.29history of injuries, or any aversive or deprivation procedures, or regulated interventions,
51.30that have not been authorized under section 121A.67 or 245.825.
51.31    Abuse does not include reasonable and moderate physical discipline of a child
51.32administered by a parent or legal guardian which does not result in an injury. Abuse does
51.33not include the use of reasonable force by a teacher, principal, or school employee as
51.34allowed by section 121A.582. Actions which are not reasonable and moderate include,
51.35but are not limited to, any of the following that are done in anger or without regard to the
51.36safety of the child:
52.1    (1) throwing, kicking, burning, biting, or cutting a child;
52.2    (2) striking a child with a closed fist;
52.3    (3) shaking a child under age three;
52.4    (4) striking or other actions which result in any nonaccidental injury to a child
52.5under 18 months of age;
52.6    (5) unreasonable interference with a child's breathing;
52.7    (6) threatening a child with a weapon, as defined in section 609.02, subdivision 6;
52.8    (7) striking a child under age one on the face or head;
52.9    (8) purposely giving a child poison, alcohol, or dangerous, harmful, or controlled
52.10substances which were not prescribed for the child by a practitioner, in order to control or
52.11punish the child; or other substances that substantially affect the child's behavior, motor
52.12coordination, or judgment or that results in sickness or internal injury, or subjects the
52.13child to medical procedures that would be unnecessary if the child were not exposed
52.14to the substances;
52.15    (9) unreasonable physical confinement or restraint not permitted under section
52.16609.379 , including but not limited to tying, caging, or chaining; or
52.17    (10) in a school facility or school zone, an act by a person responsible for the child's
52.18care that is a violation under section 121A.58.
52.19    (h) "Report" means any report received by the local welfare agency, police
52.20department, county sheriff, or agency responsible for assessing or investigating
52.21maltreatment pursuant to this section.
52.22    (i) "Facility" means:
52.23    (1) a licensed or unlicensed day care facility, residential facility, agency, hospital,
52.24sanitarium, or other facility or institution required to be licensed under sections 144.50 to
52.25144.58 , 241.021, or 245A.01 to 245A.16, or chapter 245B;
52.26    (2) a school as defined in sections 120A.05, subdivisions 9, 11, and 13; and
52.27124D.10 ; or
52.28    (3) a nonlicensed personal care provider organization as defined in sections 256B.04,
52.29subdivision 16, and 256B.0625, subdivision 19a.
52.30    (j) "Operator" means an operator or agency as defined in section 245A.02.
52.31    (k) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human services.
52.32    (l) "Practice of social services," for the purposes of subdivision 3, includes but is
52.33not limited to employee assistance counseling and the provision of guardian ad litem and
52.34parenting time expeditor services.
52.35    (m) "Mental injury" means an injury to the psychological capacity or emotional
52.36stability of a child as evidenced by an observable or substantial impairment in the child's
53.1ability to function within a normal range of performance and behavior with due regard to
53.2the child's culture.
53.3    (n) "Threatened injury" means a statement, overt act, condition, or status that
53.4represents a substantial risk of physical or sexual abuse or mental injury. Threatened
53.5injury includes, but is not limited to, exposing a child to a person responsible for the
53.6child's care, as defined in paragraph (e), clause (1), who has:
53.7    (1) subjected a child to, or failed to protect a child from, an overt act or condition
53.8that constitutes egregious harm, as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 14, or a
53.9similar law of another jurisdiction;
53.10    (2) been found to be palpably unfit under section 260C.301, paragraph (b), clause
53.11(4), or a similar law of another jurisdiction;
53.12    (3) committed an act that has resulted in an involuntary termination of parental rights
53.13under section 260C.301, or a similar law of another jurisdiction; or
53.14    (4) committed an act that has resulted in the involuntary transfer of permanent legal
53.15and physical custody of a child to a relative under section 260C.201, subdivision 11,
53.16paragraph (d), clause (1), or a similar law of another jurisdiction.
53.17A child is the subject of a report of threatened injury when the responsible social
53.18services agency receives birth match data under paragraph (o) from the Department of
53.19Human Services.
53.20(o) Upon receiving data under section 144.225, subdivision 2b, contained in a
53.21birth record or recognition of parentage identifying a child who is subject to threatened
53.22injury under paragraph (n), the Department of Human Services shall send the data to the
53.23responsible social services agency. The data is known as "birth match" data. Unless the
53.24responsible social services agency has already begun an investigation or assessment of the
53.25report due to the birth of the child or execution of the recognition of parentage and the
53.26parent's previous history with child protection, the agency shall accept the birth match
53.27data as a report under this section. The agency may use either a family assessment or
53.28investigation to determine whether the child is safe. All of the provisions of this section
53.29apply. If the child is determined to be safe, the agency shall consult with the county
53.30attorney to determine the appropriateness of filing a petition alleging the child is in need
53.31of protection or services under section 260C.007, subdivision 6, clause (16), in order to
53.32deliver needed services. If the child is determined not to be safe, the agency and the county
53.33attorney shall take appropriate action as required under section 260C.301, subdivision 3.
53.34    (o) (p) Persons who conduct assessments or investigations under this section
53.35shall take into account accepted child-rearing practices of the culture in which a child
54.1participates and accepted teacher discipline practices, which are not injurious to the child's
54.2health, welfare, and safety.
54.3    (p) (q) "Accidental" means a sudden, not reasonably foreseeable, and unexpected
54.4occurrence or event which:
54.5    (1) is not likely to occur and could not have been prevented by exercise of due
54.6care; and
54.7    (2) if occurring while a child is receiving services from a facility, happens when the
54.8facility and the employee or person providing services in the facility are in compliance
54.9with the laws and rules relevant to the occurrence or event.
54.10(q) (r) "Nonmaltreatment mistake" means:
54.11(1) at the time of the incident, the individual was performing duties identified in the
54.12center's child care program plan required under Minnesota Rules, part 9503.0045;
54.13(2) the individual has not been determined responsible for a similar incident that
54.14resulted in a finding of maltreatment for at least seven years;
54.15(3) the individual has not been determined to have committed a similar
54.16nonmaltreatment mistake under this paragraph for at least four years;
54.17(4) any injury to a child resulting from the incident, if treated, is treated only with
54.18remedies that are available over the counter, whether ordered by a medical professional or
54.19not; and
54.20(5) except for the period when the incident occurred, the facility and the individual
54.21providing services were both in compliance with all licensing requirements relevant to the
54.22incident.
54.23This definition only applies to child care centers licensed under Minnesota
54.24Rules, chapter 9503. If clauses (1) to (5) apply, rather than making a determination of
54.25substantiated maltreatment by the individual, the commissioner of human services shall
54.26determine that a nonmaltreatment mistake was made by the individual.

54.27    Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10f, is amended to read:
54.28    Subd. 10f. Notice of determinations. Within ten working days of the conclusion
54.29of a family assessment, the local welfare agency shall notify the parent or guardian
54.30of the child of the need for services to address child safety concerns or significant risk
54.31of subsequent child maltreatment. The local welfare agency and the family may also
54.32jointly agree that family support and family preservation services are needed. Within ten
54.33working days of the conclusion of an investigation, the local welfare agency or agency
54.34responsible for assessing or investigating the report shall notify the parent or guardian
54.35of the child, the person determined to be maltreating the child, and if applicable, the
55.1director of the facility, of the determination and a summary of the specific reasons for
55.2the determination. When the investigation involves a child foster care setting that is
55.3monitored by a private licensing agency under section 245A.16, the local welfare agency
55.4responsible for assessing or investigating the report shall notify the private licensing
55.5agency of the determination and shall provide a summary of the specific reasons for
55.6the determination. The notice to the private licensing agency must include identifying
55.7private data, but not the identity of the reporter of maltreatment. The notice must also
55.8include a certification that the information collection procedures under subdivision 10,
55.9paragraphs (h), (i), and (j), were followed and a notice of the right of a data subject to
55.10obtain access to other private data on the subject collected, created, or maintained under
55.11this section. In addition, the notice shall include the length of time that the records will be
55.12kept under subdivision 11c. The investigating agency shall notify the parent or guardian
55.13of the child who is the subject of the report, and any person or facility determined to
55.14have maltreated a child, of their appeal or review rights under this section or section
55.15256.022. The notice must also state that a finding of maltreatment may result in denial of a
55.16license application or background study disqualification under chapter 245C related to
55.17employment or services that are licensed by the Department of Human Services under
55.18chapter 245A, the Department of Health under chapter 144 or 144A, the Department of
55.19Corrections under section 241.021, and from providing services related to an unlicensed
55.20personal care provider organization under chapter 256B.

55.21    Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10i, is amended to read:
55.22    Subd. 10i. Administrative reconsideration; review panel. (a) Administrative
55.23reconsideration is not applicable in family assessments since no determination concerning
55.24maltreatment is made. For investigations, except as provided under paragraph (e), an
55.25individual or facility that the commissioner of human services, a local social service
55.26agency, or the commissioner of education determines has maltreated a child, an interested
55.27person acting on behalf of the child, regardless of the determination, who contests
55.28the investigating agency's final determination regarding maltreatment, may request the
55.29investigating agency to reconsider its final determination regarding maltreatment. The
55.30request for reconsideration must be submitted in writing to the investigating agency within
55.3115 calendar days after receipt of notice of the final determination regarding maltreatment
55.32or, if the request is made by an interested person who is not entitled to notice, within
55.3315 days after receipt of the notice by the parent or guardian of the child. If mailed, the
55.34request for reconsideration must be postmarked and sent to the investigating agency
55.35within 15 calendar days of the individual's or facility's receipt of the final determination. If
56.1the request for reconsideration is made by personal service, it must be received by the
56.2investigating agency within 15 calendar days after the individual's or facility's receipt of the
56.3final determination. Effective January 1, 2002, an individual who was determined to have
56.4maltreated a child under this section and who was disqualified on the basis of serious or
56.5recurring maltreatment under sections 245C.14 and 245C.15, may request reconsideration
56.6of the maltreatment determination and the disqualification. The request for reconsideration
56.7of the maltreatment determination and the disqualification must be submitted within 30
56.8calendar days of the individual's receipt of the notice of disqualification under sections
56.9245C.16 and 245C.17. If mailed, the request for reconsideration of the maltreatment
56.10determination and the disqualification must be postmarked and sent to the investigating
56.11agency within 30 calendar days of the individual's receipt of the maltreatment
56.12determination and notice of disqualification. If the request for reconsideration is made by
56.13personal service, it must be received by the investigating agency within 30 calendar days
56.14after the individual's receipt of the notice of disqualification.
56.15    (b) Except as provided under paragraphs (e) and (f), if the investigating agency
56.16denies the request or fails to act upon the request within 15 working days after receiving
56.17the request for reconsideration, the person or facility entitled to a fair hearing under section
56.18256.045 may submit to the commissioner of human services or the commissioner of
56.19education a written request for a hearing under that section. Section 256.045 also governs
56.20hearings requested to contest a final determination of the commissioner of education. For
56.21reports involving maltreatment of a child in a facility, an interested person acting on behalf
56.22of the child may request a review by the Child Maltreatment Review Panel under section
56.23256.022 if the investigating agency denies the request or fails to act upon the request or
56.24if the interested person contests a reconsidered determination. The investigating agency
56.25shall notify persons who request reconsideration of their rights under this paragraph.
56.26The request must be submitted in writing to the review panel and a copy sent to the
56.27investigating agency within 30 calendar days of receipt of notice of a denial of a request
56.28for reconsideration or of a reconsidered determination. The request must specifically
56.29identify the aspects of the agency determination with which the person is dissatisfied.
56.30    (c) If, as a result of a reconsideration or review, the investigating agency changes
56.31the final determination of maltreatment, that agency shall notify the parties specified in
56.32subdivisions 10b, 10d, and 10f.
56.33    (d) Except as provided under paragraph (f), if an individual or facility contests the
56.34investigating agency's final determination regarding maltreatment by requesting a fair
56.35hearing under section 256.045, the commissioner of human services shall assure that the
56.36hearing is conducted and a decision is reached within 90 days of receipt of the request for
57.1a hearing. The time for action on the decision may be extended for as many days as the
57.2hearing is postponed or the record is held open for the benefit of either party.
57.3    (e) If an individual was disqualified under sections 245C.14 and 245C.15, on
57.4the basis of a determination of maltreatment, which was serious or recurring, and
57.5the individual has requested reconsideration of the maltreatment determination under
57.6paragraph (a) and requested reconsideration of the disqualification under sections 245C.21
57.7to 245C.27, reconsideration of the maltreatment determination and reconsideration of the
57.8disqualification shall be consolidated into a single reconsideration. If reconsideration
57.9of the maltreatment determination is denied and the individual remains disqualified
57.10following a reconsideration decision, the individual may request a fair hearing under
57.11section 256.045. If an individual requests a fair hearing on the maltreatment determination
57.12and the disqualification, the scope of the fair hearing shall include both the maltreatment
57.13determination and the disqualification.
57.14    (f) If a maltreatment determination or a disqualification based on serious or recurring
57.15maltreatment is the basis for a denial of a license under section 245A.05 or a licensing
57.16sanction under section 245A.07, the license holder has the right to a contested case hearing
57.17under chapter 14 and Minnesota Rules, parts 1400.8505 to 1400.8612. As provided for
57.18under section 245A.08, subdivision 2a, the scope of the contested case hearing shall
57.19include the maltreatment determination, disqualification, and licensing sanction or denial
57.20of a license. In such cases, a fair hearing regarding the maltreatment determination and
57.21disqualification shall not be conducted under section 256.045. Except for family child
57.22care and child foster care, reconsideration of a maltreatment determination as provided
57.23under this subdivision, and reconsideration of a disqualification as provided under section
57.24245C.22 , shall also not be conducted when:
57.25    (1) a denial of a license under section 245A.05 or a licensing sanction under section
57.26245A.07 , is based on a determination that the license holder is responsible for maltreatment
57.27or the disqualification of a license holder based on serious or recurring maltreatment;
57.28    (2) the denial of a license or licensing sanction is issued at the same time as the
57.29maltreatment determination or disqualification; and
57.30    (3) the license holder appeals the maltreatment determination or disqualification, and
57.31denial of a license or licensing sanction.
57.32    Notwithstanding clauses (1) to (3), if the license holder appeals the maltreatment
57.33determination or disqualification, but does not appeal the denial of a license or a licensing
57.34sanction, reconsideration of the maltreatment determination shall be conducted under
57.35sections 626.556, subdivision 10i, and 626.557, subdivision 9d, and reconsideration of the
57.36disqualification shall be conducted under section 245C.22. In such cases, a fair hearing
58.1shall also be conducted as provided under sections 245C.27, 626.556, subdivision 10i, and
58.2626.557, subdivision 9d .
58.3    If the disqualified subject is an individual other than the license holder and upon
58.4whom a background study must be conducted under chapter 245C, the hearings of all
58.5parties may be consolidated into a single contested case hearing upon consent of all parties
58.6and the administrative law judge.
58.7    (g) For purposes of this subdivision, "interested person acting on behalf of the
58.8child" means a parent or legal guardian; stepparent; grandparent; guardian ad litem; adult
58.9stepbrother, stepsister, or sibling; or adult aunt or uncle; unless the person has been
58.10determined to be the perpetrator of the maltreatment.

58.11    Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
58.12    Subd. 11. Records. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) or (d) and subdivisions
58.1310b, 10d, 10g, and 11b, all records concerning individuals maintained by a local welfare
58.14agency or agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report under this
58.15section, including any written reports filed under subdivision 7, shall be private data on
58.16individuals, except insofar as copies of reports are required by subdivision 7 to be sent to
58.17the local police department or the county sheriff. All records concerning determinations
58.18of maltreatment by a facility are nonpublic data as maintained by the Department of
58.19Education, except insofar as copies of reports are required by subdivision 7 to be sent
58.20to the local police department or the county sheriff. Reports maintained by any police
58.21department or the county sheriff shall be private data on individuals except the reports
58.22shall be made available to the investigating, petitioning, or prosecuting authority, including
58.23county medical examiners or county coroners. Section 13.82, subdivisions 8, 9, and 14,
58.24apply to law enforcement data other than the reports. The local social services agency or
58.25agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report shall make available to the
58.26investigating, petitioning, or prosecuting authority, including county medical examiners or
58.27county coroners or their professional delegates, any records which contain information
58.28relating to a specific incident of neglect or abuse which is under investigation, petition, or
58.29prosecution and information relating to any prior incidents of neglect or abuse involving
58.30any of the same persons. The records shall be collected and maintained in accordance with
58.31the provisions of chapter 13. In conducting investigations and assessments pursuant to
58.32this section, the notice required by section 13.04, subdivision 2, need not be provided to a
58.33minor under the age of ten who is the alleged victim of abuse or neglect. An individual
58.34subject of a record shall have access to the record in accordance with those sections,
58.35except that the name of the reporter shall be confidential while the report is under
59.1assessment or investigation except as otherwise permitted by this subdivision. Any person
59.2conducting an investigation or assessment under this section who intentionally discloses
59.3the identity of a reporter prior to the completion of the investigation or assessment is
59.4guilty of a misdemeanor. After the assessment or investigation is completed, the name of
59.5the reporter shall be confidential. The subject of the report may compel disclosure of the
59.6name of the reporter only with the consent of the reporter or upon a written finding by
59.7the court that the report was false and that there is evidence that the report was made in
59.8bad faith. This subdivision does not alter disclosure responsibilities or obligations under
59.9the Rules of Criminal Procedure.
59.10(b) Upon request of the legislative auditor, data on individuals maintained under
59.11this section must be released to the legislative auditor in order for the auditor to fulfill the
59.12auditor's duties under section 3.971. The auditor shall maintain the data in accordance
59.13with chapter 13.
59.14(c) The commissioner of education must be provided with all requested data that are
59.15relevant to a report of maltreatment and are in possession of a school facility as defined
59.16in subdivision 2, paragraph (i), when the data is requested pursuant to an assessment or
59.17investigation of a maltreatment report of a student in a school. If the commissioner of
59.18education makes a determination of maltreatment involving an individual performing
59.19work within a school facility who is licensed by a board or other agency, the commissioner
59.20shall provide necessary and relevant information to the licensing entity to enable the
59.21entity to fulfill its statutory duties. Notwithstanding section 13.03, subdivision 4, data
59.22received by a licensing entity under this paragraph are governed by section 13.41 or other
59.23applicable law governing data of the receiving entity, except that this section applies to the
59.24classification of and access to data on the reporter of the maltreatment.
59.25(d) The investigating agency shall exchange not public data with the Child
59.26Maltreatment Review Panel under section 256.022 if the data are pertinent and necessary
59.27for a review requested under section 256.022. Upon completion of the review, the not
59.28public data received by the review panel must be returned to the investigating agency.

59.29    Sec. 53. REPEALER.
59.30Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256.022, is repealed.

59.31    Sec. 54. EFFECTIVE DATE.
59.32This article is effective August 2, 2012.

60.1ARTICLE 2
60.2SAFE PLACE FOR NEWBORNS

60.3    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 145.902, is amended to read:
60.4145.902 GIVE LIFE A CHANCE; SAFE PLACE FOR NEWBORNS;
60.5HOSPITAL DUTIES; IMMUNITY.
60.6    Subdivision 1. General. (a) For purposes of this section, a "safe place" means a
60.7hospital licensed under sections 144.50 to 144.56, a health care provider who provides
60.824-hour access to urgent care services, or an ambulance dispatched in response to a 911
60.9call.
60.10(b) A hospital licensed under sections 144.50 to 144.56 safe place shall receive a
60.11newborn left with a hospital an employee on the hospital premises of the safe place during
60.12its hours of operation, provided that:
60.13(1) the newborn was born within 72 hours seven days of being left at the hospital
60.14safe place, as determined within a reasonable degree of medical certainty; and
60.15(2) the newborn is left in an unharmed condition.
60.16(b) (c) The hospital safe place must not inquire as to the identity of the mother or the
60.17person leaving the newborn or call the police, provided the newborn is unharmed when
60.18presented to the hospital. The hospital safe place may ask the mother or the person leaving
60.19the newborn about the medical history of the mother or newborn but the mother or the
60.20person leaving the newborn is not required to provide any information. The hospital safe
60.21place may provide the mother or the person leaving the newborn with information about
60.22how to contact relevant social service agencies.
60.23(d) A safe place that is a health care provider who provides 24-hour access to urgent
60.24care services shall dial 911, advise the dispatcher that the call is being made from a safe
60.25place for newborns, and ask the dispatcher to send an ambulance or take other appropriate
60.26action to transport the newborn to a hospital. An ambulance with whom a newborn is left
60.27shall transport the newborn to a hospital for care. Hospitals must receive a newborn left
60.28with a safe place and make the report as required in subdivision 2.
60.29    Subd. 2. Reporting. Within 24 hours of receiving a newborn under this section,
60.30the hospital must inform the local welfare agency responsible social service agency that
60.31a newborn has been left at the hospital, but must not do so before in the presence of
60.32the mother or the person leaving the newborn leaves the hospital. The hospital must
60.33provide necessary care to the newborn pending assumption of legal responsibility by the
60.34responsible social services agency pursuant to section 260C.217, subdivision 4.
61.1    Subd. 3. Immunity. (a) A hospital safe place with responsibility for performing
61.2duties under this section, and any employee, doctor, ambulance personnel, or other
61.3medical professional working at the hospital safe place, are immune from any criminal
61.4liability that otherwise might result from their actions, if they are acting in good faith in
61.5receiving a newborn, and are immune from any civil liability that otherwise might result
61.6from merely receiving a newborn.
61.7(b) A hospital safe place performing duties under this section, or an employee,
61.8doctor, ambulance personnel, or other medical professional working at the hospital safe
61.9place who is a mandated reporter under section 626.556, is immune from any criminal
61.10or civil liability that otherwise might result from the failure to make a report under that
61.11section if the person is acting in good faith in complying with this section.

61.12    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.217, is amended to read:
61.13260C.217 GIVE LIFE A CHANCE; SAFE PLACE FOR NEWBORNS.
61.14    Subdivision 1. Duty to attempt reunification, duty to search for relatives, and
61.15preferences not applicable. A local responsible social service agency taking custody of
61.16with responsibility for a child after discharge from a hospital that received a child under
61.17section 145.902 pursuant to subdivision 4, is not required to attempt to reunify the child
61.18with the child's parents. Additionally, the agency is not required to search for relatives
61.19of the child as a placement or permanency option under section 260C.212, subdivision
61.205
, or to implement other placement requirements that give a preference to relatives if
61.21the agency does not have information as to the identity of the child, the child's mother,
61.22or the child's father.
61.23    Subd. 1a. Definitions. For purposes of this section, "safe place" has the meaning
61.24given in section 145.902.
61.25    Subd. 2. Status of child. For purposes of proceedings under this chapter and
61.26adoption proceedings, a newborn left at a hospital under safe place, pursuant to subdivision
61.273 and section 145.902, is considered an abandoned child under section 626.556,
61.28subdivision 2, paragraph (c), clause (3). The child is abandoned under sections 260C.007,
61.29subdivision 6, clause (1), and 260C.301, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (1).
61.30    Subd. 3. Relinquishment of a newborn. A mother or any person, with the mother's
61.31permission, may bring a newborn infant to a safe place during its hours of operation and
61.32leave the infant in the care of an employee of the safe place. The mother or a person
61.33with the mother's permission may call 911 to request to have an ambulance dispatched
61.34to an agreed-upon location to relinquish a newborn infant into the custody of ambulance
61.35personnel.
62.1    Subd. 4. Placement of the newborn. The agency contacted by a safe place pursuant
62.2to section 145.902, subdivision 2, shall have legal responsibility for the placement of
62.3the newborn infant in foster care for 72 hours during which time the agency shall file a
62.4petition under section 260C.141 and ask the court to order continued placement of the
62.5child in foster care. The agency shall immediately begin planning for adoptive placement
62.6of the newborn.

62.7    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 609.3785, is amended to read:
62.8609.3785 UNHARMED NEWBORNS LEFT AT HOSPITALS A SAFE
62.9PLACE; AVOIDANCE OF PROSECUTION.
62.10A person may leave a newborn with a hospital an employee at a hospital safe place,
62.11as defined in section 145.902, in this state, pursuant to section 260C.217, subdivision 3,
62.12without being subjected to prosecution for that act, provided that:
62.13(1) the newborn was born within 72 hours seven days of being left at the hospital
62.14safe place, as determined within a reasonable degree of medical certainty;
62.15(2) the newborn is left in an unharmed condition; and
62.16(3) in cases where the person leaving the newborn is not the newborn's mother, the
62.17person has the mother's approval to do so.

62.18ARTICLE 3
62.19ADOPTION ASSISTANCE

62.20    Section 1. [259A.01] DEFINITIONS.
62.21    Subdivision 1. Scope. For the purposes of this chapter, the terms defined in this
62.22section have the meanings given them except as otherwise indicated by the context.
62.23    Subd. 2. Adoption assistance. "Adoption assistance" means medical coverage and
62.24reimbursement of nonrecurring adoption expenses, and may also include financial support
62.25and reimbursement for specific nonmedical expenses provided under agreement with the
62.26parent of an adoptive child who would otherwise remain in foster care and whose special
62.27needs would otherwise make it difficult to place the child for adoption. Financial support
62.28may include a basic maintenance payment and a supplemental needs payment.
62.29    Subd. 3. Adoptive parent. "Adoptive parent" means the adult who has been
62.30made the legal parent of a child through a court-ordered adoption decree or a customary
62.31adoption through tribal court.
62.32    Subd. 4. AFDC. "AFDC" means the aid to families with dependent children
62.33program under sections 256.741, 256.82, and 256.87.
63.1    Subd. 5. Assessment. "Assessment" means the process by which the child-placing
63.2agency determines the benefits an eligible child may receive under this chapter.
63.3    Subd. 6. At-risk child. "At-risk child" means a child who does not have a
63.4documented disability but who is at risk of developing a physical, mental, emotional, or
63.5behavioral disability based on being related within the first or second degree to persons
63.6who have an inheritable physical, mental, emotional, or behavioral disabling condition, or
63.7from a background that has the potential to cause the child to develop a physical, mental,
63.8emotional, or behavioral disability that the child is at risk of developing. The disability
63.9must manifest during childhood.
63.10    Subd. 7. Basic maintenance payment. "Basic maintenance payment" means
63.11the maintenance payment made on behalf of a child to support the costs an adoptive
63.12parent incurs to meet a child's needs consistent with the care parents customarily provide,
63.13including: food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school supplies, and a child's personal
63.14incidentals. It also supports reasonable travel to participate in face-to-face visitation
63.15between child and birth relatives, including siblings.
63.16    Subd. 8. Child. "Child" means an individual under 18 years of age. For purposes
63.17of this chapter, child also includes individuals up to age 21 who have approved adoption
63.18assistance agreement extensions under section 259A.45, subdivision 1.
63.19    Subd. 9. Child-placing agency. "Child-placing agency" means a business,
63.20organization, or department of government, including the responsible social services
63.21agency or a federally recognized Minnesota tribe, designated or authorized by law
63.22to place children for adoption and assigned legal responsibility for placement, care,
63.23and supervision of the child through a court order, voluntary placement agreement, or
63.24voluntary relinquishment.
63.25    Subd. 10. Child under guardianship of the commissioner of human services.
63.26"Child under guardianship of the commissioner of human services" means a child the
63.27court has ordered under the guardianship of the commissioner of human services pursuant
63.28to section 260C.325.
63.29    Subd. 11. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human
63.30services or any employee of the Department of Human Services to whom the commissioner
63.31has delegated authority regarding children under the commissioner's guardianship.
63.32    Subd. 12. Consent of parent to adoption under chapter 260C. "Consent of
63.33parent to adoption under chapter 260C" means the consent executed pursuant to section
63.34260C.515, subdivision 3.
63.35    Subd. 13. Department. "Department" means the Minnesota Department of Human
63.36Services.
64.1    Subd. 14. Disability. "Disability" means a physical, mental, emotional, or
64.2behavioral impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities. Major
64.3life activities include, but are not limited to: thinking, walking, hearing, breathing,
64.4working, seeing, speaking, communicating, learning, developing and maintaining healthy
64.5relationships, safely caring for oneself, and performing manual tasks. The nature, duration,
64.6and severity of the impairment shall be used in determining if the limitation is substantial.
64.7    Subd. 15. Foster care. "Foster care" has the meaning given in section 260C.007,
64.8subdivision 18.
64.9    Subd. 16. Guardian. "Guardian" means an adult who is appointed pursuant to
64.10section 260C.325. For a child under guardianship of the commissioner, the child's
64.11guardian is the commissioner of human services.
64.12    Subd. 17. Guardianship. "Guardianship" means the court-ordered rights and
64.13responsibilities of the guardian of a child and includes legal custody of the child.
64.14    Subd. 18. Indian child. "Indian child" has the meaning given in section 260.755,
64.15subdivision 8.
64.16    Subd. 19. Legal custodian. "Legal custodian" means a person to whom permanent
64.17legal and physical custody of a child has been transferred under chapter 260C, or for
64.18children under tribal court jurisdiction, a similar provision under tribal code which means
64.19that the individual responsible for the child has responsibility for the protection, education,
64.20care, and control of the child and decision making on behalf of the child.
64.21    Subd. 20. Medical assistance. "Medical assistance" means Minnesota's
64.22implementation of the federal Medicaid program.
64.23    Subd. 21. Parent. "Parent" has the meaning given in section 257.52. Parent does
64.24not mean a putative father of a child unless the putative father also meets the requirements
64.25of section 257.55 or unless the putative father is entitled to notice under section 259.49,
64.26subdivision 1. For matters governed by the Indian Child Welfare Act, parent includes any
64.27Indian person who has adopted a child by tribal law or custom, as provided in section
64.28260.755, subdivision 14, and does not include the unwed father where paternity has not
64.29been acknowledged or established.
64.30    Subd. 22. Permanent legal and physical custody. "Permanent legal and physical
64.31custody" means permanent legal and physical custody ordered by a Minnesota court under
64.32section 260C.515, subdivision 4, or for children under tribal court jurisdiction, a similar
64.33provision under tribal code which means that the individual with permanent legal and
64.34physical custody of the child has responsibility for the protection, education, care, and
64.35control of the child and decision making on behalf of the child.
65.1    Subd. 23. Preadoptive parent. "Preadoptive parent" means an adult who is caring
65.2for a child in an adoptive placement, but where the court has not yet ordered a final decree
65.3of adoption making the adult the legal parent of the child.
65.4    Subd. 24. Reassessment. "Reassessment" means an update of a previous assessment
65.5through the process under this chapter completed for a child who has been continuously
65.6eligible for this benefit.
65.7    Subd. 25. Relative. "Relative" means a person related to the child by blood,
65.8marriage, or adoption, or an individual who is an important friend with whom the child has
65.9resided or had significant contact. For an Indian child, relative includes members of the
65.10extended family as defined by law or custom of the Indian child's tribe, or, in the absence
65.11of law or custom, shall be a person who has reached the age of 18 and who is the Indian
65.12child's grandparent, aunt or uncle, brother or sister, brother-in-law or sister-in-law, niece
65.13or nephew, first or second cousin, or stepparent, as provided in the Indian Child Welfare
65.14Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, section 1903.
65.15    Subd. 26. Relative search. "Relative search" means the search that is required
65.16under section 260C.212, subdivision 5.
65.17    Subd. 27. Sibling. "Sibling" has the meaning given in section 260C.007,
65.18subdivision 32.
65.19    Subd. 28. Social and medical history. "Social and medical history" means the
65.20document, on a form or forms prescribed by the commissioner, that contains a child's
65.21genetic, medical, and family background as well as the history and current status of a
65.22child's physical and mental health, behavior, demeanor, foster care placements, education,
65.23and family relationships and has the same meaning as the history required under sections
65.24259.43 and 260C.609.
65.25    Subd. 29. Supplemental needs payment. "Supplemental needs payment"
65.26means the payment which is negotiated with the adoptive parent for a child who has a
65.27documented physical, mental, emotional, or behavioral disability. The payment is made
65.28based on the requirements associated with parenting duties to nurture the child, preserve
65.29the child's connections, and support the child's functioning in the home.
65.30    Subd. 30. Termination of parental rights. "Termination of parental rights" means
65.31a court order that severs all rights, powers, privileges, immunities, duties, and obligations,
65.32including any rights to custody, control, visitation, or support, existing between a parent
65.33and child. For an Indian child who is a ward of tribal court, termination of parental rights
65.34means any action resulting in the termination or suspension of the parent-child relationship
65.35when the tribe has made a judicial determination that the child cannot or should not be
65.36returned to the home of the child's parent or parents.

66.1    Sec. 2. [259A.05] PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION.
66.2    Subdivision 1. Administration of title IV-E programs. The title IV-E Adoption
66.3Assistance Program shall operate according to the requirements of United States Code,
66.4title 42, sections 671 and 673, and Code of Federal Regulations, parts 1355 and 1356.
66.5    Subd. 2. Administration responsibilities. (a) AFDC relatedness is one eligibility
66.6component of title IV-E adoption assistance. The AFDC relatedness determination shall be
66.7made by an agency according to policies and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
66.8(b) Subject to commissioner approval, the child-placing agency shall certify a child's
66.9eligibility for adoption assistance in writing on the forms prescribed by the commissioner
66.10according to section 259A.15.
66.11(c) Children who meet all eligibility criteria except those specific to title IV-E, shall
66.12receive adoption assistance paid through state funds.
66.13(d) The child-placing agency is responsible for assisting the commissioner with
66.14the administration of the adoption assistance program by conducting assessments,
66.15reassessments, negotiations, and other activities as specified by the requirements and
66.16procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
66.17(e) The child-placing agency shall notify an adoptive parent of a child's eligibility for
66.18Medicaid in the state of residence. In Minnesota, the child-placing agency shall refer the
66.19adoptive parent to the appropriate social service agency in the parent's county of residence
66.20that administers medical assistance. The child-placing agency shall inform the adoptive
66.21parent of the requirement to comply with the rules of the applicable Medicaid program.
66.22    Subd. 3. Procedures, requirements, and deadlines. The commissioner shall
66.23specify procedures, requirements, and deadlines for the administration of adoption
66.24assistance in accordance with this section.
66.25    Subd. 4. Promotion of programs. (a) Parents who adopt children with special
66.26needs must be informed of the adoption tax credit.
66.27(b) The commissioner shall actively seek ways to promote the adoption assistance
66.28program, including informing prospective adoptive parents of eligible children under
66.29guardianship of the commissioner and the availability of adoption assistance.

66.30    Sec. 3. [259A.10] ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS.
66.31    Subdivision 1. General eligibility requirements. (a) To be eligible for adoption
66.32assistance, a child must:
66.33(1) be determined to be a child with special needs, according to subdivision 2;
66.34(2) meet the applicable citizenship and immigration requirements in subdivision
66.353; and
67.1(3)(i) meet the criteria outlined in section 473 of the Social Security Act; or
67.2(ii) have had foster care payments paid on the child's behalf while in out-of-home
67.3placement through the county or tribal social service agency and be a child under the
67.4guardianship of the commissioner or a ward of tribal court.
67.5(b) In addition to the requirements in paragraph (a), the child's adoptive parents must
67.6meet the applicable background study requirements outlined in subdivision 4.
67.7    Subd. 2. Special needs determination. (a) A child is considered a child with
67.8special needs under this section if all of the requirements in paragraphs (b) to (g) are met.
67.9(b) There has been a determination that the child cannot or should not be returned to
67.10the home of the child's parents as evidenced by:
67.11(1) court-ordered termination of parental rights;
67.12(2) petition to terminate parental rights;
67.13(3) consent of parent to adoption accepted by the court under chapter 260C;
67.14(4) in circumstances where tribal law permits the child to be adopted without a
67.15termination of parental rights, a judicial determination by tribal court indicating the valid
67.16reason why the child cannot or should not return home;
67.17(5) voluntary relinquishment under section 259.25 or 259.47 or, if relinquishment
67.18occurred in another state, the applicable laws in that state; or
67.19(6) death of the legal parent, or parents if the child has two legal parents.
67.20(c) There exists a specific factor or condition because of which it is reasonable to
67.21conclude that the child cannot be placed with adoptive parents without providing adoption
67.22assistance as evidenced by:
67.23(1) determination by the Social Security Administration that the child meets all
67.24medical or disability requirements of title XVI of the Social Security Act with respect to
67.25eligibility for Supplemental Security Income benefits;
67.26(2) documented physical, mental, emotional, or behavioral disability not covered
67.27under clause (1);
67.28(3) a member in a sibling group being adopted at the same time by the same parent;
67.29(4) adoptive placement in the home of a parent who previously adopted a sibling for
67.30whom they receive adoption assistance; or
67.31(5) documentation that the child is an at-risk child.
67.32(d) A reasonable but unsuccessful effort was made to place the child with adoptive
67.33parents without providing adoption assistance as evidenced by:
67.34(1) a documented search for an appropriate adoptive placement; or
67.35(2) determination by the commissioner that a search under clause (1) is not in the
67.36best interests of the child.
68.1(e) The requirement for a documented search for an appropriate adoptive placement
68.2under paragraph (d), including the registration of the child with the State Adoption
68.3Exchange and other recruitment methods under paragraph (f), must be waived if:
68.4(1) the child is being adopted by a relative and it is determined by the child-placing
68.5agency that adoption by the relative is in the best interests of the child;
68.6(2) the child is being adopted by a foster parent with whom the child has developed
68.7significant emotional ties while in their care as a foster child and it is determined by
68.8the child-placing agency that adoption by the foster parent is in the best interests of the
68.9child; or
68.10(3) the child is being adopted by a parent that previously adopted a sibling of the
68.11child, and it is determined by the child-placing agency that adoption by this parent is
68.12in the best interests of the child.
68.13When the Indian Child Welfare Act applies, a waiver must not be granted unless the
68.14child-placing agency has complied with the placement preferences required by the Indian
68.15Child Welfare Act according to United States Code, title 25, section 1915(a).
68.16(f) To meet the requirement of a documented search for an appropriate adoptive
68.17placement under paragraph (d), clause (1), the child-placing agency minimally must:
68.18(1) conduct a relative search as required by section 260C.212, subdivision 5, and give
68.19consideration to placement with a relative as required by section 260C.212, subdivision 2;
68.20(2) comply with the adoptive placement preferences required under the Indian Child
68.21Welfare Act when the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Code, title 25, section
68.221915(a), applies;
68.23(3) locate prospective adoptive families by registering the child on the State
68.24Adoption Exchange, as required under section 259.75; and
68.25(4) if registration with the State Adoption Exchange does not result in the
68.26identification of an appropriate adoptive placement, the agency must employ additional
68.27recruitment methods, as outlined in requirements and procedures prescribed by the
68.28commissioner.
68.29(g) Once the child-placing agency has determined that placement with an identified
68.30parent is in the child's best interest and has made full written disclosure about the child's
68.31social and medical history, the agency must ask the prospective adoptive parent if they are
68.32willing to adopt the child without adoption assistance. If the identified parent is either
68.33unwilling or unable to adopt the child without adoption assistance, the child-placing
68.34agency must provide documentation as prescribed by the commissioner to fulfill the
68.35requirement to make a reasonable effort to place the child without adoption assistance. If
68.36the identified parent desires to adopt the child without adoption assistance, the parent must
69.1provide a written statement to this effect to the child-placing agency and the statement must
69.2be maintained in the permanent adoption record of the child-placing agency. For children
69.3under guardianship of the commissioner, the child-placing agency shall submit a copy of
69.4this statement to the commissioner to be maintained in the permanent adoption record.
69.5    Subd. 3. Citizenship and immigration status. (a) A child must be a citizen of the
69.6United States or otherwise eligible for federal public benefits according to the Personal
69.7Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, as amended, in order to
69.8be eligible for the title IV-E Adoption Assistance Program.
69.9(b) A child must be a citizen of the United States or meet the qualified alien
69.10requirements as defined in the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
69.11Reconciliation Act of 1996, as amended, in order to be eligible for state-funded adoption
69.12assistance.
69.13    Subd. 4. Background study. (a) A background study under section 259.41 must be
69.14completed on each prospective adoptive parent. An adoptive parent is prohibited from
69.15receiving adoption assistance on behalf of an otherwise eligible child if the background
69.16study reveals:
69.17(1) a felony conviction at any time for:
69.18(i) child abuse or neglect;
69.19(ii) spousal abuse;
69.20(iii) a crime against children, including child pornography; or
69.21(iv) a crime involving violence, including rape, sexual assault, or homicide, but not
69.22including other physical assault or battery; or
69.23(2) a felony conviction within the past five years for:
69.24(i) physical assault;
69.25(ii) battery; or
69.26(iii) a drug-related offense.
69.27    Subd. 5. Responsibility for determining adoption assistance eligibility. The
69.28state will determine eligibility for:
69.29(1) a Minnesota child under the guardianship of the commissioner who would
69.30otherwise remain in foster care;
69.31(2) a child who is not under the guardianship of the commissioner who meets title
69.32IV-E eligibility defined in section 473 of the Social Security Act and no state agency has
69.33legal responsibility for placement and care of the child;
69.34(3) a Minnesota child under tribal jurisdiction who would otherwise remain in foster
69.35care; and
70.1(4) an Indian child being placed in Minnesota who meets title IV-E eligibility defined
70.2in section 473 of the Social Security Act. The agency or entity assuming responsibility for
70.3the child is responsible for the nonfederal share of the adoption assistance payment.
70.4    Subd. 6. Exclusions. The commissioner shall not enter into an adoption assistance
70.5agreement with:
70.6(1) a child's biological parent or stepparent;
70.7(2) a child's relative, according to section 260C.007, subdivision 27, with whom the
70.8child resided immediately prior to child welfare involvement unless:
70.9    (i) the child was in the custody of a Minnesota county or tribal agency pursuant to
70.10an order under chapter 260C or equivalent provisions of tribal code and the agency had
70.11placement and care responsibility for permanency planning for the child; and
70.12    (ii) the child is under guardianship of the commissioner of human services according
70.13to the requirements of section 260C.325, subdivision 1, paragraphs (a) and (b), or
70.14subdivision 3, paragraphs (a) and (b), or is a ward of a Minnesota tribal court after
70.15termination of parental rights, suspension of parental rights, or a finding by the tribal court
70.16that the child cannot safely return to the care of the parent;
70.17(3) a child's legal custodian or guardian who is now adopting the child;
70.18(4) an individual adopting a child who is the subject of a direct adoptive placement
70.19under section 259.47 or the equivalent in tribal code; or
70.20(5) an individual who is adopting a child who is not a citizen or resident of the
70.21United States and was either adopted in another country or brought to this country for
70.22the purposes of adoption.

70.23    Sec. 4. [259A.15] ESTABLISHMENT OF ADOPTION ASSISTANCE
70.24ELIGIBILITY.
70.25    Subdivision 1. Adoption assistance certification. (a) The child-placing agency
70.26shall certify a child as eligible for adoption assistance according to requirements and
70.27procedures, and on forms prescribed by the commissioner. Documentation from a
70.28qualified expert must be provided to verify that a child meets the special needs criteria in
70.29section 259A.10, subdivision 2.
70.30(b) Expert documentation of a disability is limited to evidence deemed appropriate
70.31by the commissioner and must be submitted with the certification. Examples of appropriate
70.32documentation include, but are not limited to, medical records, psychological assessments,
70.33educational or early childhood evaluations, court findings, and social and medical history.
70.34(c) Documentation that the child is an at-risk child must be submitted according to
70.35requirements and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
71.1    Subd. 2. Adoption assistance agreement. (a) An adoption assistance agreement
71.2is a binding contract between the adopting parent, the child-placing agency, and the
71.3commissioner. The agreement outlines the benefits to be provided on behalf of an eligible
71.4child.
71.5(b) In order to receive adoption assistance benefits, a written agreement on a form
71.6prescribed by the commissioner must be signed by the parent, an approved representative
71.7from the child-placing agency, and the commissioner prior to the effective date of the
71.8adoption decree. No later than 30 days after the parent is approved for the adoptive
71.9placement, the agreement must be negotiated with the parent as required in section
71.10259A.25, subdivision 1. Adoption assistance must be approved or denied by the
71.11commissioner no later than 15 business days after the receipt of a complete adoption
71.12assistance application prescribed by the commissioner. A fully executed copy of the
71.13signed agreement must be given to each party. Termination or disruption of the adoptive
71.14placement preceding adoption finalization makes the agreement with that parent void.
71.15(c) The agreement must specify the following:
71.16(1) duration of the agreement;
71.17(2) the nature and amount of any payment, services, and assistance to be provided
71.18under the agreement;
71.19(3) the child's eligibility for Medicaid services;
71.20(4) the terms of the payment;
71.21(5) eligibility for reimbursement of nonrecurring expenses associated with adopting
71.22the child, to the extent that the total cost does not exceed $2,000 per child;
71.23(6) that the agreement will remain in effect regardless of the state in which the
71.24adoptive parent resides at any given time;
71.25(7) provisions for modification of the terms of the agreement; and
71.26(8) the effective date of the agreement.
71.27(d) The agreement is effective on the date of the adoption decree.
71.28    Subd. 3. Assessment tool. An assessment tool prescribed by the commissioner
71.29must be completed for any child who has a documented disability that necessitates care,
71.30supervision, and structure beyond that ordinarily provided in a family setting to children
71.31of the same age. This assessment tool must be submitted with the adoption assistance
71.32certification and establishes eligibility for the amount of assistance requested.

71.33    Sec. 5. [259A.20] BENEFITS AND PAYMENTS.
71.34    Subdivision 1. General information. (a) Payments to parents under adoption
71.35assistance must be made monthly.
72.1(b) Payments must commence when the commissioner receives the adoption decree
72.2from the court, the child-placing agency, or the parent. Payments must be made according
72.3to requirements and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
72.4(c) Payments shall only be made to the adoptive parent specified on the agreement.
72.5If there is more than one adoptive parent, both parties must be listed as the payee unless
72.6otherwise specified in writing according to requirements and procedures prescribed by
72.7the commissioner.
72.8(d) Payment must be considered income and resource attributable to the child.
72.9Payment must not be assigned or transferred to another party. Payment is exempt from
72.10garnishment, except as permissible under the laws of the state where the child resides.
72.11    Subd. 2. Medical assistance eligibility. Eligibility for medical assistance for
72.12children receiving adoption assistance is as specified in section 256B.055.
72.13    Subd. 3. Payments. (a) The basic maintenance payments must be made according
72.14to the following schedule for all children except those eligible for adoption assistance
72.15based on being an at-risk child:
72.16
Birth through age five
up to $247 per month
72.17
Age six through age 11
up to $277 per month
72.18
Age 12 through age 14
up to $307 per month
72.19
Age 15 and older
up to $337 per month
72.20A child must receive the maximum payment amount for the child's age, unless a
72.21lesser amount is negotiated with and agreed to by the prospective adoptive parent.
72.22(b) Supplemental needs payments, in addition to basic maintenance payments, are
72.23available based on the severity of a child's disability and the level of parenting required to
72.24care for the child, and must be made according to the following amounts:
72.25
Level I
up to $150 per month
72.26
Level II
up to $275 per month
72.27
Level III
up to $400 per month
72.28
Level IV
up to $500 per month
72.29A child's level shall be assessed on an assessment tool prescribed by the
72.30commissioner. A child must receive the maximum payment for the child's assessed level,
72.31unless a lesser amount is negotiated with and agreed to by the prospective adoptive parent.
72.32    Subd. 4. Reimbursement for special nonmedical expenses. (a) Reimbursement
72.33for special nonmedical expenses is available to children, except those eligible for adoption
72.34assistance based on being an at-risk child.
72.35(b) Reimbursements under this paragraph shall be made only after the adoptive
72.36parent documents that the requested service was denied by the local social service agency,
72.37community agencies, local school district, local public health department, the parent's
73.1insurance provider, or the child's program. The denial must be for an eligible service or
73.2qualified item under the program requirements of the applicable agency or organization.
73.3(c) Reimbursements must be previously authorized, adhere to the requirements and
73.4procedures prescribed by the commissioner, and be limited to:
73.5(1) child care for a child age 12 and younger, or for a child age 13 or 14 who has
73.6a documented disability that requires special instruction for and services by the child
73.7care provider. Child care reimbursements may be made if all available adult caregivers
73.8are employed or attending educational or vocational training programs. If a parent is
73.9attending an educational or vocational training program, child care reimbursement is
73.10limited to no more than the time necessary to complete the credit requirements for an
73.11associate or baccalaureate degree as determined by the educational institution. Child
73.12care reimbursement is not limited for an adoptive parent completing basic or remedial
73.13education programs needed to prepare for postsecondary education or employment;
73.14(2) respite care provided for the relief of the child's parent up to 504 hours of respite
73.15care annually;
73.16(3) camping up to 14 days per state fiscal year for a child to attend a special needs
73.17camp. The camp must be accredited by the American Camp Association as a special needs
73.18camp in order to be eligible for camp reimbursement;
73.19(4) postadoption counseling to promote the child's integration into the adoptive
73.20family that is provided by the placing agency during the first year following the date of the
73.21adoption decree. Reimbursement is limited to 12 sessions of postadoption counseling;
73.22(5) family counseling that is required to meet the child's special needs.
73.23Reimbursement is limited to the prorated portion of the counseling fees allotted to the
73.24family when the adoptive parent's health insurance or Medicaid pays for the child's
73.25counseling but does not cover counseling for the rest of the family members;
73.26(6) home modifications to accommodate the child's special needs upon which
73.27eligibility for adoption assistance was approved. Reimbursement is limited to once every
73.28five years per child;
73.29(7) vehicle modifications to accommodate the child's special needs upon which
73.30eligibility for adoption assistance was approved. Reimbursement is limited to once every
73.31five years per family; and
73.32(8) burial expenses up to $1,000, if the special needs, upon which eligibility for
73.33adoption assistance was approved, resulted in the death of the child.
73.34(d) The adoptive parent shall submit statements for expenses incurred between July
73.351 and June 30 of a given fiscal year to the state adoption assistance unit within 60 days
73.36after the end of the fiscal year in order for reimbursement to occur.

74.1    Sec. 6. [259A.25] DETERMINATION OF ADOPTION ASSISTANCE BENEFITS
74.2AND PAYMENT.
74.3    Subdivision 1. Negotiation of adoption assistance agreement. (a) A monthly
74.4payment is provided as part of the adoption assistance agreement to support the care of
74.5a child who has manifested special needs. The amount of the payment made on behalf
74.6of a child eligible for adoption assistance is determined through negotiation between
74.7the adoptive parent and the child-placing agency on behalf of the commissioner. The
74.8negotiation shall take into consideration the circumstances of the adopting parent and the
74.9needs of the child being adopted. The income of the adoptive parent must not be taken
74.10into consideration when determining eligibility for adoption assistance or the amount of
74.11the payments under section 259A.20. At the written request of the adoptive parent, the
74.12amount of the payment in the agreement may be renegotiated when there is a change in
74.13the child's needs or the family's circumstances.
74.14(b) The adoption assistance agreement of a child who is identified as an at-risk child
74.15must not include a monthly payment unless and until the potential disability upon which
74.16the eligibility for the agreement was based has manifested during childhood.
74.17    Subd. 2. Renegotiation of adoption assistance agreement. (a) An adoptive
74.18parent of a child with an adoption assistance agreement may request renegotiation of the
74.19agreement when there is a change in the needs of the child or in the family's circumstances.
74.20When an adoptive parent requests renegotiation of the agreement, a reassessment of the
74.21child must be completed by: (1) the responsible social services agency in the child's county
74.22of residence; or (2) the child-placing agency that facilitated the adoption when the child's
74.23residence is out of state. If the reassessment indicates that the child's needs have changed,
74.24the child-placing agency, on behalf of the commissioner and the parent, shall renegotiate
74.25the agreement to include a payment of the level determined appropriate through the
74.26reassessment process using the assessment tool prescribed by the commissioner according
74.27to section 259A.15, subdivision 3. The agreement must not be renegotiated unless the
74.28commissioner and the parent mutually agree to the changes. The effective date of any
74.29renegotiated agreement must be determined according to requirements and procedures
74.30prescribed by the commissioner.
74.31(b) An adoptive parent of a child with an adoption assistance agreement based on
74.32the child being an at-risk child may request renegotiation of the agreement to include a
74.33monthly payment. The parent must have written documentation from a qualified expert
74.34that the potential disability upon which eligibility for adoption assistance was approved
74.35has manifested. Documentation of the disability must be limited to evidence deemed
74.36appropriate by the commissioner. Prior to renegotiating the agreement, a reassessment of
75.1the child must be conducted using an assessment tool prescribed by the commissioner
75.2according to section 259A.15, subdivision 3. The reassessment must be used to renegotiate
75.3the agreement to include an appropriate monthly payment. The agreement must not be
75.4renegotiated unless the commissioner and the adoptive parent mutually agree to the
75.5changes. The effective date of any renegotiated agreement must be determined according
75.6to requirements and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
75.7    Subd. 3. Child income or income attributable to the child. No income received
75.8by a child will be considered in determining a child's adoption assistance payment
75.9amount. If a child for whom a parent is receiving adoption assistance is also receiving
75.10Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or Retirement, Survivors, Disability Insurance
75.11(RSDI), the certifying agency shall inform the adoptive parent that the child's adoption
75.12assistance must be reported to the Social Security Administration.

75.13    Sec. 7. [259A.30] REPORTING RESPONSIBILITIES.
75.14    Subdivision 1. Notification of change. (a) An adoptive parent who has an adoption
75.15assistance agreement shall keep the agency administering the program informed of
75.16changes in status or circumstances that would make the child ineligible for the payments
75.17or eligible for payments in a different amount.
75.18(b) As long as the agreement is in effect, the adoptive parent agrees to notify the
75.19agency administering the program in writing within 30 days of any of the following
75.20changes:
75.21(1) the child's or adoptive parent's legal name;
75.22(2) the family's address;
75.23(3) the child's legal custody status;
75.24(4) the child's completion of high school, if this occurs after the child attains age 18;
75.25(5) the end of an adoptive parent's legal responsibility to support the child based on:
75.26termination of parental rights of the adoptive parent, transfer of guardianship to another
75.27person, or transfer of permanent legal and physical custody to another person;
75.28(6) the end of an adoptive parent's financial support of the child;
75.29(7) the death of the child;
75.30(8) the death of the adoptive parent;
75.31(9) the child enlists in the military;
75.32(10) the child gets married;
75.33(11) the child becomes an emancipated minor through legal action;
75.34(12) the adoptive parents separate or divorce;
76.1(13) the child is residing outside the adoptive home for a period of more than 30
76.2consecutive days; and
76.3(14) the child's status upon which eligibility for extension under section 259A.45,
76.4subdivision 2 or 3, was based.
76.5    Subd. 2. Correct and true information. If the adoptive parent reports information
76.6the adoptive parent knows is untrue, the adoptive parent fails to notify the commissioner
76.7of changes that may affect eligibility, or the agency administering the program receives
76.8information the adoptive parent did not report, the adoptive parent may be investigated for
76.9theft and, if charged and convicted, shall be sentenced under section 609.52, subdivision
76.103, clauses (1) to (5).

76.11    Sec. 8. [259A.35] TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT.
76.12    Subdivision 1. Reasons for termination. (a) An adoption assistance agreement
76.13shall terminate in any of the following circumstances:
76.14(1) the child has attained the age of 18, or up to age 21, when the child meets a
76.15condition for extension as outlined in section 259A.45, subdivision 1;
76.16(2) the child has not attained the age of 18, but the commissioner determines the
76.17adoptive parent is no longer legally responsible for support of the child;
76.18(3) the commissioner determines the adoptive parent is no longer providing financial
76.19support to the child up to age 21;
76.20(4) the death of the child; or
76.21(5) the adoptive parent requests in writing termination of the adoption assistance
76.22agreement.
76.23(b) An adoptive parent is considered no longer legally responsible for support of the
76.24child in any of the following circumstances:
76.25(1) parental rights to the child are legally terminated or a court accepted the parent's
76.26consent to adoption under chapter 260C;
76.27(2) permanent legal and physical custody or guardianship of the child is transferred
76.28to another individual;
76.29(3) death of adoptive parent;
76.30(4) child enlists in the military;
76.31(5) child gets married; or
76.32(6) child is determined an emancipated minor through legal action.
76.33    Subd. 2. Death of adoptive parent or adoption dissolution. The adoption
76.34assistance agreement ends upon death or termination of parental rights of both adoptive
76.35parents in the case of a two-parent adoption, or the sole adoptive parent in the case of
77.1a single-parent adoption. The child's adoption assistance eligibility may be continued
77.2according to section 259A.40.
77.3    Subd. 3. Termination notice for parent. The commissioner shall provide the
77.4child's parent written notice of termination of payment. Termination notices must be sent
77.5according to the requirements and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.

77.6    Sec. 9. [259A.40] ASSIGNMENT OF ADOPTION ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT.
77.7    Subdivision 1. Continuing child's eligibility for title IV-E adoption assistance
77.8in a subsequent adoption. (a) The child maintains eligibility for title IV-E adoption
77.9assistance in a subsequent adoption if the following criteria are met:
77.10(1) the child is determined to be a child with special needs as outlined in section
77.11259A.10, subdivision 2; and
77.12(2) the subsequent adoptive parent resides in Minnesota.
77.13(b) If the child had a title IV-E adoption assistance agreement prior to the death of
77.14the adoptive parent or dissolution of the adoption, and the subsequent adoptive parent
77.15resides outside of Minnesota, the state is not responsible for determining whether the child
77.16meets the definition of special needs, entering into the adoption assistance agreement, and
77.17making any adoption assistance payments outlined in the new agreement unless a state
77.18agency in Minnesota has responsibility for placement and care of the child at the time of
77.19the subsequent adoption. If there is no state agency in Minnesota that has responsibility
77.20for placement and care of the child at the time of the subsequent adoption, it is the public
77.21child welfare agency in the subsequent adoptive parent's residence that is responsible for
77.22determining whether the child meets the definition of special needs and entering into the
77.23adoption assistance agreement.
77.24    Subd. 2. Assigning a child's adoption assistance to a court-appointed guardian.
77.25(a) State-funded adoption assistance may be continued with the written consent of the
77.26commissioner to an individual who is a guardian appointed by a court for the child upon
77.27the death of both the adoptive parents in the case of a two-parent adoption, or the sole
77.28adoptive parent in the case of a single-parent adoption, unless the child is under the
77.29custody of a child-placing agency.
77.30(b) Temporary assignment of adoption assistance may be approved by the
77.31commissioner for a maximum of six consecutive months from the death of the parent
77.32or parents and must adhere to the requirements and procedures prescribed by the
77.33commissioner. If, within six months, the child has not been adopted by a person agreed
77.34upon by the commissioner, or if a court has not appointed a legal guardian under either
77.35section 260C.325 or 524.5-313, or similar law of another jurisdiction, the adoption
78.1assistance shall terminate. Upon assignment of payments pursuant to this subdivision,
78.2funding shall be from state funds only.

78.3    Sec. 10. [259A.45] EXTENSION OF ADOPTION ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT.
78.4    Subdivision 1. General requirements. (a) Under certain limited circumstances a
78.5child may qualify for extension of the adoption assistance agreement beyond the date the
78.6child attains age 18, up to the date the child attains the age of 21.
78.7(b) A request for extension of the adoption assistance agreement must be completed
78.8in writing and submitted, including all supporting documentation, by the adoptive parent
78.9at least 60 calendar days prior to the date that the current agreement will terminate.
78.10(c) A signed amendment to the current adoption assistance agreement must be
78.11fully executed between the adoptive parent and the commissioner at least ten business
78.12days prior to the termination of the current agreement. The request for extension and the
78.13fully executed amendment must be made according to the requirements and procedures
78.14prescribed by the commissioner, including documentation of eligibility, and on forms
78.15prescribed by the commissioner.
78.16(d) If a child-placing agency is certifying a child for adoption assistance and
78.17the child will attain the age of 18 within 60 calendar days of submission, the request
78.18for extension must be completed in writing and submitted, including all supporting
78.19documentation, with the adoption assistance application.
78.20    Subd. 2. Extension past age 18 for child adopted after 16th birthday. A child
78.21who has attained the age of 16 prior to finalization of the child's adoption is eligible for
78.22extension of the adoption assistance agreement up to the date the child attains age 21
78.23if the child is:
78.24(1) dependent on the adoptive parent for care and financial support; and
78.25(2)(i) completing a secondary education program or a program leading to an
78.26equivalent credential;
78.27(ii) enrolled in an institution that provides postsecondary or vocational education;
78.28(iii) participating in a program or activity designed to promote or remove barriers to
78.29employment;
78.30(iv) employed for at least 80 hours per month; or
78.31(v) incapable of doing any of the activities described in clauses (i) to (iv) due to
78.32a medical condition where incapability is supported by documentation from an expert
78.33according to the requirements and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.
78.34    Subd. 3. Extension past age 18 for child adopted prior to 16th birthday. A child
78.35who has not attained the age of 16 prior to finalization of the child's adoption is eligible
79.1for extension of the adoption assistance agreement up to the date the child attains the
79.2age of 21 if the child is:
79.3(1) dependent on the adoptive parent for care and financial support; and
79.4(2)(i) enrolled in a secondary education program or a program leading to the
79.5equivalent; or
79.6(ii) incapable of sustaining employment because of the continuation of a physical or
79.7mental disability, upon which eligibility for adoption assistance was approved.

79.8    Sec. 11. [259A.50] OVERPAYMENTS OF ADOPTION ASSISTANCE.
79.9An amount of adoption assistance paid to an adoptive parent in excess of the
79.10payment that was actually due is recoverable by the commissioner, even when the
79.11overpayment was caused by agency error or circumstances outside the responsibility and
79.12control of the parent or provider. Adoption assistance amounts covered by this section
79.13include basic maintenance needs payments, monthly supplemental maintenance needs
79.14payments, reimbursement of nonrecurring adoption expenses, reimbursement of special
79.15nonmedical costs, and reimbursement of medical costs.

79.16    Sec. 12. [259A.55] APPEALS AND FAIR HEARINGS.
79.17    Subdivision 1. Appeals for denials, modifications, or terminations. An adoptive
79.18parent or a prospective adoptive parent has the right to appeal to the commissioner under
79.19section 256.045, for reasons including, but not limited to: when eligibility for adoption
79.20assistance is denied, when a specific payment or reimbursement is modified or denied,
79.21and when the agreement for an eligible child is terminated. A prospective adoptive parent
79.22who disagrees with a decision by the commissioner prior to finalization of the adoption
79.23may request review of the decision by the commissioner, or may appeal the decision
79.24under section 256.045.
79.25    Subd. 2. Extenuating circumstances. (a) An adoption assistance agreement must
79.26be signed and fully executed prior to the court order that finalizes the adoption. An
79.27adoptive parent who believes that extenuating circumstances exist, as to why the adoption
79.28was finalized prior to fully executing an adoption assistance agreement, may request
79.29a fair hearing. The parent has the responsibility to prove the existence of extenuating
79.30circumstances, such as:
79.31(1) relevant facts regarding the child were known by the child-placing agency and
79.32not presented to the parent prior to finalization of the adoption; or
79.33(2) the child-placing agency failed to advise a potential parent about the availability
79.34of adoption assistance for a child in the county-paid foster care system.
80.1(b) If an appeals judge finds through the fair hearing process that extenuating
80.2circumstances existed and that the child met all eligibility criteria at the time the adoption
80.3was finalized, the effective date and any associated federal financial participation shall
80.4be retroactive to the date of the request for a fair hearing.

80.5    Sec. 13. [259A.65] INTERSTATE COMPACT ON ADOPTION AND MEDICAL
80.6ASSISTANCE.
80.7    Subdivision 1. Purpose. It is the purpose and policy of the state of Minnesota to:
80.8(1) enter into interstate agreements with agencies of other states to safeguard and
80.9protect the interests of children covered by an adoption assistance agreement when they
80.10are adopted across state lines or move to another state after adoption finalization; and
80.11(2) provide a framework for uniformity and consistency in administrative procedures
80.12when a child with special needs is adopted by a family in another state and for children
80.13adopted in Minnesota who move to another state.
80.14    Subd. 2. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in this
80.15subdivision have the meanings given them, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
80.16(a) "Adoption assistance state" means the state that certifies eligibility for Medicaid
80.17in an adoption assistance agreement.
80.18(b) "Resident state" means the state where the adopted child is a resident.
80.19(c) "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia,
80.20the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, the
80.21Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, or a territory or possession of the
80.22United States.
80.23    Subd. 3. Compacts authorized. The commissioner is authorized to develop,
80.24negotiate, and enter into one or more interstate compacts on behalf of this state with other
80.25states to implement Medicaid for children with adoption assistance agreements.
80.26    Subd. 4. Contents of compacts. (a) A compact must include:
80.27(1) a provision allowing all states to join the compact;
80.28(2) a provision for withdrawal from the compact upon written notice to the parties,
80.29effective one year after the notice is provided;
80.30(3) a requirement that the protections afforded under the compact continue in force
80.31for the duration of the adoption assistance from a party state other than the one in which
80.32the adopted child is a resident;
80.33(4) a requirement that each instance of adoption assistance to which the compact
80.34applies be covered by an adoption assistance agreement in writing between the adoptive
80.35parent and the state child welfare agency of the state that provides the adoption assistance,
81.1and that the agreement be expressly for the benefit of the adopted child and enforceable by
81.2the adoptive parent and the state agency providing the adoption assistance; and
81.3(5) other provisions necessary and appropriate for the proper administration of the
81.4compact.
81.5(b) A compact may contain provisions establishing requirements and entitlements to
81.6medical, developmental, child care, or other social services for the child under state law,
81.7even though the child and the adoptive parent are in a state other than the one responsible
81.8for or providing the services or funds to pay part or all of the costs.
81.9    Subd. 5. Duties of commissioner of human services regarding medical
81.10assistance. (a) The commissioner of human services shall:
81.11(1) provide Minnesota medical assistance for an adopted child who is title IV-E
81.12eligible;
81.13(2) provide Minnesota medical assistance for an adopted child who is not title IV-E
81.14eligible who:
81.15(i) was determined to have a special need for medical or rehabilitative care;
81.16(ii) is living in another state; and
81.17(iii) is covered by an adoption assistance agreement made by the commissioner for
81.18medical coverage or benefits when the child is not eligible for Medicaid in the child's
81.19residence state;
81.20(3) consider the holder of a medical assistance identification card under this
81.21subdivision as any other recipient of medical assistance under chapter 256B; and
81.22(4) process and make payments on claims for the recipient in the same manner as
81.23for other recipients of medical assistance.
81.24(b) Coverage must be limited to providers authorized by Minnesota's medical
81.25assistance program, and according to Minnesota's program requirements.
81.26    Subd. 6. Cooperation with Medicaid. The adoptive parent shall cooperate with
81.27and abide by the Medicaid program requirements and procedures of the state which
81.28provides medical coverage.
81.29    Subd. 7. Federal participation. The commissioner shall apply for and administer
81.30all relevant aid in accordance with state and federal law.

81.31    Sec. 14. [259A.70] REIMBURSEMENT OF NONRECURRING ADOPTION
81.32EXPENSES.
81.33(a) The commissioner of human services shall provide reimbursement to an adoptive
81.34parent for costs incurred in an adoption of a child with special needs according to section
81.35259A.10, subdivision 2. Reimbursement shall be made for expenses that are reasonable
82.1and necessary for the adoption to occur, subject to a maximum of $2,000. The expenses
82.2must directly relate to the legal adoption of the child, not be incurred in violation of state
82.3or federal law, and must not have been reimbursed from other sources or funds.
82.4(b) Children who have special needs but are not citizens or residents of the United
82.5States and were either adopted in another country or brought to this country for the
82.6purposes of adoption are categorically ineligible for this reimbursement program, except if
82.7the child meets the eligibility criteria after the dissolution of the international adoption.
82.8(c) An adoptive parent, in consultation with the responsible child-placing agency,
82.9may request reimbursement of nonrecurring adoption expenses by submitting a complete
82.10application, according to the requirements and procedures and on forms prescribed by
82.11the commissioner.
82.12(d) The commissioner shall determine the child's eligibility for adoption expense
82.13reimbursement under title IV-E of the Social Security Act, United States Code, title 42,
82.14sections 670 to 676. If determined eligible, the commissioner of human services shall
82.15sign the agreement for nonrecurring adoption expense reimbursement, making this a
82.16fully executed agreement. To be eligible, the agreement must be fully executed prior to
82.17the child's adoption finalization.
82.18(e) An adoptive parent who has an adoption assistance agreement under section
82.19259A.15, subdivision 2, is not required to make a separate application for reimbursement
82.20of nonrecurring adoption expenses for the child who is the subject of that agreement.
82.21(f) If determined eligible, the adoptive parent shall submit reimbursement requests
82.22within 21 months of the date of the child's adoption decree, and according to requirements
82.23and procedures prescribed by the commissioner.

82.24    Sec. 15. [259A.75] REIMBURSEMENT OF CERTAIN AGENCY COSTS;
82.25PURCHASE OF SERVICE CONTRACTS.
82.26    Subdivision 1. General information. (a) Subject to the procedures required by
82.27the commissioner and the provisions of this section, a Minnesota county or tribal social
82.28services agency shall receive a reimbursement from the commissioner equal to 100
82.29percent of the reasonable and appropriate cost for contracted adoption placement services
82.30identified for a specific child that are not reimbursed under other federal or state funding
82.31sources.
82.32(b) The commissioner may spend up to $16,000 for each purchase of service
82.33contract. Only one contract per child per adoptive placement is permitted. Funds
82.34encumbered and obligated under the contract for the child remain available until the terms
82.35of the contract are fulfilled or the contract is terminated.
83.1(c) The commissioner shall set aside an amount not to exceed five percent of the
83.2total amount of the fiscal year appropriation from the state for the adoption assistance
83.3program to reimburse placing agencies for child-specific adoption placement services.
83.4When adoption assistance payments for children's needs exceed 95 percent of the total
83.5amount of the fiscal year appropriation from the state for the adoption assistance program,
83.6the amount of reimbursement available to placing agencies for adoption services is
83.7reduced correspondingly.
83.8    Subd. 2. Child eligibility criteria. (a) A child who is the subject of a purchase
83.9of service contract must:
83.10(1) have the goal of adoption, which may include an adoption in accordance with
83.11tribal law;
83.12(2) be under the guardianship of the commissioner of human services or be a ward of
83.13tribal court pursuant to section 260.755, subdivision 20; and
83.14(3) meet all of the special needs criteria according to section 259A.10, subdivision 2.
83.15(b) A child under the guardianship of the commissioner must have an identified
83.16adoptive parent and a fully executed adoption placement agreement according to section
83.17260C.613, subdivision 1, paragraph (a).
83.18    Subd. 3. Agency eligibility criteria. (a) A Minnesota county or tribal social
83.19services agency shall receive reimbursement for child-specific adoption placement
83.20services for an eligible child that it purchases from a private adoption agency licensed in
83.21Minnesota or any other state or tribal social services agency.
83.22(b) Reimbursement for adoption services is available only for services provided
83.23prior to the date of the adoption decree.
83.24    Subd. 4. Application and eligibility determination. (a) A county or tribal social
83.25services agency may request reimbursement of costs for adoption placement services by
83.26submitting a complete purchase of service application, according to the requirements and
83.27procedures and on forms prescribed by the commissioner.
83.28(b) The commissioner shall determine eligibility for reimbursement of adoption
83.29placement services. If determined eligible, the commissioner of human services shall
83.30sign the purchase of service agreement, making this a fully executed contract. No
83.31reimbursement under this section shall be made to an agency for services provided prior to
83.32the fully executed contract.
83.33(c) Separate purchase of service agreements shall be made, and separate records
83.34maintained, on each child. Only one agreement per child per adoptive placement is
83.35permitted. For siblings who are placed together, services shall be planned and provided to
83.36best maximize efficiency of the contracted hours.
84.1    Subd. 5. Reimbursement process. (a) The agency providing adoption services is
84.2responsible to track and record all service activity, including billable hours, on a form
84.3prescribed by the commissioner. The agency shall submit this form to the state for
84.4reimbursement after services have been completed.
84.5(b) The commissioner shall make the final determination whether or not the
84.6requested reimbursement costs are reasonable and appropriate and if the services have
84.7been completed according to the terms of the purchase of service agreement.
84.8    Subd. 6. Retention of purchase of service records. Agencies entering into
84.9purchase of service contracts shall keep a copy of the agreements, service records, and all
84.10applicable billing and invoicing according to the department's record retention schedule.
84.11Agency records shall be provided upon request by the commissioner.

84.12    Sec. 16. EFFECTIVE DATE.
84.13This article is effective August 1, 2012.

84.14ARTICLE 4
84.15CHILD PROTECTION

84.16    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260.012, is amended to read:
84.17260.012 DUTY TO ENSURE PLACEMENT PREVENTION AND FAMILY
84.18REUNIFICATION; REASONABLE EFFORTS.
84.19    (a) Once a child alleged to be in need of protection or services is under the court's
84.20jurisdiction, the court shall ensure that reasonable efforts, including culturally appropriate
84.21services, by the social services agency are made to prevent placement or to eliminate the
84.22need for removal and to reunite the child with the child's family at the earliest possible
84.23time, and the court must ensure that the responsible social services agency makes
84.24reasonable efforts to finalize an alternative permanent plan for the child as provided in
84.25paragraph (e). In determining reasonable efforts to be made with respect to a child and in
84.26making those reasonable efforts, the child's best interests, health, and safety must be of
84.27paramount concern. Reasonable efforts to prevent placement and for rehabilitation and
84.28reunification are always required except upon a determination by the court that a petition
84.29has been filed stating a prima facie case that:
84.30    (1) the parent has subjected a child to egregious harm as defined in section
84.31260C.007, subdivision 14 ;
84.32    (2) the parental rights of the parent to another child have been terminated
84.33involuntarily;
85.1    (3) the child is an abandoned infant under section 260C.301, subdivision 2,
85.2paragraph (a), clause (2);
85.3    (4) the parent's custodial rights to another child have been involuntarily transferred
85.4to a relative under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, paragraph (d), clause (1), or a similar
85.5law of another jurisdiction; or
85.6(5) the parent has committed sexual abuse as defined in section 626.556, subdivision
85.72, against the child or another child of the parent;
85.8(6) the parent has committed an offense that requires registration as a predatory
85.9offender under section 243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b); or
85.10    (5) (7) the provision of services or further services for the purpose of reunification is
85.11futile and therefore unreasonable under the circumstances.
85.12    (b) When the court makes one of the prima facie determinations under paragraph (a),
85.13either permanency pleadings under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, or a termination
85.14of parental rights petition under sections 260C.141 and 260C.301 must be filed. A
85.15permanency hearing under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, must be held within 30
85.16days of this determination.
85.17    (c) In the case of an Indian child, in proceedings under sections 260B.178 or
85.18260C.178 , 260C.201, and 260C.301 the juvenile court must make findings and conclusions
85.19consistent with the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, section
85.201901 et seq., as to the provision of active efforts. In cases governed by the Indian Child
85.21Welfare Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, section 1901, the responsible social
85.22services agency must provide active efforts as required under United States Code, title
85.2325, section 1911(d).
85.24    (d) "Reasonable efforts to prevent placement" means:
85.25    (1) the agency has made reasonable efforts to prevent the placement of the child in
85.26foster care by working with the family to develop and implement a safety plan; or
85.27    (2) given the particular circumstances of the child and family at the time of the
85.28child's removal, there are no services or efforts available which could allow the child to
85.29safely remain in the home.
85.30    (e) "Reasonable efforts to finalize a permanent plan for the child" means due
85.31diligence by the responsible social services agency to:
85.32    (1) reunify the child with the parent or guardian from whom the child was removed;
85.33    (2) assess a noncustodial parent's ability to provide day-to-day care for the child and,
85.34where appropriate, provide services necessary to enable the noncustodial parent to safely
85.35provide the care, as required by section 260C.212, subdivision 4;
86.1    (3) conduct a relative search to identify and provide notice to adult relatives as
86.2required under section 260C.212, subdivision 5;
86.3(4) place siblings removed from their home in the same home for foster care or
86.4adoption, or transfer permanent legal and physical custody to a relative. Visitation
86.5between siblings who are not in the same foster care, adoption, or custodial placement or
86.6facility shall be consistent with section 260C.212, subdivision 2; and
86.7    (5) when the child cannot return to the parent or guardian from whom the child was
86.8removed, to plan for and finalize a safe and legally permanent alternative home for the
86.9child, and considers permanent alternative homes for the child inside or outside of the
86.10state, preferably through adoption or transfer of permanent legal and physical custody of
86.11the child.
86.12    (f) Reasonable efforts are made upon the exercise of due diligence by the responsible
86.13social services agency to use culturally appropriate and available services to meet the
86.14needs of the child and the child's family. Services may include those provided by the
86.15responsible social services agency and other culturally appropriate services available in
86.16the community. At each stage of the proceedings where the court is required to review
86.17the appropriateness of the responsible social services agency's reasonable efforts as
86.18described in paragraphs (a), (d), and (e), the social services agency has the burden of
86.19demonstrating that:
86.20    (1) it has made reasonable efforts to prevent placement of the child in foster care;
86.21    (2) it has made reasonable efforts to eliminate the need for removal of the child from
86.22the child's home and to reunify the child with the child's family at the earliest possible time;
86.23    (3) it has made reasonable efforts to finalize an alternative permanent home for
86.24the child, and considers permanent alternative homes for the child inside or outside of
86.25the state; or
86.26    (4) reasonable efforts to prevent placement and to reunify the child with the parent
86.27or guardian are not required. The agency may meet this burden by stating facts in a sworn
86.28petition filed under section 260C.141, by filing an affidavit summarizing the agency's
86.29reasonable efforts or facts the agency believes demonstrate there is no need for reasonable
86.30efforts to reunify the parent and child, or through testimony or a certified report required
86.31under juvenile court rules.
86.32    (g) Once the court determines that reasonable efforts for reunification are not
86.33required because the court has made one of the prima facie determinations under paragraph
86.34(a), the court may only require reasonable efforts for reunification after a hearing according
86.35to section 260C.163, where the court finds there is not clear and convincing evidence of
86.36the facts upon which the court based its prima facie determination. In this case when there
87.1is clear and convincing evidence that the child is in need of protection or services, the
87.2court may find the child in need of protection or services and order any of the dispositions
87.3available under section 260C.201, subdivision 1. Reunification of a surviving child with a
87.4parent is not required if the parent has been convicted of:
87.5    (1) a violation of, or an attempt or conspiracy to commit a violation of, sections
87.6609.185 to 609.20; 609.222, subdivision 2; or 609.223 in regard to another child of the
87.7parent;
87.8    (2) a violation of section 609.222, subdivision 2; or 609.223, in regard to the
87.9surviving child; or
87.10    (3) a violation of, or an attempt or conspiracy to commit a violation of, United States
87.11Code, title 18, section 1111(a) or 1112(a), in regard to another child of the parent.;
87.12(4) committing sexual abuse as defined in section 626.556, subdivision 2, against
87.13the child or another child of the parent; or
87.14(5) an offense that requires registration as a predatory offender under section
87.15243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b).
87.16    (h) The juvenile court, in proceedings under sections 260B.178 or 260C.178,
87.17260C.201 , and 260C.301 shall make findings and conclusions as to the provision of
87.18reasonable efforts. When determining whether reasonable efforts have been made, the
87.19court shall consider whether services to the child and family were:
87.20    (1) relevant to the safety and protection of the child;
87.21    (2) adequate to meet the needs of the child and family;
87.22    (3) culturally appropriate;
87.23    (4) available and accessible;
87.24    (5) consistent and timely; and
87.25    (6) realistic under the circumstances.
87.26    In the alternative, the court may determine that provision of services or further
87.27services for the purpose of rehabilitation is futile and therefore unreasonable under the
87.28circumstances or that reasonable efforts are not required as provided in paragraph (a).
87.29    (i) This section does not prevent out-of-home placement for treatment of a child with
87.30a mental disability when it is determined to be medically necessary as a result of the child's
87.31diagnostic assessment or individual treatment plan indicates that appropriate and necessary
87.32treatment cannot be effectively provided outside of a residential or inpatient treatment
87.33program and the level or intensity of supervision and treatment cannot be effectively and
87.34safely provided in the child's home or community and it is determined that a residential
87.35treatment setting is the least restrictive setting that is appropriate to the needs of the child.
88.1    (j) If continuation of reasonable efforts to prevent placement or reunify the child
88.2with the parent or guardian from whom the child was removed is determined by the court
88.3to be inconsistent with the permanent plan for the child or upon the court making one of
88.4the prima facie determinations under paragraph (a), reasonable efforts must be made to
88.5place the child in a timely manner in a safe and permanent home and to complete whatever
88.6steps are necessary to legally finalize the permanent placement of the child.
88.7    (k) Reasonable efforts to place a child for adoption or in another permanent
88.8placement may be made concurrently with reasonable efforts to prevent placement or to
88.9reunify the child with the parent or guardian from whom the child was removed. When
88.10the responsible social services agency decides to concurrently make reasonable efforts for
88.11both reunification and permanent placement away from the parent under paragraph (a), the
88.12agency shall disclose its decision and both plans for concurrent reasonable efforts to all
88.13parties and the court. When the agency discloses its decision to proceed on both plans for
88.14reunification and permanent placement away from the parent, the court's review of the
88.15agency's reasonable efforts shall include the agency's efforts under both plans.

88.16    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.001, is amended to read:
88.17260C.001 TITLE, INTENT, AND CONSTRUCTION.
88.18    Subdivision 1. Citation; scope. (a) Sections 260C.001 to 260C.451 260C.521 may
88.19be cited as the child juvenile protection provisions of the Juvenile Court Act.
88.20(b) Juvenile protection proceedings include:
88.21(1) a child in need of protection or services matters;
88.22(2) permanency matters, including termination of parental rights;
88.23(3) postpermanency reviews under sections 260C.317 and 260C.521; and
88.24(4) adoption matters including posttermination of parental rights proceedings that
88.25review the responsible social services agency's reasonable efforts to finalize adoption.
88.26    Subd. 2. Child in need of Juvenile protection services proceedings. (a) The
88.27paramount consideration in all juvenile protection proceedings concerning a child alleged
88.28or found to be in need of protection or services is the health, safety, and best interests
88.29of the child. In proceedings involving an American Indian child, as defined in section
88.30260.755, subdivision 8 , the best interests of the child must be determined consistent with
88.31sections 260.751 to 260.835 and the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Code, title
88.3225, sections 1901 to 1923.
88.33    (b) The purpose of the laws relating to juvenile courts protection proceedings is:
89.1    (1) to secure for each child alleged or adjudicated in need of protection or services
89.2and under the jurisdiction of the court, the care and guidance, preferably in the child's own
89.3home, as will best serve the spiritual, emotional, mental, and physical welfare of the child;
89.4    (2) to provide judicial procedures which that protect the welfare of the child;
89.5    (3) to preserve and strengthen the child's family ties whenever possible and in the
89.6child's best interests, removing the child from the custody of parents only when the child's
89.7welfare or safety cannot be adequately safeguarded without removal;
89.8    (4) to ensure that when removal from the child's own family is necessary and in the
89.9child's best interests, the responsible social services agency has legal responsibility for
89.10the child removal either:
89.11    (i) pursuant to a voluntary placement agreement between the child's parent or
89.12guardian or the child, when the child is over age 18, and the responsible social services
89.13agency; or
89.14    (ii) by court order pursuant to section 260C.151, subdivision 6; 206C.178; or
89.15260C.178; 260C.201; 260C.325; or 260C.515;
89.16    (5) to ensure that, when placement is pursuant to court order, the court order
89.17removing the child or continuing the child in foster care contains an individualized
89.18determination that placement is in the best interests of the child that coincides with the
89.19actual removal of the child; and
89.20    (6) to ensure that when the child is removed, the child's care and discipline is, as
89.21nearly as possible, equivalent to that which should have been given by the parents and is
89.22either in:
89.23    (i) the home of a noncustodial parent pursuant to section 260C.178 or 260C.201,
89.24subdivision 1, paragraph (a), clause (1);
89.25    (ii) the home of a relative pursuant to emergency placement by the responsible social
89.26services agency under chapter 245A; or
89.27    (iii) a foster home care licensed under chapter 245A.; and
89.28(7) to ensure appropriate permanency planning for children in foster care including:
89.29(i) unless reunification is not required under section 260.012, developing a
89.30permanency plan for the child that includes a primary plan for reunification with the
89.31child's parent or guardian and a secondary plan for an alternative, legally permanent home
89.32for the child in the event reunification cannot be achieved in a timely manner;
89.33(ii) identifying, locating, and assessing both parents of the child as soon as possible
89.34and offering reunification services to both parents of the child as required under section
89.35260.012 and 260C.219;
90.1(iii) identifying, locating, and notifying relatives of both parents of the child
90.2according to section 260C.221;
90.3(iv) making a placement with a family that will commit to being the legally
90.4permanent home for the child in the event reunification cannot occur at the earliest
90.5possible time while at the same time actively supporting the reunification plan; and
90.6(v) returning the child home with supports and services, as soon as return is safe
90.7for the child, or when safe return cannot be timely achieved, moving to finalize another
90.8legally permanent home for the child.
90.9    Subd. 3. Permanency and, termination of parental rights, and adoption. The
90.10purpose of the laws relating to permanency and, termination of parental rights, and children
90.11who come under the guardianship of the commissioner of human services is to ensure that:
90.12(1) when required and appropriate, reasonable efforts have been made by the social
90.13services agency to reunite the child with the child's parents in a home that is safe and
90.14permanent; and
90.15(2) if placement with the parents is not reasonably foreseeable, to secure for the
90.16child a safe and permanent placement according to the requirements of section 260C.212,
90.17subdivision 2, preferably with adoptive parents or, if that is not possible or in the best
90.18interests of the child, a fit and willing relative through transfer of permanent legal and
90.19physical custody to that relative; and
90.20(3) when a child is under the guardianship of the commissioner of human services,
90.21reasonable efforts are made to finalize an adoptive home for the child in a timely manner.
90.22Nothing in this section requires reasonable efforts to prevent placement or to reunify
90.23the child with the parent or guardian to be made in circumstances where the court has
90.24determined that the child has been subjected to egregious harm, when the child is an
90.25abandoned infant, the parent has involuntarily lost custody of another child through a
90.26proceeding under section 260C.201, subdivision 11 260C.515, subdivision 4, or similar
90.27law of another state, the parental rights of the parent to a sibling have been involuntarily
90.28terminated, or the court has determined that reasonable efforts or further reasonable efforts
90.29to reunify the child with the parent or guardian would be futile.
90.30The paramount consideration in all proceedings for permanent placement of the
90.31child under section 260C.201, subdivision 11 sections 260C.503 to 260C.521, or the
90.32termination of parental rights is the best interests of the child. In proceedings involving an
90.33American Indian child, as defined in section 260.755, subdivision 8, the best interests of
90.34the child must be determined consistent with the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, United
90.35States Code, title 25, section 1901, et seq.
91.1    Subd. 4. Construction. The laws relating to the child protection provisions of
91.2the juvenile courts protection proceedings shall be liberally construed to carry out these
91.3purposes.

91.4    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.007, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
91.5    Subd. 4. Child. "Child" means an individual under 18 years of age. For purposes of
91.6this chapter and chapter 260D, child also includes individuals under age 21 who are in
91.7foster care pursuant to section 260C.451.

91.8    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.007, is amended by adding a
91.9subdivision to read:
91.10    Subd. 26a. Putative father. "Putative father" has the meaning given in section
91.11259.21, subdivision 12.

91.12    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.007, is amended by adding a
91.13subdivision to read:
91.14    Subd. 27a. Responsible social services agency. "Responsible social services
91.15agency" means the county social services agency that has responsibility for public child
91.16welfare and child protection services and includes the provision of adoption services as an
91.17agent of the commissioner of human services.

91.18    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.007, is amended by adding a
91.19subdivision to read:
91.20    Subd. 32. Sibling. "Sibling" means one of two or more individuals who have one
91.21or both parents in common through blood, marriage, or adoption, including siblings as
91.22defined by the child's tribal code or custom.

91.23    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.101, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
91.24    Subd. 2. Other matters relating to children. Except as provided in clause (4), The
91.25juvenile court has original and exclusive jurisdiction in proceedings concerning:
91.26    (1) the termination of parental rights to a child in accordance with the provisions of
91.27sections 260C.301 to 260C.328;
91.28    (2) permanency matters under sections 260C.503 to 260C.521;
91.29(3) the appointment and removal of a juvenile court guardian for a child, where
91.30parental rights have been terminated under the provisions of sections 260C.301 to
91.31260C.328 ;
92.1    (3) (4) judicial consent to the marriage of a child when required by law;
92.2    (4) the juvenile court in those counties in which the judge of the probate-juvenile
92.3court has been admitted to the practice of law in this state shall proceed under the laws
92.4relating to adoptions in all adoption matters. In those counties in which the judge of the
92.5probate-juvenile court has not been admitted to the practice of law in this state the district
92.6court shall proceed under the laws relating to adoptions in
92.7(5) all adoption matters and review of the efforts to finalize the adoption of the child
92.8under section 260C.317;
92.9    (5) (6) the review of the placement of a child who is in foster care pursuant to a
92.10voluntary placement agreement between the child's parent or parents and the responsible
92.11social services agency under section 260C.212, subdivision 8 260C.227; or between the
92.12child, when the child is over age 18, and the agency under section 260C.229; and
92.13    (6) (7) the review of voluntary foster care placement of a child for treatment under
92.14chapter 260D according to the review requirements of that chapter.

92.15    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.150, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
92.16    Subdivision 1. Determining parentage. (a) A parent and child relationship may be
92.17established under this chapter according to the requirements of section 257.54 and. The
92.18requirements of the Minnesota Parentage Act, sections 257.51 to 257.74, must be followed
92.19unless otherwise specified in this section.
92.20    (b) An action to establish a parent and child relationship under this chapter must
92.21be commenced by motion, which shall be personally served upon the alleged parent and
92.22served upon all required parties under the Minnesota Parentage Act as provided for service
92.23of motions in the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure. The motion shall be
92.24brought in an existing juvenile protection proceeding and may be brought by any party, a
92.25putative father, or the county attorney representing the responsible social services agency.
92.26    (c) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, a motion to establish parentage
92.27under this section, and any related documents or orders, are not confidential and are
92.28accessible to the public according to the provisions of the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile
92.29Protection Procedure. Any hearings related to establishment of paternity under this section
92.30are accessible to the public according to the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection
92.31Procedure.
92.32    (d) The court may order genetic testing of any putative father or any man presumed
92.33to be the father of a child who is the subject of a juvenile protection matter unless paternity
92.34of the child has already been adjudicated under the Minnesota Parentage Act or if a
92.35recognition of parentage has been fully executed and filed under section 257.75 when the
93.1recognition of parentage has the force and effect of a judgment or order determining the
93.2existence of the parent and child relationship under section 257.66. If genetic testing is
93.3ordered, a positive genetic test under section 257.62, subdivision 5, is required to establish
93.4paternity for a child under this chapter.
93.5    (e) A copy of the order establishing the parent and child relationship shall be filed
93.6in family court. Any further proceedings for modification of the child support portion of
93.7the order that establishes the parent and child relationship shall be brought in the family
93.8court of the county where the original order was filed. The review shall be under chapters
93.9518 and 518A. Notice of any family court proceedings shall be provided by the court
93.10administrator to the responsible social services agency, which shall be a party to the
93.11family court proceeding.

93.12    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.157, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
93.13    Subdivision 1. Investigation. Upon request of the court the responsible social
93.14services agency or probation officer shall investigate the personal and family history
93.15and environment of any minor coming within the jurisdiction of the court under section
93.16260C.101 and shall report its findings to the court. The court may order any minor coming
93.17within its jurisdiction to be examined by a duly qualified physician, psychiatrist, or
93.18psychologist appointed by the court.
93.19Adoption investigations shall be conducted in accordance with the laws relating to
93.20adoptions in chapter 259. Any funds received under the provisions of this subdivision
93.21shall not cancel until the end of the fiscal year immediately following the fiscal year in
93.22which the funds were received. The funds are available for use by the commissioner of
93.23corrections during that period and are hereby appropriated annually to the commissioner of
93.24corrections as reimbursement of the costs of providing these services to the juvenile courts.

93.25    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.163, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
93.26    Subdivision 1. General. (a) Except for hearings arising under section 260C.425,
93.27hearings on any matter shall be without a jury and may be conducted in an informal
93.28manner. In all adjudicatory proceedings involving a child alleged to be in need of
93.29protection or services regarding juvenile protection matters under this chapter, the court
93.30shall admit only evidence that would be admissible in a civil trial. To be proved at trial,
93.31allegations of a petition alleging a child to be in need of protection or services must be
93.32proved by clear and convincing evidence.
93.33    (b) Except for proceedings involving a child alleged to be in need of protection or
93.34services and petitions for the termination of parental rights, hearings may be continued or
94.1adjourned from time to time. In proceedings involving a child alleged to be in need of
94.2protection or services and petitions for the termination of parental rights, hearings may not
94.3be continued or adjourned for more than one week unless the court makes specific findings
94.4that the continuance or adjournment is in the best interests of the child. If a hearing is held
94.5on a petition involving physical or sexual abuse of a child who is alleged to be in need of
94.6protection or services or neglected and in foster care, the court shall file the decision with
94.7the court administrator as soon as possible but no later than 15 days after the matter is
94.8submitted to the court. When a continuance or adjournment is ordered in any proceeding,
94.9the court may make any interim orders as it deems in the best interests of the minor in
94.10accordance with the provisions of sections 260C.001 to 260C.421 this chapter.
94.11    (c) Absent exceptional circumstances, hearings under this chapter, except hearings
94.12in adoption proceedings, are presumed to be accessible to the public, however the court
94.13may close any hearing and the records related to any matter as provided in the Minnesota
94.14Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure.
94.15    (d) Adoption hearings shall be conducted in accordance with the provisions of laws
94.16relating to adoptions are closed to the public and all records related to an adoption are
94.17inaccessible except as provided in the Minnesota Rules of Adoption Procedure.
94.18    (e) In any permanency hearing, including the transition of a child from foster care
94.19to independent living, the court shall ensure that its consult with the child during the
94.20hearing is in an age-appropriate manner.

94.21    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.163, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
94.22    Subd. 4. County attorney. Except in adoption proceedings, the county attorney
94.23shall present the evidence upon request of the court. In representing the responsible social
94.24services agency, the county attorney shall also have the responsibility for advancing the
94.25public interest in the welfare of the child.

94.26    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.178, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
94.27    Subdivision 1. Hearing and release requirements. (a) If a child was taken into
94.28custody under section 260C.175, subdivision 1, clause (1) or (2), item (ii), the court shall
94.29hold a hearing within 72 hours of the time the child was taken into custody, excluding
94.30Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, to determine whether the child should continue in
94.31custody.
94.32    (b) Unless there is reason to believe that the child would endanger self or others or
94.33not return for a court hearing, or that the child's health or welfare would be immediately
94.34endangered, the child shall be released to the custody of a parent, guardian, custodian,
95.1or other suitable person, subject to reasonable conditions of release including, but not
95.2limited to, a requirement that the child undergo a chemical use assessment as provided in
95.3section 260C.157, subdivision 1.
95.4    (c) If the court determines there is reason to believe that the child would endanger
95.5self or others or not return for a court hearing, or that the child's health or welfare would
95.6be immediately endangered if returned to the care of the parent or guardian who has
95.7custody and from whom the child was removed, the court shall order the child into
95.8foster care under the legal responsibility of the responsible social services agency or
95.9responsible probation or corrections agency for the purposes of protective care as that term
95.10is used in the juvenile court rules or into the home of a noncustodial parent and order the
95.11noncustodial parent to comply with any conditions the court determines to be appropriate
95.12to the safety and care of the child, including cooperating with paternity establishment
95.13proceedings in the case of a man who has not been adjudicated the child's father. The
95.14court shall not give the responsible social services legal custody and order a trial home
95.15visit at any time prior to adjudication and disposition under section 260C.201, subdivision
95.161
, paragraph (a), clause (3), but may order the child returned to the care of the parent or
95.17guardian who has custody and from whom the child was removed and order the parent or
95.18guardian to comply with any conditions the court determines to be appropriate to meet
95.19the safety, health, and welfare of the child.
95.20    (d) In determining whether the child's health or welfare would be immediately
95.21endangered, the court shall consider whether the child would reside with a perpetrator
95.22of domestic child abuse.
95.23    (e) The court, before determining whether a child should be placed in or continue
95.24in foster care under the protective care of the responsible agency, shall also make a
95.25determination, consistent with section 260.012 as to whether reasonable efforts were made
95.26to prevent placement or whether reasonable efforts to prevent placement are not required.
95.27In the case of an Indian child, the court shall determine whether active efforts, according
95.28to the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, United States Code, title 25, section 1912(d),
95.29were made to prevent placement. The court shall enter a finding that the responsible
95.30social services agency has made reasonable efforts to prevent placement when the agency
95.31establishes either:
95.32    (1) that it has actually provided services or made efforts in an attempt to prevent
95.33the child's removal but that such services or efforts have not proven sufficient to permit
95.34the child to safely remain in the home; or
95.35    (2) that there are no services or other efforts that could be made at the time of the
95.36hearing that could safely permit the child to remain home or to return home. When
96.1reasonable efforts to prevent placement are required and there are services or other efforts
96.2that could be ordered which would permit the child to safely return home, the court shall
96.3order the child returned to the care of the parent or guardian and the services or efforts put
96.4in place to ensure the child's safety. When the court makes a prima facie determination
96.5that one of the circumstances under paragraph (g) exists, the court shall determine that
96.6reasonable efforts to prevent placement and to return the child to the care of the parent or
96.7guardian are not required.
96.8    If the court finds the social services agency's preventive or reunification efforts
96.9have not been reasonable but further preventive or reunification efforts could not permit
96.10the child to safely remain at home, the court may nevertheless authorize or continue
96.11the removal of the child.
96.12    (f) The court may not order or continue the foster care placement of the child unless
96.13the court makes explicit, individualized findings that continued custody of the child by
96.14the parent or guardian would be contrary to the welfare of the child and that placement is
96.15in the best interest of the child.
96.16    (g) At the emergency removal hearing, or at any time during the course of the
96.17proceeding, and upon notice and request of the county attorney, the court shall determine
96.18whether a petition has been filed stating a prima facie case that:
96.19    (1) the parent has subjected a child to egregious harm as defined in section
96.20260C.007, subdivision 14 ;
96.21    (2) the parental rights of the parent to another child have been involuntarily
96.22terminated;
96.23    (3) the child is an abandoned infant under section 260C.301, subdivision 2,
96.24paragraph (a), clause (2);
96.25    (4) the parents' custodial rights to another child have been involuntarily transferred
96.26to a relative under Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.201, subdivision 11, paragraph
96.27(e), clause (1); section 260C.515, subdivision 4, or a similar law of another jurisdiction; or
96.28    (5) the parent has committed sexual abuse as defined in section 626.556, subdivision
96.292, against the child or another child of the parent;
96.30(6) the parent has committed an offense that requires registration as a predatory
96.31offender under section 243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b); or
96.32(7) the provision of services or further services for the purpose of reunification is
96.33futile and therefore unreasonable.
96.34    (h) When a petition to terminate parental rights is required under section 260C.301,
96.35subdivision 3
or 4, but the county attorney has determined not to proceed with a
96.36termination of parental rights petition, and has instead filed a petition to transfer permanent
97.1legal and physical custody to a relative under section 260C.201, subdivision 11 260C.507,
97.2the court shall schedule a permanency hearing within 30 days of the filing of the petition.
97.3    (i) If the county attorney has filed a petition under section 260C.307, the court shall
97.4schedule a trial under section 260C.163 within 90 days of the filing of the petition except
97.5when the county attorney determines that the criminal case shall proceed to trial first under
97.6section 260C.201, subdivision 3 260C.503, subdivision 2, paragraph (c).
97.7    (j) If the court determines the child should be ordered into foster care and the child's
97.8parent refuses to give information to the responsible social services agency regarding the
97.9child's father or relatives of the child, the court may order the parent to disclose the names,
97.10addresses, telephone numbers, and other identifying information to the responsible social
97.11services agency for the purpose of complying with the requirements of sections 260C.151,
97.12260C.212 , and 260C.215.
97.13    (k) If a child ordered into foster care has siblings, whether full, half, or step, who
97.14are also ordered into foster care, the court shall inquire of the responsible social services
97.15agency of the efforts to place the children together as required by section 260C.212,
97.16subdivision 2
, paragraph (d), if placement together is in each child's best interests, unless
97.17a child is in placement for treatment or a child is placed with a previously noncustodial
97.18parent who is not a parent to all siblings. If the children are not placed together at the time
97.19of the hearing, the court shall inquire at each subsequent hearing of the agency's reasonable
97.20efforts to place the siblings together, as required under section 260.012. If any sibling is
97.21not placed with another sibling or siblings, the agency must develop a plan to facilitate
97.22visitation or ongoing contact among the siblings as required under section 260C.212,
97.23subdivision 1
, unless it is contrary to the safety or well-being of any of the siblings to do so.
97.24(l) When the court has ordered the child into foster care or into the home of a
97.25noncustodial parent, the court may order a chemical dependency evaluation, mental health
97.26evaluation, medical examination, and parenting assessment for the parent as necessary
97.27to support the development of a plan for reunification required under subdivision 7 and
97.28section 260C.212, subdivision 1, or the child protective services plan under section
97.29626.556, subdivision 10, and Minnesota Rules, part 9560.0228.

97.30    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.178, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
97.31    Subd. 7. Out-of-home placement plan. (a) An out-of-home placement plan
97.32required under section 260C.212 shall be filed with the court within 30 days of the filing
97.33of a juvenile protection petition alleging the child to be in need of protection or services
97.34under section 260C.141, subdivision 1, when the court orders emergency removal of the
98.1child under this section, or filed with the petition if the petition is a review of a voluntary
98.2placement under section 260C.141, subdivision 2.
98.3(b) Upon the filing of the out-of-home placement plan which has been developed
98.4jointly with the parent and in consultation with others as required under section 260C.212,
98.5subdivision 1
, the court may approve implementation of the plan by the responsible social
98.6services agency based on the allegations contained in the petition and any evaluations,
98.7examinations, or assessments conducted under subdivision 1, paragraph (l). The court
98.8shall send written notice of the approval of the out-of-home placement plan to all parties
98.9and the county attorney or may state such approval on the record at a hearing. A parent
98.10may agree to comply with the terms of the plan filed with the court.
98.11(c) The responsible social services agency shall make reasonable attempts efforts
98.12to engage a parent both parents of the child in case planning. If the parent refuses to
98.13cooperate in the development of the out-of-home placement plan or disagrees with the
98.14services recommended by The responsible social service agency, the agency shall note
98.15such refusal or disagreement for the court report the results of its efforts to engage the
98.16child's parents in the out-of-home placement plan filed with the court. The agency shall
98.17notify the court of the services it will provide or efforts it will attempt under the plan
98.18notwithstanding the parent's refusal to cooperate or disagreement with the services. The
98.19parent may ask the court to modify the plan to require different or additional services
98.20requested by the parent, but which the agency refused to provide. The court may approve
98.21the plan as presented by the agency or may modify the plan to require services requested
98.22by the parent. The court's approval shall be based on the content of the petition.
98.23(d) Unless the parent agrees to comply with the terms of the out-of-home placement
98.24plan, the court may not order a parent to comply with the provisions of the plan until the
98.25court finds the child is in need of protection or services and orders disposition under
98.26section 260C.201, subdivision 1. However, the court may find that the responsible social
98.27services agency has made reasonable efforts for reunification if the agency makes efforts
98.28to implement the terms of an out-of-home placement plan approved under this section.

98.29    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.193, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
98.30    Subd. 3. Best interest of the child in foster care or residential care. (a) The
98.31policy of the state is to ensure that the best interests of children in foster or residential
98.32care, who experience transfer of permanent legal and physical custody to a relative under
98.33section 260C.515, subdivision 4, or adoption under chapter 259 are met by requiring
98.34individualized determinations under section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b), of
99.1the needs of the child and of how the selected placement home will serve the needs of the
99.2child in foster care placements.
99.3(b) No later than three months after a child is ordered removed from the care of a
99.4parent in the hearing required under section 260C.202, the court shall review and enter
99.5findings regarding whether the responsible social services agency made:
99.6(1) diligent efforts to identify and search for relatives as required under section
99.7260C.212, subdivision 5 , 260C.221; and made
99.8(2) an individualized determination as required under section 260C.212, subdivision
99.92, to select a home that meets the needs of the child
.
99.10(c) If the court finds the agency has not made efforts as required under section
99.11260C.212, subdivision 5 260C.221, and there is a relative who qualifies to be licensed
99.12to provide family foster care under chapter 245A, the court may order the child placed
99.13with the relative consistent with the child's best interests.
99.14    (d) If the agency's efforts under section 260C.221 are found to be sufficient, the
99.15court shall order the agency to continue to appropriately engage relatives who responded
99.16to the notice under section 260C.221 in placement and case planning decisions and to
99.17appropriately engage relatives who subsequently come to the agency's attention.
99.18(c) (e) If the child's birth parent or parents explicitly request that a relative or
99.19important friend not be considered, the court shall honor that request if it is consistent with
99.20the best interests of the child. If the child's birth parent or parents express a preference
99.21for placing the child in a foster or adoptive home of the same or a similar religious
99.22background to that of the birth parent or parents, the court shall order placement of the
99.23child with an individual who meets the birth parent's religious preference.
99.24(d) (f) Placement of a child cannot be delayed or denied based on race, color, or
99.25national origin of the foster parent or the child.
99.26(e) (g) Whenever possible, siblings should be placed together unless it is determined
99.27not to be in the best interests of a sibling siblings. If siblings are were not placed together
99.28according to section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (d), the responsible social
99.29services agency shall report to the court the efforts made to place the siblings together
99.30and why the efforts were not successful. If the court is not satisfied with that the agency's
99.31agency has made reasonable efforts to place siblings together, the court may must order
99.32the agency to make further reasonable efforts. If siblings are not placed together the court
99.33shall review order the responsible social services agency's agency to implement the plan
99.34for visitation among siblings required as part of the out-of-home placement plan under
99.35section 260C.212.
100.1(f) (h) This subdivision does not affect the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States
100.2Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923, and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation
100.3Act, sections 260.751 to 260.835.

100.4    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.193, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
100.5    Subd. 6. Jurisdiction to review foster care to age 21, termination of jurisdiction,
100.6jurisdiction to age 18. (a) Jurisdiction over a child in foster care pursuant to section
100.7260C.451 may shall continue to age 21 for the purpose of conducting the reviews required
100.8under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, paragraph (d), 260C.212, subdivision 7, or
100.9260C.317 , subdivision 3, 260C.203, or 260C.515, subdivision 5 or 6. Jurisdiction over a
100.10child in foster care pursuant to section 260C.451 shall not be terminated without giving
100.11the child notice of any motion or proposed order to dismiss jurisdiction and an opportunity
100.12to be heard on the appropriateness of the dismissal. When a child in foster care pursuant to
100.13section 260C.451 asks to leave foster care or actually leaves foster care, the court may
100.14terminate its jurisdiction.
100.15(b) Except when a court order is necessary for a child to be in foster care or when
100.16continued review under (1) section 260C.212, subdivision 7, paragraph (d), or 260C.201,
100.17subdivision 11
, paragraph (d), and (2) section 260C.317, subdivision 3, is required for a
100.18child in foster care under section 260C.451, The court may terminate jurisdiction on its
100.19own motion or the motion of any interested party upon a determination that jurisdiction is
100.20no longer necessary to protect the child's best interests except when:
100.21(1) a court order is necessary for a child to be in foster care; or
100.22(2) continued review under section 260C.203, 260C.515, subdivision 5 or 6, or
100.23260C.317, subdivision 3, is required for a child in foster care under section 260C.451.
100.24(c) Unless terminated by the court, and except as otherwise provided in this
100.25subdivision, the jurisdiction of the court shall continue until the child becomes 18 years
100.26of age. The court may continue jurisdiction over an individual and all other parties to
100.27the proceeding to the individual's 19th birthday when continuing jurisdiction is in the
100.28individual's best interest in order to:
100.29(1) protect the safety or health of the individual;
100.30(2) accomplish additional planning for independent living or for the transition out of
100.31foster care; or
100.32(3) support the individual's completion of high school or a high school equivalency
100.33program.

100.34    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.201, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
101.1    Subd. 2. Written findings. (a) Any order for a disposition authorized under this
101.2section shall contain written findings of fact to support the disposition and case plan
101.3ordered and shall also set forth in writing the following information:
101.4(1) why the best interests and safety of the child are served by the disposition and
101.5case plan ordered;
101.6(2) what alternative dispositions or services under the case plan were considered by
101.7the court and why such dispositions or services were not appropriate in the instant case;
101.8(3) when legal custody of the child is transferred, the appropriateness of the
101.9particular placement made or to be made by the placing agency using the factors in section
101.10260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (b) ;
101.11(4) whether reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child consistent
101.12with section 260.012 were made including reasonable efforts:
101.13(i) to prevent or eliminate the necessity of the child's removal placement and to
101.14reunify the family after removal child with the parent or guardian from whom the child was
101.15removed at the earliest time consistent with the child's safety. The court's findings must
101.16include a brief description of what preventive and reunification efforts were made and
101.17why further efforts could not have prevented or eliminated the necessity of removal or that
101.18reasonable efforts were not required under section 260.012 or 260C.178, subdivision 1;
101.19(ii) to identify and locate any noncustodial or nonresident parent of the child and to
101.20assess such parent's ability to provide day-to-day care of the child, and, where appropriate,
101.21provide services necessary to enable the noncustodial or nonresident parent to safely
101.22provide day-to-day care of the child as required under section 260C.219, unless such
101.23services are not required under section 260.012 or 260C.178, subdivision 1;
101.24(iii) to make the diligent search for relatives and provide the notices required under
101.25section 260C.221; a finding made pursuant to a hearing under section 260C.202 that
101.26the agency has made diligent efforts to conduct a relative search and has appropriately
101.27engaged relatives who responded to the notice under section 260C.221 and other relatives,
101.28who came to the attention of the agency after notice under section 260C.221 was sent, in
101.29placement and case planning decisions fulfills the requirement of this item;
101.30(iv) to identify and make a foster care placement in the home of an unlicensed
101.31relative, according to the requirements of section 245A.035, a licensed relative, or other
101.32licensed foster care provider who will commit to being the permanent legal parent or
101.33custodian for the child in the event reunification cannot occur, but who will actively
101.34support the reunification plan for the child; and
102.1(v) to place siblings together in the same home or to ensure visitation is occurring
102.2when siblings are separated in foster care placement and visitation is in the siblings' best
102.3interests under section 260C.212, subdivision 2, paragraph (d); and
102.4(5) if the child has been adjudicated as a child in need of protection or services
102.5because the child is in need of special services or care to treat or ameliorate a mental
102.6disability or emotional disturbance as defined in section 245.4871, subdivision 15, the
102.7written findings shall also set forth:
102.8(i) whether the child has mental health needs that must be addressed by the case plan;
102.9(ii) what consideration was given to the diagnostic and functional assessments
102.10performed by the child's mental health professional and to health and mental health care
102.11professionals' treatment recommendations;
102.12(iii) what consideration was given to the requests or preferences of the child's parent
102.13or guardian with regard to the child's interventions, services, or treatment; and
102.14(iv) what consideration was given to the cultural appropriateness of the child's
102.15treatment or services.
102.16(b) If the court finds that the social services agency's preventive or reunification
102.17efforts have not been reasonable but that further preventive or reunification efforts could
102.18not permit the child to safely remain at home, the court may nevertheless authorize or
102.19continue the removal of the child.
102.20(c) If the child has been identified by the responsible social services agency as the
102.21subject of concurrent permanency planning, the court shall review the reasonable efforts
102.22of the agency to recruit, identify, and make a placement in a home where the foster parent
102.23or relative that has committed to being the legally permanent home for the child in the
102.24event reunification efforts are not successful develop a permanency plan for the child that
102.25includes a primary plan which is for reunification with the child's parent or guardian and a
102.26secondary plan which is for an alternative, legally permanent home for the child in the
102.27event reunification cannot be achieved in a timely manner.

102.28    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.201, subdivision 10, is amended to
102.29read:
102.30    Subd. 10. Court review of foster care. (a) If the court orders a child placed
102.31in foster care, the court shall review the out-of-home placement plan and the child's
102.32placement at least every 90 days as required in juvenile court rules to determine whether
102.33continued out-of-home placement is necessary and appropriate or whether the child should
102.34be returned home. This review is not required if the court has returned the child home,
102.35ordered the child permanently placed away from the parent under subdivision 11, or
103.1terminated rights under section 260C.301. Court review for a child permanently placed
103.2away from a parent, including where the child is under guardianship and legal custody of
103.3the commissioner, shall be governed by subdivision 11 or section 260C.317, subdivision
103.43
, whichever is applicable 260C.607.
103.5    (b) No later than six three months after the child's placement in foster care, the court
103.6shall review agency efforts pursuant to section 260C.212, subdivision 2 260C.221, and
103.7order that the efforts continue if the agency has failed to perform the duties under that
103.8section. The court must order the agency to continue to appropriately engage relatives
103.9who responded to the notice under section 260C.221 in placement and case planning
103.10decisions and to engage other relatives who came to the agency's attention after notice
103.11under section 260C.221 was sent.
103.12    (c) The court shall review the out-of-home placement plan and may modify the plan
103.13as provided under subdivisions 6 and 7.
103.14    (d) When the court orders transfer of custody to a responsible social services
103.15agency resulting in foster care or protective supervision with a noncustodial parent under
103.16subdivision 1, the court shall notify the parents of the provisions of subdivisions 11 and
103.17subdivision 11a and sections 260C.503 to 260C.521, as required under juvenile court rules.
103.18    (e) When a child remains in or returns to foster care pursuant to section 260C.451 and
103.19the court has jurisdiction pursuant to section 260C.193, subdivision 6, paragraph (c), the
103.20court shall at least annually conduct the review required under subdivision 11, paragraph
103.21(d), or sections 260C.212, subdivision 7, and 260C.317, subdivision 3 section 260C.203.

103.22    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
103.23    Subd. 5. Relative search. (a) The responsible social services agency shall exercise
103.24due diligence to identify and notify adult relatives prior to placement or within 30 days
103.25after the child's removal from the parent. The county agency shall consider placement with
103.26a relative under subdivision 2 without delay and whenever the child must move from or be
103.27returned to foster care. The relative search required by this section shall be reasonable and
103.28comprehensive in scope and may last up to six months or until a fit and willing relative
103.29is identified. After a finding that the agency has made reasonable efforts to conduct the
103.30relative search under this paragraph, the agency has the continuing responsibility to
103.31appropriately involve relatives, who have responded to the notice required under this
103.32paragraph, in planning for the child and to continue to consider relatives according to
103.33the requirements of section 260C.212, subdivision 2. At any time during the course of
103.34juvenile protection proceedings, the court may order the agency to reopen its search for
103.35relatives when it is in the child's best interest to do so. The relative search required by this
104.1section shall include both maternal relatives of the child and paternal relatives of the child,
104.2if paternity is adjudicated. The search shall also include getting information from the child
104.3in an age-appropriate manner about who the child considers to be family members and
104.4important friends with whom the child has resided or had significant contact. The relative
104.5search required under this section must fulfill the agency's duties under the Indian Child
104.6Welfare Act regarding active efforts to prevent the breakup of the Indian family under
104.7United States Code, title 25, section 1912(d), and to meet placement preferences under
104.8United States Code, title 25, section 1915. The relatives must be notified:
104.9(1) of the need for a foster home for the child, the option to become a placement
104.10resource for the child, and the possibility of the need for a permanent placement for the
104.11child;
104.12(2) of their responsibility to keep the responsible social services agency informed of
104.13their current address in order to receive notice in the event that a permanent placement is
104.14sought for the child. A relative who fails to provide a current address to the responsible
104.15social services agency forfeits the right to notice of the possibility of permanent placement.
104.16A decision by a relative not to be identified as a potential permanent placement resource
104.17or participate in planning for the child at the beginning of the case shall not affect whether
104.18the relative is considered for placement of the child with that relative later;
104.19(3) that the relative may participate in the care and planning for the child, including
104.20that the opportunity for such participation may be lost by failing to respond to the notice.
104.21"Participate in the care and planning" includes, but is not limited to, participation in case
104.22planning for the parent and child, identifying the strengths and needs of the parent and
104.23child, supervising visits, providing respite and vacation visits for the child, providing
104.24transportation to appointments, suggesting other relatives who might be able to help
104.25support the case plan, and to the extent possible, helping to maintain the child's familiar
104.26and regular activities and contact with friends and relatives; and
104.27(4) of the family foster care licensing requirements, including how to complete an
104.28application and how to request a variance from licensing standards that do not present a
104.29safety or health risk to the child in the home under section 245A.04 and supports that are
104.30available for relatives and children who reside in a family foster home.; and
104.31    (5) of the relatives' right to ask to be notified of any court proceedings regarding
104.32the child, to attend the hearings, and of a relative's right or opportunity to be heard by the
104.33court as required under section 260C.152, subdivision 5.
104.34(b) A responsible social services agency may disclose private or confidential data,
104.35as defined in section sections 13.02 and 626.556, to relatives of the child for the purpose
104.36of locating and assessing a suitable placement and may use any reasonable means of
105.1identifying and locating relatives including the Internet or other electronic means of
105.2conducting a search. The agency shall disclose only data that is necessary to facilitate
105.3possible placement with relatives and to ensure that the relative is informed of the needs
105.4of the child so the relative can participate in planning for the child and be supportive of
105.5services to the child and family. If the child's parent refuses to give the responsible social
105.6services agency information sufficient to identify the maternal and paternal relatives of the
105.7child, the agency shall ask the juvenile court to order the parent to provide the necessary
105.8information. If a parent makes an explicit request that relatives or a specific relative not be
105.9contacted or considered for placement, the agency shall bring the parent's request to the
105.10attention of the court to determine whether the parent's request is consistent with the best
105.11interests of the child and the agency shall not contact relatives or a specific relative unless
105.12authorized to do so by the juvenile court.
105.13(c) At a regularly scheduled hearing not later than three months after the child's
105.14placement in foster care and as required in section 260C.202, the agency shall report to
105.15the court:
105.16(1) its efforts to identify maternal and paternal relatives of the child, to engage the
105.17relatives in providing support for the child and family, and document that the relatives
105.18have been provided the notice required under paragraph (a); and
105.19(2) its decision regarding placing the child with a relative as required under section
105.20260C.212, subdivision 2, and to ask relatives to visit or maintain contact with the child in
105.21order to support family connections for the child, when placement with a relative is not
105.22possible or appropriate.
105.23(d) Notwithstanding chapter 13, the agency shall disclose data about particular
105.24relatives identified, searched for, and contacted for the purposes of the court's review of
105.25the agency's due diligence.
105.26(e) When the court is satisfied that the agency has exercised due diligence to
105.27identify relatives and provide the notice required in paragraph (a), the court may find that
105.28reasonable efforts have been made to conduct a relative search to identify and provide
105.29notice to adult relatives as required under section 260.012, paragraph (e), clause (3). If the
105.30court is not satisfied that the agency has exercised due diligence to identify relatives and
105.31provide the notice required in paragraph (a), the court may order the agency to continue its
105.32search and notice efforts and to report back to the court.
105.33(f) When the placing agency determines that a permanent placement hearing is
105.34proceedings are necessary because there is a likelihood that the child will not return to a
105.35parent's care, the agency may must send the notice provided in paragraph (d) (g), may ask
105.36the court to modify the requirements duty of the agency under this paragraph to send the
106.1notice required in paragraph (g), or may ask the court to completely relieve the agency
106.2of the requirements of this paragraph (g). The relative notification requirements of this
106.3paragraph (g) do not apply when the child is placed with an appropriate relative or a
106.4foster home that has committed to being the adopting the child or taking permanent legal
106.5placement for and physical custody of the child and the agency approves of that foster
106.6home for permanent placement of the child. The actions ordered by the court under this
106.7section must be consistent with the best interests, safety, permanency, and welfare of
106.8the child.
106.9(d) (g) Unless required under the Indian Child Welfare Act or relieved of this duty
106.10by the court under paragraph (c) (e), when the agency determines that it is necessary to
106.11prepare for the permanent placement determination hearing proceedings, or in anticipation
106.12of filing a termination of parental rights petition, the agency shall send notice to the
106.13relatives, any adult with whom the child is currently residing, any adult with whom the
106.14child has resided for one year or longer in the past, and any adults who have maintained a
106.15relationship or exercised visitation with the child as identified in the agency case plan. The
106.16notice must state that a permanent home is sought for the child and that the individuals
106.17receiving the notice may indicate to the agency their interest in providing a permanent
106.18home. The notice must state that within 30 days of receipt of the notice an individual
106.19receiving the notice must indicate to the agency the individual's interest in providing
106.20a permanent home for the child or that the individual may lose the opportunity to be
106.21considered for a permanent placement.
106.22(e) The Department of Human Services shall develop a best practices guide and
106.23specialized staff training to assist the responsible social services agency in performing and
106.24complying with the relative search requirements under this subdivision.

106.25    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.212, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
106.26    Subd. 7. Administrative or court review of placements. (a) Unless the court is
106.27conducting the reviews required under section 260C.202, there shall be an administrative
106.28review of the out-of-home placement plan of each child placed in foster care no later than
106.29180 days after the initial placement of the child in foster care and at least every six months
106.30thereafter if the child is not returned to the home of the parent or parents within that time.
106.31The out-of-home placement plan must be monitored and updated at each administrative
106.32review. The administrative review shall be conducted by the responsible social services
106.33agency using a panel of appropriate persons at least one of whom is not responsible for the
106.34case management of, or the delivery of services to, either the child or the parents who are
107.1the subject of the review. The administrative review shall be open to participation by the
107.2parent or guardian of the child and the child, as appropriate.
107.3    (b) As an alternative to the administrative review required in paragraph (a), the court
107.4may, as part of any hearing required under the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection
107.5Procedure, conduct a hearing to monitor and update the out-of-home placement plan
107.6pursuant to the procedure and standard in section 260C.201, subdivision 6, paragraph
107.7(d). The party requesting review of the out-of-home placement plan shall give parties to
107.8the proceeding notice of the request to review and update the out-of-home placement
107.9plan. A court review conducted pursuant to section 260C.141, subdivision 2; 260C.193;
107.10260C.201 , subdivision 1 or 11; 260C.141, subdivision 2; 260C.317 260C.202; 260C.204;
107.11260C.317; or 260D.06 shall satisfy the requirement for the review so long as the other
107.12requirements of this section are met.
107.13    (c) As appropriate to the stage of the proceedings and relevant court orders, the
107.14responsible social services agency or the court shall review:
107.15    (1) the safety, permanency needs, and well-being of the child;
107.16    (2) the continuing necessity for and appropriateness of the placement;
107.17    (3) the extent of compliance with the out-of-home placement plan;
107.18    (4) the extent of progress which that has been made toward alleviating or mitigating
107.19the causes necessitating placement in foster care;
107.20    (5) the projected date by which the child may be returned to and safely maintained in
107.21the home or placed permanently away from the care of the parent or parents or guardian;
107.22and
107.23    (6) the appropriateness of the services provided to the child.
107.24    (d) When a child is age 16 or older, in addition to any administrative review
107.25conducted by the agency, at the in-court review required under section 260C.201,
107.26subdivision 11, or 260C.317, subdivision 3, clause (3), or 260C.515, subdivision 5 or
107.276, the court shall review the independent living plan required under section 260C.201,
107.28subdivision 1, paragraph (c), clause (11), and the provision of services to the child related
107.29to the well-being of the child as the child prepares to leave foster care. The review shall
107.30include the actual plans related to each item in the plan necessary to the child's future
107.31safety and well-being when the child is no longer in foster care.
107.32    (1) (e) At the court review required under paragraph (d) for a child age 16 or older
107.33the following procedures apply:
107.34(1) six months before the child is expected to be discharged from foster care, the
107.35responsible social services agency shall establish that it has given give the written
107.36notice required under section 260C.456 or Minnesota Rules, part 9560.0660 260C.451,
108.1subdivision 1, regarding the right to continued access to services for certain children in
108.2foster care past age 18 and of the right to appeal a denial of social services under section
108.3256.045 . If The agency is unable to establish that shall file a copy of the notice, including
108.4the right to appeal a denial of social services, has been given, with the court. If the agency
108.5does not file the notice by the time the child is age 17-1/2, the court shall require the
108.6agency to give it.;
108.7    (2) consistent with the requirements of the independent living plan, the court shall
108.8review progress toward or accomplishment of the following goals:
108.9    (i) the child has obtained a high school diploma or its equivalent;
108.10    (ii) the child has completed a driver's education course or has demonstrated the
108.11ability to use public transportation in the child's community;
108.12    (iii) the child is employed or enrolled in postsecondary education;
108.13    (iv) the child has applied for and obtained postsecondary education financial aid for
108.14which the child is eligible;
108.15    (v) the child has health care coverage and health care providers to meet the child's
108.16physical and mental health needs;
108.17    (vi) the child has applied for and obtained disability income assistance for which
108.18the child is eligible;
108.19    (vii) the child has obtained affordable housing with necessary supports, which does
108.20not include a homeless shelter;
108.21    (viii) the child has saved sufficient funds to pay for the first month's rent and a
108.22damage deposit;
108.23    (ix) the child has an alternative affordable housing plan, which does not include a
108.24homeless shelter, if the original housing plan is unworkable;
108.25    (x) the child, if male, has registered for the Selective Service; and
108.26    (xi) the child has a permanent connection to a caring adult.; and
108.27    (3) the court shall ensure that the responsible agency in conjunction with the
108.28placement provider assists the child in obtaining the following documents prior to the
108.29child's leaving foster care: a Social Security card; the child's birth certificate; a state
108.30identification card or driver's license, green card, or school visa; the child's school,
108.31medical, and dental records; a contact list of the child's medical, dental, and mental health
108.32providers; and contact information for the child's siblings, if the siblings are in foster care.
108.33    (e) When a child is age 17 or older, during the 90-day period immediately prior to
108.34the date the child is expected to be discharged from foster care, the responsible social
108.35services agency is required to provide the child with assistance and support in developing
108.36a transition plan that is personalized at the direction of the child. (f) For a child who
109.1will be discharged from foster care at age 18 or older, the responsible social services
109.2agency is required to develop a personalized transition plan as directed by the youth. The
109.3transition plan must be developed during the 90-day period immediately prior to the
109.4expected date of discharge. The transition plan must be as detailed as the child may elect
109.5and include specific options on housing, health insurance, education, local opportunities
109.6for mentors and continuing support services, and work force supports and employment
109.7services. The plan must include information on the importance of designating another
109.8individual to make health care treatment decisions on behalf of the child if the child
109.9becomes unable to participate in these decisions and the child does not have, or does not
109.10want, a relative who would otherwise be authorized to make these decisions. The plan
109.11must provide the child with the option to execute a health care directive as provided
109.12under chapter 145C. The county shall also provide the individual with appropriate contact
109.13information if the individual needs more information or needs help dealing with a crisis
109.14situation through age 21.

109.15    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.215, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
109.16    Subd. 4. Consultation with representatives Duties of commissioner.
109.17The commissioner of human services, after seeking and considering advice from
109.18representatives reflecting diverse populations from the councils established under sections
109.193.922, 3.9223, 3.9225, and 3.9226, and other state, local, and community organizations
109.20shall:
109.21(1) review and, where necessary, revise the Department of Human Services Social
109.22Service Manual and Practice Guide provide practice guidance to responsible social
109.23services agencies and child-placing agencies that reflect federal and state laws and policy
109.24direction on placement of children;
109.25(2) develop criteria for determining whether a prospective adoptive or foster family
109.26has the ability to understand and validate the child's cultural background;
109.27(3) develop provide a standardized training curriculum for adoption and foster care
109.28workers, family-based providers, and administrators who work with children. Training
109.29must address the following objectives:
109.30(a) (i) developing and maintaining sensitivity to all cultures;
109.31(b) (ii) assessing values and their cultural implications; and
109.32(c) (iii) making individualized placement decisions that advance the best interests of
109.33a particular child under section 260C.212, subdivision 2; and
109.34(iv) issues related to cross-cultural placement;
110.1(4) develop provide a training curriculum for family and extended family members
110.2all prospective adoptive and foster families that prepares them to care for the needs of
110.3adoptive and foster children. The curriculum must address issues relating to cross-cultural
110.4placements as well as issues that arise after a foster or adoptive placement is made taking
110.5into consideration the needs of children outlined in section 260C.212, subdivision 2,
110.6paragraph (b); and
110.7(5) develop and provide to agencies an assessment tool to be used in combination
110.8with group interviews and other preplacement activities a home study format to evaluate
110.9assess the capacities and needs of prospective adoptive and foster families. The tool
110.10format must assess address problem-solving skills; identify parenting skills; and evaluate
110.11the degree to which the prospective family has the ability to understand and validate the
110.12child's cultural background, and other issues needed to provide sufficient information for
110.13agencies to make an individualized placement decision consistent with section 260C.212,
110.14subdivision 2. If a prospective adoptive parent has also been a foster parent, any update
110.15necessary to a home study for the purpose of adoption may be completed by the licensing
110.16authority responsible for the foster parent's license. If a prospective adoptive parent with an
110.17approved adoptive home study also applies for a foster care license, the license application
110.18may be made with the same agency which provided the adoptive home study; and
110.19(6) shall consult with representatives reflecting diverse populations from the councils
110.20established under sections 3.922, 3.9223, 3.9225, and 3.9226, and other state, local, and
110.21community organizations.

110.22    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.215, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
110.23    Subd. 6. Duties of child-placing agencies. (a) Each authorized child-placing
110.24agency must:
110.25(1) develop and follow procedures for implementing the requirements of section
110.26260C.193, subdivision 3 260C.212, subdivision 2, and the Indian Child Welfare Act,
110.27United States Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923;
110.28(2) have a written plan for recruiting adoptive and foster families that reflect the
110.29ethnic and racial diversity of children who are in need of foster and adoptive homes.
110.30The plan must include:
110.31(i) strategies for using existing resources in diverse communities,;
110.32(ii) use of diverse outreach staff wherever possible,;
110.33(iii) use of diverse foster homes for placements after birth and before adoption,; and
110.34(iv) other techniques as appropriate;
110.35(3) have a written plan for training adoptive and foster families;
111.1(4) have a written plan for employing staff in adoption and foster care who have
111.2the capacity to assess the foster and adoptive parents' ability to understand and validate a
111.3child's cultural and meet the child's individual needs, and to advance the best interests of
111.4the child, as required in section 260C.212, subdivision 2. The plan must include staffing
111.5goals and objectives;
111.6(5) ensure that adoption and foster care workers attend training offered or approved
111.7by the Department of Human Services regarding cultural diversity and the needs of special
111.8needs children; and
111.9(6) develop and implement procedures for implementing the requirements of the
111.10Indian Child Welfare Act and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act.
111.11(b) In determining the suitability of a proposed placement of an Indian child, the
111.12standards to be applied must be the prevailing social and cultural standards of the Indian
111.13child's community, and the agency shall defer to tribal judgment as to suitability of a
111.14particular home when the tribe has intervened pursuant to the Indian Child Welfare Act.

111.15    Sec. 22. [260C.229] VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE FOR CHILDREN OVER
111.16AGE 18; REQUIRED COURT REVIEW.
111.17(a) When a child asks to continue or to reenter foster care after age 18 under section
111.18260C.451, the child and the responsible social services agency may enter into a voluntary
111.19agreement for the child to be in foster care under the terms of section 260C.451. The
111.20voluntary agreement must be in writing and on a form prescribed by the commissioner.
111.21(b) When the child is in foster care pursuant to a voluntary foster care agreement
111.22between the agency and child and the child is not already under court jurisdiction pursuant
111.23to section 260C.193, subdivision 6, the agency responsible for the child's placement
111.24in foster care shall:
111.25(1) file a motion to reopen the juvenile protection matter where the court previously
111.26had jurisdiction over the child within 30 days of the child and the agency executing the
111.27voluntary placement agreement under paragraph (a) and ask the court to review the child's
111.28placement in foster care and find that the placement is in the best interests of the child; and
111.29(2) file the out-of-home placement plan required under subdivision 1 with the
111.30motion to reopen jurisdiction.
111.31(c) The court shall conduct a hearing on the matter within 30 days of the agency's
111.32motion to reopen the matter and, if the court finds that placement is in the best interest of
111.33the child, shall conduct the review for the purpose and with the content required under
111.34section 260C.203, at least every 12 months as long as the child continues in foster care.

112.1    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.301, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
112.2    Subd. 8. Findings regarding reasonable efforts. In any proceeding under this
112.3section, the court shall make specific findings:
112.4(1) that reasonable efforts to prevent the placement and finalize the permanency
112.5plan to reunify the child and the parent were made including individualized and explicit
112.6findings regarding the nature and extent of efforts made by the social services agency to
112.7rehabilitate the parent and reunite the family; or
112.8(2) that reasonable efforts at for reunification are not required as provided under
112.9section 260.012.

112.10    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.328, is amended to read:
112.11260C.328 CHANGE OF GUARDIAN; TERMINATION OF GUARDIANSHIP.
112.12(a) Upon its own motion or upon petition of an interested party, the juvenile court
112.13having jurisdiction of the child may, after notice to the parties and a hearing, remove
112.14the guardian appointed by the juvenile court and appoint a new guardian in accordance
112.15with the provisions of section 260C.325, subdivision 1, clause (a), (b), or (c). Upon a
112.16showing that the child is emancipated, the court may discharge the guardianship. Any
112.17child 14 years of age or older who is not adopted but who is placed in a satisfactory foster
112.18home, may, with the consent of the foster parents, join with the guardian appointed by the
112.19juvenile court in a petition to the court having jurisdiction of the child to discharge the
112.20existing guardian and appoint the foster parents as guardians of the child.
112.21(b) The authority of a guardian appointed by the juvenile court terminates when the
112.22individual under guardianship is no longer a minor or when guardianship is otherwise
112.23discharged becomes age 18. However, an individual who has been under the guardianship
112.24of the commissioner and who has not been adopted may continue in foster care or reenter
112.25foster care pursuant to section 260C.451 and the responsible social services agency has
112.26continuing legal responsibility for the placement of the individual.

112.27    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.451, is amended to read:
112.28260C.451 FOSTER CARE BENEFITS TO AGE 21 PAST AGE 18.
112.29    Subdivision 1. Notification of benefits. Within the Six months prior to the child's
112.3018th birthday, the local responsible social services agency shall advise provide written
112.31notice on a form prescribed by the commissioner of human services to any child in foster
112.32care under this chapter who cannot reasonably be expected to return home or have another
112.33legally permanent family by the age of 18, the child's parents or legal guardian, if any, and
113.1the child's guardian ad litem, and the child's foster parents of the availability of benefits of
113.2the foster care program up to age 21, when the child is eligible under subdivisions 3 and 3a.
113.3    Subd. 2. Independent living plan. Upon the request of any child receiving in foster
113.4care benefits immediately prior to the child's 18th birthday and who is in foster care at
113.5the time of the request, the local responsible social services agency shall, in conjunction
113.6with the child and other appropriate parties, update the independent living plan required
113.7under section 260C.212, subdivision 1, paragraph (c), clause (11), related to the child's
113.8employment, vocational, educational, social, or maturational needs. The agency shall
113.9provide continued services and foster care for the child including those services that are
113.10necessary to implement the independent living plan.
113.11    Subd. 3. Eligibility to continue in foster care. A child already in foster care
113.12immediately prior to the child's 18th birthday may continue in foster care past age 18
113.13unless:
113.14(1) the child can safely return home;
113.15(2) the child is in placement pursuant to the agency's duties under section 256B.092
113.16and Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0016, to meet the child's needs due to
113.17developmental disability or related condition, and the child will be served as an adult
113.18under section 256B.092 and Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0016; or
113.19(3) the child can be adopted or have permanent legal and physical custody
113.20transferred to a relative prior to the child's 18th birthday.
113.21    Subd. 3a. Eligibility criteria. The child must meet at least one of the following
113.22conditions to be considered eligible to continue in or return to foster care and remain there
113.23to age 21. The child must be:
113.24    (1) completing secondary education or a program leading to an equivalent credential;
113.25    (2) enrolled in an institution which that provides postsecondary or vocational
113.26education;
113.27    (3) participating in a program or activity designed to promote or remove barriers to
113.28employment;
113.29    (4) employed for at least 80 hours per month; or
113.30    (5) incapable of doing any of the activities described in clauses (1) to (4) due to a
113.31medical condition.
113.32    Subd. 4. Foster care benefits. For children between the ages of 18 and 21, "foster
113.33care benefits" means payment for those foster care settings defined in section 260C.007,
113.34subdivision 18. Additionally, foster care benefits means payment for a supervised
113.35setting, approved by the responsible social services agency, in which a child may live
113.36independently.
114.1    Subd. 5. Permanent decision Foster care setting. The particular foster care
114.2setting, including supervised settings, shall be selected by the agency and the child
114.3based on the best interest of the child consistent with section 260C.212, subdivision 2.
114.4Supervision in approved settings must be determined by an individual determination of
114.5the child's needs by the responsible social services agency and consistent with section
114.6260C.212, subdivision 4a .
114.7    Subd. 6. Individual plan to age 21 Reentering foster care and accessing services
114.8after age 18. (a) Upon request of an individual between the ages of 18 and 21 who,
114.9within six months of the individual's 18th birthday, had been under the guardianship of the
114.10commissioner and who has left foster care without being adopted, the responsible social
114.11services agency which had been the commissioner's agent for purposes of the guardianship
114.12shall develop with the individual a plan related to the individual's vocational, educational,
114.13social, or maturational needs to increase the individual's ability to live safely and
114.14independently using the plan requirements of section 260C.212, subdivision 1, paragraph
114.15(b), clause (11), and to assist the individual to meet one or more of the eligibility criteria in
114.16subdivision 4 if the individual wants to reenter foster care. The agency shall provide foster
114.17care with maintenance and counseling benefits as required to implement the plan. The
114.18agency shall enter into a voluntary placement agreement under section 260C.229 with the
114.19individual if the plan includes foster care.
114.20(b) Individuals who had not been under the guardianship of the commissioner of
114.21human services prior to age 18 and are between the ages of 18 and 21 may ask to reenter
114.22foster care after age 18 and, to the extent funds are available, the responsible social
114.23services agency that had responsibility for planning for the individual before discharge
114.24from foster care may provide foster care or other services to the individual for the purpose
114.25of increasing the individual's ability to live safely and independently and to meet the
114.26eligibility criteria in subdivision 3a, if the individual:
114.27(1) was in foster care for the six consecutive months prior to the person's 18th
114.28birthday and was not discharged home, adopted, or received into a relative's home under a
114.29transfer of permanent legal and physical custody under section 260C.515, subdivision 4; or
114.30(2) was discharged from foster care while on runaway status after age 15.
114.31(c) In conjunction with a qualifying and eligible individual under paragraph (b) and
114.32other appropriate persons, the responsible social services agency shall develop a specific
114.33plan related to that individual's vocational, educational, social, or maturational needs
114.34and, to the extent funds are available, provide foster care as required to implement the
114.35plan. The agency shall enter into a voluntary placement agreement with the individual
114.36if the plan includes foster care.
115.1(d) Youth who left foster care while under guardianship of the commissioner of
115.2human services retain eligibility for foster care for placement at any time between the
115.3ages of 18 and 21.
115.4    Subd. 7. Jurisdiction. Notwithstanding that the court retains jurisdiction pursuant
115.5to this section, Individuals in foster care pursuant to this section are adults for all purposes
115.6except the continued provision of foster care. Any order establishing guardianship under
115.7section 260C.325, any legal custody order under section 260C.201, subdivision 1, and
115.8any order for legal custody associated with an order for long-term foster care permanent
115.9custody under section 260C.201, subdivision 11 260C.515, subdivision 5, terminates on
115.10the child's 18th birthday. The responsible social services agency has legal responsibility
115.11for the individual's placement and care when the matter continues under court jurisdiction
115.12pursuant to section 260C.193 or when the individual and the responsible agency execute a
115.13voluntary placement agreement pursuant to section 260C.229.
115.14    Subd. 8. Notice of termination of foster care. When a child in foster care between
115.15the ages of 18 and 21 ceases to meet one of the eligibility criteria of subdivision 3a, the
115.16responsible social services agency shall give the child written notice that foster care will
115.17terminate 30 days from the date the notice is sent. The child or the child's guardian ad
115.18litem may file a motion asking the court to review the agency's determination within 15
115.19days of receiving the notice. The child shall not be discharged from foster care until the
115.20motion is heard. The agency shall work with the child to transition out of foster care as
115.21required under section 260C.203, paragraph (e). The written notice of termination of
115.22benefits shall be on a form prescribed by the commissioner and shall also give notice of
115.23the right to have the agency's determination reviewed by the court in the proceeding where
115.24the court conducts the reviews required under section 260C.203, 260C.317, or 260C.515,
115.25subdivision 5 or 6. A copy of the termination notice shall be sent to the child and the
115.26child's attorney, if any, the foster care provider, the child's guardian ad litem, and the
115.27court. The agency is not responsible for paying foster care benefits for any period of time
115.28after the child actually leaves foster care.

115.29    Sec. 26. [260C.503] PERMANENCY PROCEEDINGS.
115.30    Subdivision 1. Required permanency proceedings. Except for children in foster
115.31care pursuant to chapter 260D, where the child is in foster care or in the care of a
115.32noncustodial or nonresident parent, the court shall commence proceedings to determine
115.33the permanent status of a child by holding the admit-deny hearing required under section
115.34260C.507 not later than 12 months after the child is placed in foster care or in the care of a
116.1noncustodial or nonresident parent. Permanency proceedings for children in foster care
116.2pursuant to chapter 260D shall be according to section 260D.07.
116.3    Subd. 2. Termination of parental rights. (a) The responsible social services
116.4agency must ask the county attorney to immediately file a termination of parental rights
116.5petition when:
116.6(1) the child has been subjected to egregious harm as defined in section 260C.007,
116.7subdivision 14;
116.8(2) the child is determined to be the sibling of a child who was subjected to
116.9egregious harm;
116.10(3) the child is an abandoned infant as defined in section 260C.301, subdivision 3,
116.11paragraph (b), clause (2);
116.12(4) the child's parent has lost parental rights to another child through an order
116.13involuntarily terminating the parent's rights;
116.14(5) the parent has committed sexual abuse as defined in section 626.556, subdivision
116.152, against the child or another child of the parent;
116.16    (6) the parent has committed an offense that requires registration as a predatory
116.17offender under section 243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b); or
116.18(7) another child of the parent is the subject of an order involuntarily transferring
116.19permanent legal and physical custody of the child to a relative under this chapter or a
116.20similar law of another jurisdiction;
116.21The county attorney shall file a termination of parental rights petition unless the conditions
116.22of paragraph (d) are met.
116.23(b) When the termination of parental rights petition is filed under this subdivision,
116.24the responsible social services agency shall identify, recruit, and approve an adoptive
116.25family for the child. If a termination of parental rights petition has been filed by another
116.26party, the responsible social services agency shall be joined as a party to the petition.
116.27(c) If criminal charges have been filed against a parent arising out of the conduct
116.28alleged to constitute egregious harm, the county attorney shall determine which matter
116.29should proceed to trial first, consistent with the best interests of the child and subject
116.30to the defendant's right to a speedy trial.
116.31(d) The requirement of paragraph (a) does not apply if the responsible social services
116.32agency and the county attorney determine and file with the court:
116.33(1) a petition for transfer of permanent legal and physical custody to a relative under
116.34sections 260C.505 and 260C.515, subdivision 3, including a determination that adoption
116.35is not in the child's best interests and that transfer of permanent legal and physical custody
116.36is in the child's best interests; or
117.1(2) a petition under section 260C.141 alleging the child, and where appropriate,
117.2the child's siblings, to be in need of protection or services accompanied by a case plan
117.3prepared by the responsible social services agency documenting a compelling reason why
117.4filing a termination of parental rights petition would not be in the best interests of the child.
117.5    Subd. 3. Calculating time to required permanency proceedings. (a) For
117.6purposes of this section, the date of the child's placement in foster care is the earlier of
117.7the first court-ordered placement or 60 days after the date on which the child has been
117.8voluntarily placed in foster care by the child's parent or guardian. For purposes of this
117.9section, time spent by a child in the home of the noncustodial parent pursuant to court
117.10order under section 260C.178 or under the protective supervision of the responsible
117.11social services agency in the home of the noncustodial parent pursuant to an order under
117.12section 260C.201, subdivision 1, counts towards the requirement of a permanency hearing
117.13under this section. Time spent on a trial home visit counts towards the requirement of a
117.14permanency hearing under this section and the permanency progress review required
117.15under section 260C.204.
117.16(b) For the purposes of this section, 12 months is calculated as follows:
117.17(1) during the pendency of a petition alleging that a child is in need of protection
117.18or services, all time periods when a child is placed in foster care or in the home of a
117.19noncustodial parent are cumulated;
117.20(2) if a child has been placed in foster care within the previous five years under one
117.21or more previous petitions, the lengths of all prior time periods when the child was placed
117.22in foster care within the previous five years are cumulated. If a child under this clause
117.23has been in foster care for 12 months or more, the court, if it is in the best interests of the
117.24child and for compelling reasons, may extend the total time the child may continue out
117.25of the home under the current petition up to an additional six months before making a
117.26permanency determination.
117.27(c) If the child is on a trial home visit 12 months after the child was placed in foster
117.28care or in the care of a noncustodial parent, the responsible social services agency may file
117.29a report with the court regarding the child's and parent's progress on the trial home visit and
117.30the agency's reasonable efforts to finalize the child's safe and permanent return to the care
117.31of the parent in lieu of filing the petition required under section 260C.505. The court shall
117.32make findings regarding the reasonable efforts of the agency to finalize the child's return
117.33home as the permanency disposition order in the best interests of the child. The court may
117.34continue the trial home visit to a total time not to exceed six months as provided in section
117.35260C.201, subdivision 1, paragraph (a), clause (3). If the court finds the agency has not
117.36made reasonable efforts to finalize the child's return home as the permanency disposition
118.1order in the child's best interests, the court may order other or additional efforts to support
118.2the child remaining in the care of the parent. If a trial home visit ordered or continued at
118.3permanency proceedings under sections 260C.503 to 260C.521 terminates, the court shall
118.4commence or recommence permanency proceedings under this chapter no later than 30
118.5days after the child is returned to foster care or to the care of a noncustodial parent.

118.6    Sec. 27. [260C.505] PETITION.
118.7(a) A permanency or termination of parental rights petition must be filed at or
118.8prior to the time the child has been in foster care or in the care of a noncustodial or
118.9nonresident parent for 11 months or in the expedited manner required in section 260C.503,
118.10subdivision 2, paragraph (a). The court administrator shall serve the petition as required
118.11in the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure and section 260C.152 for the
118.12admit-deny hearing on the petition required in section 260C.507.
118.13(b) A petition under this section is not required if the responsible social services
118.14agency intends to recommend that the child return to the care of the parent from whom
118.15the child was removed at or prior to the time the court is required to hold the admit-deny
118.16hearing required under section 260C.507.

118.17    Sec. 28. [260C.507] ADMIT-DENY HEARING.
118.18(a) An admit-deny hearing on the permanency or termination of parental rights
118.19petition shall be held not later than 12 months from the child's placement in foster care or
118.20an order for the child to be in the care of a noncustodial or nonresident parent.
118.21(b) An admit-deny hearing on the termination of parental rights or transfer of
118.22permanent legal and physical custody petition required to be immediately filed under
118.23section 260C.503, subdivision 2, paragraph (a), shall be within ten days of the filing
118.24of the petition.
118.25(c) At the admit-deny hearing, the court shall determine whether there is a prima
118.26facie basis for finding that the agency made reasonable efforts, or in the case of an Indian
118.27child active efforts, for reunification as required or that reasonable efforts for reunification
118.28are not required under section 260.012 and proceed according to the Minnesota Rules of
118.29Juvenile Protection Procedure.

118.30    Sec. 29. [260C.509] TRIAL.
118.31The permanency proceedings shall be conducted in a timely fashion including
118.32that any trial required under section 260C.163 shall be commenced within 60 days of
119.1the admit-deny hearing required under section 260C.507. At the conclusion of the
119.2permanency proceedings, the court shall:
119.3(1) order the child returned to the care of the parent or guardian from whom the
119.4child was removed; or
119.5(2) order a permanency disposition under section 260C.515 or termination of
119.6parental rights under sections 260C.301 to 260C.328 if a permanency disposition order or
119.7termination of parental rights is in the child's best interests.

119.8    Sec. 30. [260C.511] BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD.
119.9(a) The "best interests of the child" means all relevant factors to be considered
119.10and evaluated.
119.11(b) In making a permanency disposition order or termination of parental rights,
119.12the court must be governed by the best interests of the child, including a review of the
119.13relationship between the child and relatives and the child and other important persons with
119.14whom the child has resided or had significant contact.

119.15    Sec. 31. [260C.513] PERMANENCY DISPOSITIONS WHEN CHILD CANNOT
119.16RETURN HOME.
119.17(a) Termination of parental rights and adoption, or guardianship to the commissioner
119.18of human services through a consent to adopt are preferred permanency options for a
119.19child who cannot return home. If the court finds that termination of parental rights and
119.20guardianship to the commissioner is not in the child's best interests, the court may transfer
119.21permanent legal and physical custody of the child to a relative when that order is in the
119.22child's best interests.
119.23(b) When the court has determined that permanent placement of the child away from
119.24the parent is necessary, the court shall consider permanent alternative homes that are
119.25available both inside and outside the state.

119.26    Sec. 32. [260C.515] PERMANENCY DISPOSITION ORDERS.
119.27    Subdivision 1. Court order required. If the child is not returned to the home at or
119.28before the conclusion of permanency proceedings under sections 260C.503 to 260C.521,
119.29the court must order one of the permanency dispositions in this section.
119.30    Subd. 2. Termination of parental rights. The court may order:
119.31(1) termination of parental rights when the requirements of sections 260C.301 to
119.32260C.328 are met; or
120.1(2) the responsible social services agency to file a petition for termination of
120.2parental rights in which case all the requirements of sections 260C.301 to 260C.328
120.3remain applicable.
120.4    Subd. 3. Guardianship; commissioner. The court may order guardianship to the
120.5commissioner of human services under the following procedures and conditions:
120.6(1) there is an identified prospective adoptive parent agreed to by the responsible
120.7social services agency having legal custody of the child pursuant to court order under this
120.8chapter and that prospective adoptive parent has agreed to adopt the child;
120.9(2) the court accepts the parent's voluntary consent to adopt in writing on a form
120.10prescribed by the commissioner, executed before two competent witnesses and confirmed
120.11by the consenting parent before the court or executed before court. The consent shall
120.12contain notice that consent given under this chapter:
120.13(i) is irrevocable upon acceptance by the court unless fraud is established and an
120.14order issues permitting revocation as stated in clause (9) unless the matter is governed by
120.15the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Code, title 25, section 1913(c); and
120.16(ii) will result in an order that the child is under the guardianship of the commissioner
120.17of human services;
120.18(3) a consent executed and acknowledged outside of this state, either in accordance
120.19with the law of this state or in accordance with the law of the place where executed, is
120.20valid;
120.21(4) the court must review the matter at least every 90 days under section 260C.317;
120.22(5) a consent to adopt under this subdivision vests guardianship of the child with
120.23the commissioner of human services and makes the child a ward of the commissioner of
120.24human services under section 260C.325;
120.25(6) the court must forward to the commissioner a copy of the consent to adopt,
120.26together with a certified copy of the order transferring guardianship to the commissioner;
120.27(7) if an adoption is not finalized by the identified prospective adoptive parent within
120.28six months of the execution of the consent to adopt under this clause, the responsible
120.29social services agency shall pursue adoptive placement in another home unless the court
120.30finds in a hearing under section 260C.317 that the failure to finalize is not due to either an
120.31action or a failure to act by the prospective adoptive parent;
120.32(8) notwithstanding clause (7), the responsible social services agency must pursue
120.33adoptive placement in another home as soon as the agency determines that finalization
120.34of the adoption with the identified prospective adoptive parent is not possible, that the
120.35identified prospective adoptive parent is not willing to adopt the child, or that the identified
121.1prospective adoptive parent is not cooperative in completing the steps necessary to finalize
121.2the adoption;
121.3(9) unless otherwise required by the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Code,
121.4title 25, section 1913(c), a consent to adopt executed under this section shall be irrevocable
121.5upon acceptance by the court except upon order permitting revocation issued by the same
121.6court after written findings that consent was obtained by fraud.
121.7    Subd. 4. Custody to relative. The court may order permanent legal and physical
121.8custody to a relative in the best interests of the child according to the following conditions:
121.9(1) an order for transfer of permanent legal and physical custody to a relative shall
121.10only be made after the court has reviewed the suitability of the prospective legal and
121.11physical custodian;
121.12(2) in transferring permanent legal and physical custody to a relative, the juvenile
121.13court shall follow the standards applicable under this chapter and chapter 260, and the
121.14procedures in the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure;
121.15(3) a transfer of legal and physical custody includes responsibility for the protection,
121.16education, care, and control of the child and decision making on behalf of the child;
121.17(4) a permanent legal and physical custodian may not return a child to the permanent
121.18care of a parent from whom the court removed custody without the court's approval and
121.19without notice to the responsible social services agency;
121.20(5) the social services agency may file a petition naming a fit and willing relative as
121.21a proposed permanent legal and physical custodian;
121.22(6) another party to the permanency proceeding regarding the child may file a
121.23petition to transfer permanent legal and physical custody to a relative, but the petition must
121.24be filed not later than the date for the required admit/deny hearing under section 260C.507;
121.25or if the agency's petition is filed under section 260C.503, subdivision 2, the petition must
121.26be filed not later than 30 days prior to the trial required under section 260C.509; and
121.27(7) the juvenile court may maintain jurisdiction over the responsible social services
121.28agency, the parents or guardian of the child, the child, and the permanent legal and
121.29physical custodian for purposes of ensuring appropriate services are delivered to the child
121.30and permanent legal custodian for the purpose of ensuring conditions ordered by the court
121.31related to the care and custody of the child are met.
121.32    Subd. 5. Permanent custody to agency. The court may order permanent custody to
121.33the responsible social services agency for continued placement of the child in foster care
121.34but only if it approves the responsible social services agency's compelling reasons that no
121.35other permanency disposition order is in the child's best interests, and:
121.36(1) the child has reached age 12;
122.1(2) the child is a sibling of a child described in clause (1) and the siblings have a
122.2significant positive relationship and are ordered into the same foster home;
122.3(3) the responsible social services agency has made reasonable efforts to locate and
122.4place the child with an adoptive family or a fit and willing relative who would either agree
122.5to adopt the child or to a transfer of permanent legal and physical custody of the child, but
122.6these efforts have not proven successful; and
122.7(4) the parent will continue to have visitation or contact with the child and will
122.8remain involved in planning for the child.
122.9    Subd. 6. Temporary legal custody to agency. The court may order temporary legal
122.10custody to the responsible social services agency for continued placement of the child in
122.11foster care for a specified period of time according to the following conditions:
122.12(1) the sole basis for an adjudication that the child is in need of protection or services
122.13is the child's behavior;
122.14(2) the court finds that foster care for a specified period of time is in the best interests
122.15of the child;
122.16(3) the court approves the responsible social services agency's compelling reasons
122.17that neither an award of permanent legal and physical custody to a relative, nor termination
122.18of parental rights is in the child's best interests; and
122.19(4) the order specifies that the child continue in foster care no longer than one year.

122.20    Sec. 33. [260C.517] FINDINGS AND CONTENT OF ORDER FOR
122.21PERMANENCY DISPOSITION.
122.22(a) Except for an order terminating parental rights, an order permanently placing
122.23a child out of the home of the parent or guardian must include the following detailed
122.24findings:
122.25(1) how the child's best interests are served by the order;
122.26(2) the nature and extent of the responsible social services agency's reasonable
122.27efforts, or, in the case of an Indian child, active efforts to reunify the child with the parent
122.28or guardian where reasonable efforts are required;
122.29(3) the parent's or parents' efforts and ability to use services to correct the conditions
122.30which led to the out-of-home placement; and
122.31(4) that the conditions which led to the out-of-home placement have not been
122.32corrected so that the child can safely return home.
122.33(b) The court shall issue an order required under section 260C.515 and this section
122.34within 15 days of the close of the proceedings. The court may extend issuing the order
123.1an additional 15 days when necessary in the interests of justice and the best interests of
123.2the child.

123.3    Sec. 34. [260C.519] FURTHER COURT HEARINGS.
123.4Once a permanency disposition order has been made, further court hearings are
123.5necessary if:
123.6(1) the child is ordered on a trial home visit or under the protective supervision
123.7of the responsible social services agency;
123.8(2) the child continues in foster care;
123.9(3) the court orders further hearings in a transfer of permanent legal and physical
123.10custody matter including if a party seeks to modify an order under section 260C.521,
123.11subdivision 2;
123.12(4) an adoption has not yet been finalized; or
123.13(5) the child returns to foster care after the court has entered an order for a
123.14permanency disposition under this section.

123.15    Sec. 35. [260C.521] COURT REVIEWS AFTER PERMANENCY DISPOSITION
123.16ORDER.
123.17    Subdivision 1. Child in permanent custody of responsible social services agency.
123.18(a) Court reviews of an order for permanent custody to the responsible social services
123.19agency for placement of the child in foster care must be conducted at least yearly at an
123.20in-court appearance hearing.
123.21(b) The purpose of the review hearing is to ensure:
123.22(1) the order for permanent custody to the responsible social services agency for
123.23placement of the child in foster care continues to be in the best interests of the child and
123.24that no other permanency disposition order is in the best interests of the child;
123.25(2) that the agency is assisting the child to build connections to the child's family
123.26and community; and
123.27(3) that the agency is appropriately planning with the child for development of
123.28independent living skills for the child, and as appropriate, for the orderly and successful
123.29transition to independent living that may occur if the child continues in foster care without
123.30another permanency disposition order.
123.31(c) The court must review the child's out-of-home placement plan and the reasonable
123.32efforts of the agency to finalize an alternative permanent plan for the child including the
123.33agency's efforts to:
124.1(1) ensure that permanent custody to the agency with placement of the child in
124.2foster care continues to be the most appropriate legal arrangement for meeting the child's
124.3need for permanency and stability or, if not, to identify and attempt to finalize another
124.4permanency disposition order under this chapter that would better serve the child's needs
124.5and best interests;
124.6(2) identify a specific foster home for the child, if one has not already been identified;
124.7(3) support continued placement of the child in the identified home, if one has been
124.8identified;
124.9(4) ensure appropriate services are provided to address the physical health, mental
124.10health, and educational needs of the child during the period of foster care and also ensure
124.11appropriate services or assistance to maintain relationships with appropriate family
124.12members and the child's community; and
124.13(5) plan for the child's independence upon the child's leaving foster care living as
124.14required under section 260C.212, subdivision 1.
124.15(d) The court may find that the agency has made reasonable efforts to finalize the
124.16permanent plan for the child when:
124.17(1) the agency has made reasonable efforts to identify a more legally permanent
124.18home for the child than is provided by an order for permanent custody to the agency
124.19for placement in foster care; and
124.20(2) the agency's engagement of the child in planning for independent living is
124.21reasonable and appropriate.
124.22    Subd. 2. Modifying an order for permanent legal and physical custody to a
124.23relative. An order for a relative to have permanent legal and physical custody of a child
124.24may be modified using standards under sections 518.18 and 518.185. The social services
124.25agency is a party to the proceeding and must receive notice.
124.26    Subd. 3. Modifying order for permanent custody to agency for placement in
124.27foster care. (a) A parent may seek modification of an order for permanent custody of the
124.28child to the responsible social services agency for placement in foster care upon motion
124.29and a showing by the parent of a substantial change in the parent's circumstances such
124.30that the parent could provide appropriate care for the child and that removal of the child
124.31from the permanent custody of the agency and the return to the parent's care would be
124.32in the best interests of the child.
124.33(b) The responsible social services agency may ask the court to vacate an order for
124.34permanent custody to the agency upon a petition and hearing pursuant to section 260C.163
124.35establishing the basis for the court to order another permanency disposition under this
124.36chapter, including termination of parental rights based on abandonment if the parent
125.1has not visited the child, maintained contact with the child, or participated in planning
125.2for the child as required under section 260C.515, subdivision 5. The responsible social
125.3services agency must establish that the proposed permanency disposition order is in the
125.4child's best interests. Upon a hearing where the court determines the petition is proved,
125.5the court may vacate the order for permanent custody and enter a different order for a
125.6permanent disposition that is in the child's best interests. The court shall not require further
125.7reasonable efforts to reunify the child with the parent or guardian as a basis for vacating
125.8the order for permanent custody to the agency and ordering a different permanency
125.9disposition in the child's best interests. The county attorney must file the petition and give
125.10notice as required under the Minnesota Rules of Juvenile Protection Procedure in order to
125.11modify an order for permanent custody under this subdivision.

125.12    Sec. 36. EFFECTIVE DATE.
125.13This article is effective August 1, 2012.

125.14ARTICLE 5
125.15CHILD SUPPORT

125.16    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 256.01, subdivision 14b,
125.17is amended to read:
125.18    Subd. 14b. American Indian child welfare projects. (a) The commissioner of
125.19human services may authorize projects to test tribal delivery of child welfare services to
125.20American Indian children and their parents and custodians living on the reservation.
125.21The commissioner has authority to solicit and determine which tribes may participate
125.22in a project. Grants may be issued to Minnesota Indian tribes to support the projects.
125.23The commissioner may waive existing state rules as needed to accomplish the projects.
125.24Notwithstanding section 626.556, the commissioner may authorize projects to use
125.25alternative methods of investigating and assessing reports of child maltreatment, provided
125.26that the projects comply with the provisions of section 626.556 dealing with the rights
125.27of individuals who are subjects of reports or investigations, including notice and appeal
125.28rights and data practices requirements. The commissioner may seek any federal approvals
125.29necessary to carry out the projects as well as seek and use any funds available to the
125.30commissioner, including use of federal funds, foundation funds, existing grant funds,
125.31and other funds. The commissioner is authorized to advance state funds as necessary to
125.32operate the projects. Federal reimbursement applicable to the projects is appropriated
125.33to the commissioner for the purposes of the projects. The projects must be required to
125.34address responsibility for safety, permanency, and well-being of children.
126.1(b) For the purposes of this section, "American Indian child" means a person under
126.218 years of age 21 years old and who is a tribal member or eligible for membership in
126.3one of the tribes chosen for a project under this subdivision and who is residing on the
126.4reservation of that tribe.
126.5(c) In order to qualify for an American Indian child welfare project, a tribe must:
126.6(1) be one of the existing tribes with reservation land in Minnesota;
126.7(2) have a tribal court with jurisdiction over child custody proceedings;
126.8(3) have a substantial number of children for whom determinations of maltreatment
126.9have occurred;
126.10(4) have capacity to respond to reports of abuse and neglect under section 626.556;
126.11(5) provide a wide range of services to families in need of child welfare services; and
126.12(6) have a tribal-state title IV-E agreement in effect.
126.13(d) Grants awarded under this section may be used for the nonfederal costs of
126.14providing child welfare services to American Indian children on the tribe's reservation,
126.15including costs associated with:
126.16(1) assessment and prevention of child abuse and neglect;
126.17(2) family preservation;
126.18(3) facilitative, supportive, and reunification services;
126.19(4) out-of-home placement for children removed from the home for child protective
126.20purposes; and
126.21(5) other activities and services approved by the commissioner that further the goals
126.22of providing safety, permanency, and well-being of American Indian children.
126.23(e) When a tribe has initiated a project and has been approved by the commissioner
126.24to assume child welfare responsibilities for American Indian children of that tribe under
126.25this section, the affected county social service agency is relieved of responsibility for
126.26responding to reports of abuse and neglect under section 626.556 for those children
126.27during the time within which the tribal project is in effect and funded. The commissioner
126.28shall work with tribes and affected counties to develop procedures for data collection,
126.29evaluation, and clarification of ongoing role and financial responsibilities of the county
126.30and tribe for child welfare services prior to initiation of the project. Children who have not
126.31been identified by the tribe as participating in the project shall remain the responsibility
126.32of the county. Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for law
126.33enforcement or court services.
126.34(f) Participating tribes may conduct children's mental health screenings under section
126.35245.4874, subdivision 1 , paragraph (a), clause (14), for children who are eligible for the
126.36initiative and living on the reservation and who meet one of the following criteria:
127.1(1) the child must be receiving child protective services;
127.2(2) the child must be in foster care; or
127.3(3) the child's parents must have had parental rights suspended or terminated.
127.4Tribes may access reimbursement from available state funds for conducting the screenings.
127.5Nothing in this section shall alter responsibilities of the county for providing services
127.6under section 245.487.
127.7(g) Participating tribes may establish a local child mortality review panel. In
127.8establishing a local child mortality review panel, the tribe agrees to conduct local child
127.9mortality reviews for child deaths or near-fatalities occurring on the reservation under
127.10subdivision 12. Tribes with established child mortality review panels shall have access
127.11to nonpublic data and shall protect nonpublic data under subdivision 12, paragraphs (c)
127.12to (e). The tribe shall provide written notice to the commissioner and affected counties
127.13when a local child mortality review panel has been established and shall provide data upon
127.14request of the commissioner for purposes of sharing nonpublic data with members of the
127.15state child mortality review panel in connection to an individual case.
127.16(h) The commissioner shall collect information on outcomes relating to child safety,
127.17permanency, and well-being of American Indian children who are served in the projects.
127.18Participating tribes must provide information to the state in a format and completeness
127.19deemed acceptable by the state to meet state and federal reporting requirements.
127.20    (i) In consultation with the White Earth Band, the commissioner shall develop
127.21and submit to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees
127.22with jurisdiction over health and human services a plan to transfer legal responsibility
127.23for providing child protective services to White Earth Band member children residing in
127.24Hennepin County to the White Earth Band. The plan shall include a financing proposal,
127.25definitions of key terms, statutory amendments required, and other provisions required to
127.26implement the plan. The commissioner shall submit the plan by January 15, 2012.

127.27    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 257.75, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
127.28    Subd. 7. Hospital and Department of Health distribution of educational
127.29materials; recognition form. Hospitals that provide obstetric services and the state
127.30registrar of vital statistics shall distribute the educational materials and recognition
127.31of parentage forms prepared by the commissioner of human services to new parents;
127.32and shall assist parents in understanding the recognition of parentage form, including
127.33following the provisions for notice under subdivision 5; shall aid new parents in properly
127.34completing the recognition of parentage form, including providing notary services; and
127.35shall timely file the completed recognition of parentage form with the Office of the State
128.1Registrar of Vital Statistics. On and after January 1, 1994, hospitals may not distribute the
128.2declaration of parentage forms.

128.3    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 518A.40, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
128.4    Subd. 4. Change in child care. (a) When a court order provides for child care
128.5expenses, and child care support is not assigned under section 256.741, the public
128.6authority, if the public authority provides child support enforcement services, must may
128.7suspend collecting the amount allocated for child care expenses when:
128.8    (1) either party informs the public authority that no child care costs are being
128.9incurred; and:
128.10    (2) (1) the public authority verifies the accuracy of the information with the obligee.;
128.11or
128.12(2) the obligee fails to respond within 30 days of the date of a written request
128.13from the public authority for information regarding child care costs. A written or oral
128.14response from the obligee that child care costs are being incurred is sufficient for the
128.15public authority to continue collecting child care expenses.
128.16The suspension is effective as of the first day of the month following the date that the
128.17public authority received the verification either verified the information with the obligee
128.18or the obligee failed to respond. The public authority will resume collecting child care
128.19expenses when either party provides information that child care costs have resumed are
128.20incurred, or when a child care support assignment takes effect under section 256.741,
128.21subdivision 4. The resumption is effective as of the first day of the month after the date
128.22that the public authority received the information.
128.23    (b) If the parties provide conflicting information to the public authority regarding
128.24whether child care expenses are being incurred, or if the public authority is unable to
128.25verify with the obligee that no child care costs are being incurred, the public authority will
128.26continue or resume collecting child care expenses. Either party, by motion to the court,
128.27may challenge the suspension, continuation, or resumption of the collection of child care
128.28expenses under this subdivision. If the public authority suspends collection activities
128.29for the amount allocated for child care expenses, all other provisions of the court order
128.30remain in effect.
128.31    (c) In cases where there is a substantial increase or decrease in child care expenses,
128.32the parties may modify the order under section 518A.39.

128.33    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 518C.205, is amended to read:
128.34518C.205 CONTINUING, EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION.
129.1    (a) A tribunal of this state issuing a support order consistent with the law of this state
129.2has continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over a child support order unless:
129.3    (1) as long as this state remains is no longer the residence of the obligor, the
129.4individual obligee, or and the child for whose benefit the support order is issued; or
129.5    (2) until all of the parties who are individuals have filed written consents with
129.6the tribunal of this state for a tribunal of another state to modify the order and assume
129.7continuing, exclusive jurisdiction.
129.8    (b) A tribunal of this state issuing a child support order consistent with the law of
129.9this state may not exercise its continuing jurisdiction to modify the order if the order has
129.10been modified by a tribunal of another state pursuant to this chapter or a law substantially
129.11similar to this chapter.
129.12    (c) If a child support order of this state is modified by a tribunal of another state
129.13pursuant to this chapter or a law substantially similar to this chapter, a tribunal of this state
129.14loses its continuing, exclusive jurisdiction with regard to prospective enforcement of the
129.15order issued in this state, and may only:
129.16    (1) enforce the order that was modified as to amounts accruing before the
129.17modification;
129.18    (2) enforce nonmodifiable aspects of that order; and
129.19    (3) provide other appropriate relief for violations of that order which occurred before
129.20the effective date of the modification.
129.21    (d) A tribunal of this state shall recognize the continuing, exclusive jurisdiction of a
129.22tribunal of another state which has issued a child support order pursuant to this chapter or
129.23a law substantially similar to this chapter.
129.24    (e) A temporary support order issued ex parte or pending resolution of a jurisdictional
129.25conflict does not create continuing, exclusive jurisdiction in the issuing tribunal.
129.26    (f) A tribunal of this state issuing a support order consistent with the law of this
129.27state has continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over a spousal support order throughout the
129.28existence of the support obligation. A tribunal of this state may not modify a spousal
129.29support order issued by a tribunal of another state having continuing, exclusive jurisdiction
129.30over that order under the law of that state.

129.31    Sec. 5. RECIPROCAL AGREEMENT; CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT.
129.32The commissioner of human services shall initiate procedures no later than October
129.331, 2012, to enter into a reciprocal agreement with Bermuda for the establishment and
129.34enforcement of child support obligations pursuant to United States Code, title 42, section
129.35659a(d).
130.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon Bermuda's written acceptance
130.2and agreement to enforce Minnesota child support orders. If Bermuda does not accept and
130.3declines to enforce Minnesota orders, this section expires October 1, 2013.

130.4    Sec. 6. EFFECTIVE DATE.
130.5This article is effective August 1, 2012.

130.6ARTICLE 6
130.7TECHNICAL AND CONFORMING AMENDMENTS

130.8    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 257.01, is amended to read:
130.9257.01 RECORDS REQUIRED.
130.10Each person or authorized child-placing agency permitted by law to receive children,
130.11secure homes for children, or care for children, shall keep a record containing the name,
130.12age, former residence, legal status, health records, sex, race, and accumulated length of
130.13time in foster care, if applicable, of each child received; the name, former residence,
130.14occupation, health history, and character, of each birth parent; the date of reception,
130.15placing out, and adoption of each child, and the name, race, occupation, and residence of
130.16the person with whom a child is placed; the date of the removal of any child to another
130.17home and the reason for removal; the date of termination of the guardianship; the history
130.18of each child until the child reaches the age of 18 21 years, is legally adopted, or is
130.19discharged according to law; and further demographic and other information as is required
130.20by the commissioner of human services.

130.21    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.69, is amended to read:
130.22259.69 TRANSFER OF FUNDS.
130.23The commissioner of human services may transfer funds into the subsidized adoption
130.24assistance account when a deficit in the subsidized adoption assistance program occurs.

130.25    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 259.73, is amended to read:
130.26259.73 REIMBURSEMENT OF NONRECURRING ADOPTION EXPENSES.
130.27The commissioner of human services shall provide reimbursement of up to $2,000
130.28to the adoptive parent or parents for costs incurred in adopting a child with special
130.29needs. The commissioner shall determine the child's eligibility for adoption expense
130.30reimbursement under title IV-E of the Social Security Act, United States Code, title 42,
130.31sections 670 to 676. To be reimbursed, costs must be reasonable, necessary, and directly
131.1related to the legal adoption of the child. An individual may apply for reimbursement for
131.2costs incurred in an adoption of a child with special needs under section 259A.70.

131.3    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260C.301, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
131.4    Subdivision 1. Voluntary and involuntary. The juvenile court may upon petition,
131.5terminate all rights of a parent to a child:
131.6(a) with the written consent of a parent who for good cause desires to terminate
131.7parental rights; or
131.8(b) if it finds that one or more of the following conditions exist:
131.9(1) that the parent has abandoned the child;
131.10(2) that the parent has substantially, continuously, or repeatedly refused or neglected
131.11to comply with the duties imposed upon that parent by the parent and child relationship,
131.12including but not limited to providing the child with necessary food, clothing, shelter,
131.13education, and other care and control necessary for the child's physical, mental, or
131.14emotional health and development, if the parent is physically and financially able, and
131.15either reasonable efforts by the social services agency have failed to correct the conditions
131.16that formed the basis of the petition or reasonable efforts would be futile and therefore
131.17unreasonable;
131.18(3) that a parent has been ordered to contribute to the support of the child or
131.19financially aid in the child's birth and has continuously failed to do so without good cause.
131.20This clause shall not be construed to state a grounds for termination of parental rights of a
131.21noncustodial parent if that parent has not been ordered to or cannot financially contribute
131.22to the support of the child or aid in the child's birth;
131.23(4) that a parent is palpably unfit to be a party to the parent and child relationship
131.24because of a consistent pattern of specific conduct before the child or of specific conditions
131.25directly relating to the parent and child relationship either of which are determined by
131.26the court to be of a duration or nature that renders the parent unable, for the reasonably
131.27foreseeable future, to care appropriately for the ongoing physical, mental, or emotional
131.28needs of the child. It is presumed that a parent is palpably unfit to be a party to the parent
131.29and child relationship upon a showing that the parent's parental rights to one or more other
131.30children were involuntarily terminated or that the parent's custodial rights to another child
131.31have been involuntarily transferred to a relative under section 260C.201, subdivision 11,
131.32paragraph (e), clause (1), or a similar law of another jurisdiction;
131.33(5) that following the child's placement out of the home, reasonable efforts, under the
131.34direction of the court, have failed to correct the conditions leading to the child's placement.
131.35It is presumed that reasonable efforts under this clause have failed upon a showing that:
132.1(i) a child has resided out of the parental home under court order for a cumulative
132.2period of 12 months within the preceding 22 months. In the case of a child under age eight
132.3at the time the petition was filed alleging the child to be in need of protection or services,
132.4the presumption arises when the child has resided out of the parental home under court
132.5order for six months unless the parent has maintained regular contact with the child and
132.6the parent is complying with the out-of-home placement plan;
132.7(ii) the court has approved the out-of-home placement plan required under section
132.8260C.212 and filed with the court under section 260C.178;
132.9(iii) conditions leading to the out-of-home placement have not been corrected. It
132.10is presumed that conditions leading to a child's out-of-home placement have not been
132.11corrected upon a showing that the parent or parents have not substantially complied with
132.12the court's orders and a reasonable case plan; and
132.13(iv) reasonable efforts have been made by the social services agency to rehabilitate
132.14the parent and reunite the family.
132.15This clause does not prohibit the termination of parental rights prior to one year, or
132.16in the case of a child under age eight, prior to six months after a child has been placed
132.17out of the home.
132.18It is also presumed that reasonable efforts have failed under this clause upon a
132.19showing that:
132.20(A) the parent has been diagnosed as chemically dependent by a professional
132.21certified to make the diagnosis;
132.22(B) the parent has been required by a case plan to participate in a chemical
132.23dependency treatment program;
132.24(C) the treatment programs offered to the parent were culturally, linguistically,
132.25and clinically appropriate;
132.26(D) the parent has either failed two or more times to successfully complete a
132.27treatment program or has refused at two or more separate meetings with a caseworker
132.28to participate in a treatment program; and
132.29(E) the parent continues to abuse chemicals.
132.30(6) that a child has experienced egregious harm in the parent's care which is of a
132.31nature, duration, or chronicity that indicates a lack of regard for the child's well-being,
132.32such that a reasonable person would believe it contrary to the best interest of the child
132.33or of any child to be in the parent's care;
132.34(7) that in the case of a child born to a mother who was not married to the child's
132.35father when the child was conceived nor when the child was born the person is not entitled
133.1to notice of an adoption hearing under section 259.49 and the person has not registered
133.2with the fathers' adoption registry under section 259.52;
133.3(8) that the child is neglected and in foster care; or
133.4(9) that the parent has been convicted of a crime listed in section 260.012, paragraph
133.5(g)
, clauses (1) to (3) (5).
133.6In an action involving an American Indian child, sections 260.751 to 260.835 and
133.7the Indian Child Welfare Act, United States Code, title 25, sections 1901 to 1923, control
133.8to the extent that the provisions of this section are inconsistent with those laws.

133.9    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 260D.08, is amended to read:
133.10260D.08 ANNUAL REVIEW.
133.11    (a) After the court conducts a permanency review hearing under section 260D.07,
133.12the matter must be returned to the court for further review of the responsible social
133.13services reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child and the child's foster
133.14care placement at least every 12 months while the child is in foster care. The court shall
133.15give notice to the parent and child, age 12 or older, and the foster parents of the continued
133.16review requirements under this section at the permanency review hearing.
133.17    (b) Every 12 months, the court shall determine whether the agency made reasonable
133.18efforts to finalize the permanency plan for the child, which means the exercise of due
133.19diligence by the agency to:
133.20    (1) ensure that the agreement for voluntary foster care is the most appropriate legal
133.21arrangement to meet the child's safety, health, and best interests and to conduct a genuine
133.22examination of whether there is another permanency disposition order under chapter
133.23260C, including returning the child home, that would better serve the child's need for a
133.24stable and permanent home;
133.25    (2) engage and support the parent in continued involvement in planning and decision
133.26making for the needs of the child;
133.27    (3) strengthen the child's ties to the parent, relatives, and community;
133.28    (4) implement the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212,
133.29subdivision 1, and ensure that the plan requires the provision of appropriate services to
133.30address the physical health, mental health, and educational needs of the child; and
133.31    (5) ensure appropriate planning for the child's safe, permanent, and independent
133.32living arrangement after the child's 18th birthday.

133.33    Sec. 6. [611.012] DISPOSITION OF CHILD OF PARENT ARRESTED.
134.1A peace officer who arrests a person accompanied by a child of the person may
134.2release the child to any person designated by the parent unless it is necessary to remove
134.3the child under section 260C.175 because the child is found in surroundings or conditions
134.4which endanger the child's health or welfare or which the peace officer reasonably believes
134.5will endanger the child's health or welfare. An officer releasing a child under this section
134.6to a person designated by the parent has no civil or criminal liability for the child's release.

134.7    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
134.8    Subd. 2. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have the meanings
134.9given them unless the specific content indicates otherwise:
134.10    (a) "Family assessment" means a comprehensive assessment of child safety, risk
134.11of subsequent child maltreatment, and family strengths and needs that is applied to a
134.12child maltreatment report that does not allege substantial child endangerment. Family
134.13assessment does not include a determination as to whether child maltreatment occurred
134.14but does determine the need for services to address the safety of family members and the
134.15risk of subsequent maltreatment.
134.16    (b) "Investigation" means fact gathering related to the current safety of a child
134.17and the risk of subsequent maltreatment that determines whether child maltreatment
134.18occurred and whether child protective services are needed. An investigation must be used
134.19when reports involve substantial child endangerment, and for reports of maltreatment in
134.20facilities required to be licensed under chapter 245A or 245B; under sections 144.50 to
134.21144.58 and 241.021; in a school as defined in sections 120A.05, subdivisions 9, 11, and
134.2213, and 124D.10; or in a nonlicensed personal care provider association as defined in
134.23sections 256B.04, subdivision 16, and 256B.0625, subdivision 19a.
134.24    (c) "Substantial child endangerment" means a person responsible for a child's care,
134.25and in the case of sexual abuse includes a person who has a significant relationship to the
134.26child as defined in section 609.341, or a person in a position of authority as defined in
134.27section 609.341, who by act or omission commits or attempts to commit an act against a
134.28child under their care that constitutes any of the following:
134.29    (1) egregious harm as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 14;
134.30    (2) sexual abuse as defined in paragraph (d);
134.31    (3) abandonment under section 260C.301, subdivision 2;
134.32    (4) neglect as defined in paragraph (f), clause (2), that substantially endangers the
134.33child's physical or mental health, including a growth delay, which may be referred to as
134.34failure to thrive, that has been diagnosed by a physician and is due to parental neglect;
135.1    (5) murder in the first, second, or third degree under section 609.185, 609.19, or
135.2609.195 ;
135.3    (6) manslaughter in the first or second degree under section 609.20 or 609.205;
135.4    (7) assault in the first, second, or third degree under section 609.221, 609.222, or
135.5609.223 ;
135.6    (8) solicitation, inducement, and promotion of prostitution under section 609.322;
135.7    (9) criminal sexual conduct under sections 609.342 to 609.3451;
135.8    (10) solicitation of children to engage in sexual conduct under section 609.352;
135.9    (11) malicious punishment or neglect or endangerment of a child under section
135.10609.377 or 609.378;
135.11    (12) use of a minor in sexual performance under section 617.246; or
135.12    (13) parental behavior, status, or condition which mandates that the county attorney
135.13file a termination of parental rights petition under section 260C.301, subdivision 3,
135.14paragraph (a).
135.15    (d) "Sexual abuse" means the subjection of a child by a person responsible for the
135.16child's care, by a person who has a significant relationship to the child, as defined in
135.17section 609.341, or by a person in a position of authority, as defined in section 609.341,
135.18subdivision 10, to any act which constitutes a violation of section 609.342 (criminal sexual
135.19conduct in the first degree), 609.343 (criminal sexual conduct in the second degree),
135.20609.344 (criminal sexual conduct in the third degree), 609.345 (criminal sexual conduct
135.21in the fourth degree), or 609.3451 (criminal sexual conduct in the fifth degree). Sexual
135.22abuse also includes any act which involves a minor which constitutes a violation of
135.23prostitution offenses under sections 609.321 to 609.324 or 617.246. Sexual abuse includes
135.24threatened sexual abuse which includes the status of a parent or household member
135.25who has committed a violation which requires registration as an offender under section
135.26243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b), or required registration under section
135.27243.166, subdivision 1b, paragraph (a) or (b).
135.28    (e) "Person responsible for the child's care" means (1) an individual functioning
135.29within the family unit and having responsibilities for the care of the child such as a
135.30parent, guardian, or other person having similar care responsibilities, or (2) an individual
135.31functioning outside the family unit and having responsibilities for the care of the child
135.32such as a teacher, school administrator, other school employees or agents, or other lawful
135.33custodian of a child having either full-time or short-term care responsibilities including,
135.34but not limited to, day care, babysitting whether paid or unpaid, counseling, teaching,
135.35and coaching.
136.1    (f) "Neglect" means the commission or omission of any of the acts specified under
136.2clauses (1) to (9), other than by accidental means:
136.3    (1) failure by a person responsible for a child's care to supply a child with necessary
136.4food, clothing, shelter, health, medical, or other care required for the child's physical or
136.5mental health when reasonably able to do so;
136.6    (2) failure to protect a child from conditions or actions that seriously endanger the
136.7child's physical or mental health when reasonably able to do so, including a growth delay,
136.8which may be referred to as a failure to thrive, that has been diagnosed by a physician and
136.9is due to parental neglect;
136.10    (3) failure to provide for necessary supervision or child care arrangements
136.11appropriate for a child after considering factors as the child's age, mental ability, physical
136.12condition, length of absence, or environment, when the child is unable to care for the
136.13child's own basic needs or safety, or the basic needs or safety of another child in their care;
136.14    (4) failure to ensure that the child is educated as defined in sections 120A.22 and
136.15260C.163, subdivision 11 , which does not include a parent's refusal to provide the parent's
136.16child with sympathomimetic medications, consistent with section 125A.091, subdivision 5;
136.17    (5) nothing in this section shall be construed to mean that a child is neglected solely
136.18because the child's parent, guardian, or other person responsible for the child's care in
136.19good faith selects and depends upon spiritual means or prayer for treatment or care of
136.20disease or remedial care of the child in lieu of medical care; except that a parent, guardian,
136.21or caretaker, or a person mandated to report pursuant to subdivision 3, has a duty to report
136.22if a lack of medical care may cause serious danger to the child's health. This section does
136.23not impose upon persons, not otherwise legally responsible for providing a child with
136.24necessary food, clothing, shelter, education, or medical care, a duty to provide that care;
136.25    (6) prenatal exposure to a controlled substance, as defined in section 253B.02,
136.26subdivision 2, used by the mother for a nonmedical purpose, as evidenced by withdrawal
136.27symptoms in the child at birth, results of a toxicology test performed on the mother at
136.28delivery or the child at birth, or medical effects or developmental delays during the child's
136.29first year of life that medically indicate prenatal exposure to a controlled substance, or the
136.30presence of a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder;
136.31    (7) "medical neglect" as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 6, clause (5);
136.32    (8) chronic and severe use of alcohol or a controlled substance by a parent or
136.33person responsible for the care of the child that adversely affects the child's basic needs
136.34and safety; or
136.35    (9) emotional harm from a pattern of behavior which contributes to impaired
136.36emotional functioning of the child which may be demonstrated by a substantial and
137.1observable effect in the child's behavior, emotional response, or cognition that is not
137.2within the normal range for the child's age and stage of development, with due regard to
137.3the child's culture.
137.4    (g) "Physical abuse" means any physical injury, mental injury, or threatened injury,
137.5inflicted by a person responsible for the child's care on a child other than by accidental
137.6means, or any physical or mental injury that cannot reasonably be explained by the child's
137.7history of injuries, or any aversive or deprivation procedures, or regulated interventions,
137.8that have not been authorized under section 121A.67 or 245.825.
137.9    Abuse does not include reasonable and moderate physical discipline of a child
137.10administered by a parent or legal guardian which does not result in an injury. Abuse does
137.11not include the use of reasonable force by a teacher, principal, or school employee as
137.12allowed by section 121A.582. Actions which are not reasonable and moderate include,
137.13but are not limited to, any of the following that are done in anger or without regard to the
137.14safety of the child:
137.15    (1) throwing, kicking, burning, biting, or cutting a child;
137.16    (2) striking a child with a closed fist;
137.17    (3) shaking a child under age three;
137.18    (4) striking or other actions which result in any nonaccidental injury to a child
137.19under 18 months of age;
137.20    (5) unreasonable interference with a child's breathing;
137.21    (6) threatening a child with a weapon, as defined in section 609.02, subdivision 6;
137.22    (7) striking a child under age one on the face or head;
137.23    (8) purposely giving a child poison, alcohol, or dangerous, harmful, or controlled
137.24substances which were not prescribed for the child by a practitioner, in order to control or
137.25punish the child; or other substances that substantially affect the child's behavior, motor
137.26coordination, or judgment or that results in sickness or internal injury, or subjects the
137.27child to medical procedures that would be unnecessary if the child were not exposed
137.28to the substances;
137.29    (9) unreasonable physical confinement or restraint not permitted under section
137.30609.379 , including but not limited to tying, caging, or chaining; or
137.31    (10) in a school facility or school zone, an act by a person responsible for the child's
137.32care that is a violation under section 121A.58.
137.33    (h) "Report" means any report received by the local welfare agency, police
137.34department, county sheriff, or agency responsible for assessing or investigating
137.35maltreatment pursuant to this section.
137.36    (i) "Facility" means:
138.1    (1) a licensed or unlicensed day care facility, residential facility, agency, hospital,
138.2sanitarium, or other facility or institution required to be licensed under sections 144.50 to
138.3144.58 , 241.021, or 245A.01 to 245A.16, or chapter 245B;
138.4    (2) a school as defined in sections 120A.05, subdivisions 9, 11, and 13; and
138.5124D.10 ; or
138.6    (3) a nonlicensed personal care provider organization as defined in sections 256B.04,
138.7subdivision 16, and 256B.0625, subdivision 19a.
138.8    (j) "Operator" means an operator or agency as defined in section 245A.02.
138.9    (k) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of human services.
138.10    (l) "Practice of social services," for the purposes of subdivision 3, includes but is
138.11not limited to employee assistance counseling and the provision of guardian ad litem and
138.12parenting time expeditor services.
138.13    (m) "Mental injury" means an injury to the psychological capacity or emotional
138.14stability of a child as evidenced by an observable or substantial impairment in the child's
138.15ability to function within a normal range of performance and behavior with due regard to
138.16the child's culture.
138.17    (n) "Threatened injury" means a statement, overt act, condition, or status that
138.18represents a substantial risk of physical or sexual abuse or mental injury. Threatened
138.19injury includes, but is not limited to, exposing a child to a person responsible for the
138.20child's care, as defined in paragraph (e), clause (1), who has:
138.21    (1) subjected a child to, or failed to protect a child from, an overt act or condition
138.22that constitutes egregious harm, as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 14, or a
138.23similar law of another jurisdiction;
138.24    (2) been found to be palpably unfit under section 260C.301, paragraph (b), clause
138.25(4), or a similar law of another jurisdiction;
138.26    (3) committed an act that has resulted in an involuntary termination of parental rights
138.27under section 260C.301, or a similar law of another jurisdiction; or
138.28    (4) committed an act that has resulted in the involuntary transfer of permanent legal
138.29and physical custody of a child to a relative under section 260C.201, subdivision 11,
138.30paragraph (d), clause (1), or a similar law of another jurisdiction.
138.31    (o) Persons who conduct assessments or investigations under this section shall take
138.32into account accepted child-rearing practices of the culture in which a child participates
138.33and accepted teacher discipline practices, which are not injurious to the child's health,
138.34welfare, and safety.
138.35    (p) "Accidental" means a sudden, not reasonably foreseeable, and unexpected
138.36occurrence or event which:
139.1    (1) is not likely to occur and could not have been prevented by exercise of due
139.2care; and
139.3    (2) if occurring while a child is receiving services from a facility, happens when the
139.4facility and the employee or person providing services in the facility are in compliance
139.5with the laws and rules relevant to the occurrence or event.
139.6(q) "Nonmaltreatment mistake" means:
139.7(1) at the time of the incident, the individual was performing duties identified in the
139.8center's child care program plan required under Minnesota Rules, part 9503.0045;
139.9(2) the individual has not been determined responsible for a similar incident that
139.10resulted in a finding of maltreatment for at least seven years;
139.11(3) the individual has not been determined to have committed a similar
139.12nonmaltreatment mistake under this paragraph for at least four years;
139.13(4) any injury to a child resulting from the incident, if treated, is treated only with
139.14remedies that are available over the counter, whether ordered by a medical professional or
139.15not; and
139.16(5) except for the period when the incident occurred, the facility and the individual
139.17providing services were both in compliance with all licensing requirements relevant to the
139.18incident.
139.19This definition only applies to child care centers licensed under Minnesota
139.20Rules, chapter 9503. If clauses (1) to (5) apply, rather than making a determination of
139.21substantiated maltreatment by the individual, the commissioner of human services shall
139.22determine that a nonmaltreatment mistake was made by the individual.

139.23    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
139.24    Subd. 10. Duties of local welfare agency and local law enforcement agency upon
139.25receipt of report. (a) Upon receipt of a report, the local welfare agency shall determine
139.26whether to conduct a family assessment or an investigation as appropriate to prevent or
139.27provide a remedy for child maltreatment. The local welfare agency:
139.28    (1) shall conduct an investigation on reports involving substantial child
139.29endangerment;
139.30    (2) shall begin an immediate investigation if, at any time when it is using a family
139.31assessment response, it determines that there is reason to believe that substantial child
139.32endangerment or a serious threat to the child's safety exists;
139.33    (3) may conduct a family assessment for reports that do not allege substantial child
139.34endangerment. In determining that a family assessment is appropriate, the local welfare
140.1agency may consider issues of child safety, parental cooperation, and the need for an
140.2immediate response; and
140.3    (4) may conduct a family assessment on a report that was initially screened and
140.4assigned for an investigation. In determining that a complete investigation is not required,
140.5the local welfare agency must document the reason for terminating the investigation and
140.6notify the local law enforcement agency if the local law enforcement agency is conducting
140.7a joint investigation.
140.8    If the report alleges neglect, physical abuse, or sexual abuse by a parent, guardian,
140.9or individual functioning within the family unit as a person responsible for the child's
140.10care, or sexual abuse by a person with a significant relationship to the child when that
140.11person resides in the child's household or by a sibling, the local welfare agency shall
140.12immediately conduct a family assessment or investigation as identified in clauses (1) to
140.13(4). In conducting a family assessment or investigation, the local welfare agency shall
140.14gather information on the existence of substance abuse and domestic violence and offer
140.15services for purposes of preventing future child maltreatment, safeguarding and enhancing
140.16the welfare of the abused or neglected minor, and supporting and preserving family
140.17life whenever possible. If the report alleges a violation of a criminal statute involving
140.18sexual abuse, physical abuse, or neglect or endangerment, under section 609.378, the
140.19local law enforcement agency and local welfare agency shall coordinate the planning and
140.20execution of their respective investigation and assessment efforts to avoid a duplication of
140.21fact-finding efforts and multiple interviews. Each agency shall prepare a separate report of
140.22the results of its investigation. In cases of alleged child maltreatment resulting in death,
140.23the local agency may rely on the fact-finding efforts of a law enforcement investigation
140.24to make a determination of whether or not maltreatment occurred. When necessary the
140.25local welfare agency shall seek authority to remove the child from the custody of a parent,
140.26guardian, or adult with whom the child is living. In performing any of these duties, the
140.27local welfare agency shall maintain appropriate records.
140.28    If the family assessment or investigation indicates there is a potential for abuse of
140.29alcohol or other drugs by the parent, guardian, or person responsible for the child's care,
140.30the local welfare agency shall conduct a chemical use assessment pursuant to Minnesota
140.31Rules, part 9530.6615.
140.32    (b) When a local agency receives a report or otherwise has information indicating
140.33that a child who is a client, as defined in section 245.91, has been the subject of physical
140.34abuse, sexual abuse, or neglect at an agency, facility, or program as defined in section
140.35245.91 , it shall, in addition to its other duties under this section, immediately inform the
140.36ombudsman established under sections 245.91 to 245.97. The commissioner of education
141.1shall inform the ombudsman established under sections 245.91 to 245.97 of reports
141.2regarding a child defined as a client in section 245.91 that maltreatment occurred at a
141.3school as defined in sections 120A.05, subdivisions 9, 11, and 13, and 124D.10.
141.4    (c) Authority of the local welfare agency responsible for assessing or investigating
141.5the child abuse or neglect report, the agency responsible for assessing or investigating
141.6the report, and of the local law enforcement agency for investigating the alleged abuse or
141.7neglect includes, but is not limited to, authority to interview, without parental consent,
141.8the alleged victim and any other minors who currently reside with or who have resided
141.9with the alleged offender. The interview may take place at school or at any facility or
141.10other place where the alleged victim or other minors might be found or the child may be
141.11transported to, and the interview conducted at, a place appropriate for the interview of a
141.12child designated by the local welfare agency or law enforcement agency. The interview
141.13may take place outside the presence of the alleged offender or parent, legal custodian,
141.14guardian, or school official. For family assessments, it is the preferred practice to request
141.15a parent or guardian's permission to interview the child prior to conducting the child
141.16interview, unless doing so would compromise the safety assessment. Except as provided in
141.17this paragraph, the parent, legal custodian, or guardian shall be notified by the responsible
141.18local welfare or law enforcement agency no later than the conclusion of the investigation
141.19or assessment that this interview has occurred. Notwithstanding rule 32 of the Minnesota
141.20Rules of Procedure for Juvenile Courts, the juvenile court may, after hearing on an ex parte
141.21motion by the local welfare agency, order that, where reasonable cause exists, the agency
141.22withhold notification of this interview from the parent, legal custodian, or guardian. If the
141.23interview took place or is to take place on school property, the order shall specify that
141.24school officials may not disclose to the parent, legal custodian, or guardian the contents
141.25of the notification of intent to interview the child on school property, as provided under
141.26this paragraph, and any other related information regarding the interview that may be a
141.27part of the child's school record. A copy of the order shall be sent by the local welfare or
141.28law enforcement agency to the appropriate school official.
141.29    (d) When the local welfare, local law enforcement agency, or the agency responsible
141.30for assessing or investigating a report of maltreatment determines that an interview should
141.31take place on school property, written notification of intent to interview the child on school
141.32property must be received by school officials prior to the interview. The notification
141.33shall include the name of the child to be interviewed, the purpose of the interview, and
141.34a reference to the statutory authority to conduct an interview on school property. For
141.35interviews conducted by the local welfare agency, the notification shall be signed by the
141.36chair of the local social services agency or the chair's designee. The notification shall be
142.1private data on individuals subject to the provisions of this paragraph. School officials
142.2may not disclose to the parent, legal custodian, or guardian the contents of the notification
142.3or any other related information regarding the interview until notified in writing by the
142.4local welfare or law enforcement agency that the investigation or assessment has been
142.5concluded, unless a school employee or agent is alleged to have maltreated the child.
142.6Until that time, the local welfare or law enforcement agency or the agency responsible
142.7for assessing or investigating a report of maltreatment shall be solely responsible for any
142.8disclosures regarding the nature of the assessment or investigation.
142.9    Except where the alleged offender is believed to be a school official or employee,
142.10the time and place, and manner of the interview on school premises shall be within the
142.11discretion of school officials, but the local welfare or law enforcement agency shall have
142.12the exclusive authority to determine who may attend the interview. The conditions as to
142.13time, place, and manner of the interview set by the school officials shall be reasonable and
142.14the interview shall be conducted not more than 24 hours after the receipt of the notification
142.15unless another time is considered necessary by agreement between the school officials and
142.16the local welfare or law enforcement agency. Where the school fails to comply with the
142.17provisions of this paragraph, the juvenile court may order the school to comply. Every
142.18effort must be made to reduce the disruption of the educational program of the child, other
142.19students, or school staff when an interview is conducted on school premises.
142.20    (e) Where the alleged offender or a person responsible for the care of the alleged
142.21victim or other minor prevents access to the victim or other minor by the local welfare
142.22agency, the juvenile court may order the parents, legal custodian, or guardian to produce
142.23the alleged victim or other minor for questioning by the local welfare agency or the local
142.24law enforcement agency outside the presence of the alleged offender or any person
142.25responsible for the child's care at reasonable places and times as specified by court order.
142.26    (f) Before making an order under paragraph (e), the court shall issue an order to
142.27show cause, either upon its own motion or upon a verified petition, specifying the basis for
142.28the requested interviews and fixing the time and place of the hearing. The order to show
142.29cause shall be served personally and shall be heard in the same manner as provided in
142.30other cases in the juvenile court. The court shall consider the need for appointment of a
142.31guardian ad litem to protect the best interests of the child. If appointed, the guardian ad
142.32litem shall be present at the hearing on the order to show cause.
142.33    (g) The commissioner of human services, the ombudsman for mental health and
142.34developmental disabilities, the local welfare agencies responsible for investigating reports,
142.35the commissioner of education, and the local law enforcement agencies have the right to
142.36enter facilities as defined in subdivision 2 and to inspect and copy the facility's records,
143.1including medical records, as part of the investigation. Notwithstanding the provisions of
143.2chapter 13, they also have the right to inform the facility under investigation that they are
143.3conducting an investigation, to disclose to the facility the names of the individuals under
143.4investigation for abusing or neglecting a child, and to provide the facility with a copy of
143.5the report and the investigative findings.
143.6    (h) The local welfare agency responsible for conducting a family assessment or
143.7investigation shall collect available and relevant information to determine child safety,
143.8risk of subsequent child maltreatment, and family strengths and needs and share not public
143.9information with an Indian's tribal social services agency without violating any law of the
143.10state that may otherwise impose duties of confidentiality on the local welfare agency in
143.11order to implement the tribal state agreement. The local welfare agency or the agency
143.12responsible for investigating the report shall collect available and relevant information
143.13to ascertain whether maltreatment occurred and whether protective services are needed.
143.14Information collected includes, when relevant, information with regard to the person
143.15reporting the alleged maltreatment, including the nature of the reporter's relationship to the
143.16child and to the alleged offender, and the basis of the reporter's knowledge for the report;
143.17the child allegedly being maltreated; the alleged offender; the child's caretaker; and other
143.18collateral sources having relevant information related to the alleged maltreatment. The
143.19local welfare agency or the agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report
143.20may make a determination of no maltreatment early in an assessment investigation, and
143.21close the case and retain immunity, if the collected information shows no basis for a
143.22full assessment or investigation.
143.23    Information relevant to the assessment or investigation must be asked for, and
143.24may include:
143.25    (1) the child's sex and age, prior reports of maltreatment, information relating
143.26to developmental functioning, credibility of the child's statement, and whether the
143.27information provided under this clause is consistent with other information collected
143.28during the course of the assessment or investigation;
143.29    (2) the alleged offender's age, a record check for prior reports of maltreatment, and
143.30criminal charges and convictions. The local welfare agency or the agency responsible for
143.31assessing or investigating the report must provide the alleged offender with an opportunity
143.32to make a statement. The alleged offender may submit supporting documentation relevant
143.33to the assessment or investigation;
143.34    (3) collateral source information regarding the alleged maltreatment and care of the
143.35child. Collateral information includes, when relevant: (i) a medical examination of the
143.36child; (ii) prior medical records relating to the alleged maltreatment or the care of the
144.1child maintained by any facility, clinic, or health care professional and an interview with
144.2the treating professionals; and (iii) interviews with the child's caretakers, including the
144.3child's parent, guardian, foster parent, child care provider, teachers, counselors, family
144.4members, relatives, and other persons who may have knowledge regarding the alleged
144.5maltreatment and the care of the child; and
144.6    (4) information on the existence of domestic abuse and violence in the home of
144.7the child, and substance abuse.
144.8    Nothing in this paragraph precludes the local welfare agency, the local law
144.9enforcement agency, or the agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report
144.10from collecting other relevant information necessary to conduct the assessment or
144.11investigation. Notwithstanding sections 13.384 or 144.291 to 144.298, the local welfare
144.12agency has access to medical data and records for purposes of clause (3). Notwithstanding
144.13the data's classification in the possession of any other agency, data acquired by the
144.14local welfare agency or the agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report
144.15during the course of the assessment or investigation are private data on individuals and
144.16must be maintained in accordance with subdivision 11. Data of the commissioner of
144.17education collected or maintained during and for the purpose of an investigation of
144.18alleged maltreatment in a school are governed by this section, notwithstanding the data's
144.19classification as educational, licensing, or personnel data under chapter 13.
144.20    In conducting an assessment or investigation involving a school facility as defined
144.21in subdivision 2, paragraph (i), the commissioner of education shall collect investigative
144.22reports and data that are relevant to a report of maltreatment and are from local law
144.23enforcement and the school facility.
144.24    (i) Upon receipt of a report, the local welfare agency shall conduct a face-to-face
144.25contact with the child reported to be maltreated and with the child's primary caregiver
144.26sufficient to complete a safety assessment and ensure the immediate safety of the child.
144.27The face-to-face contact with the child and primary caregiver shall occur immediately
144.28if substantial child endangerment is alleged and within five calendar days for all other
144.29reports. If the alleged offender was not already interviewed as the primary caregiver, the
144.30local welfare agency shall also conduct a face-to-face interview with the alleged offender
144.31in the early stages of the assessment or investigation. At the initial contact, the local child
144.32welfare agency or the agency responsible for assessing or investigating the report must
144.33inform the alleged offender of the complaints or allegations made against the individual in
144.34a manner consistent with laws protecting the rights of the person who made the report.
144.35The interview with the alleged offender may be postponed if it would jeopardize an active
144.36law enforcement investigation.
145.1    (j) When conducting an investigation, the local welfare agency shall use a question
145.2and answer interviewing format with questioning as nondirective as possible to elicit
145.3spontaneous responses. For investigations only, the following interviewing methods and
145.4procedures must be used whenever possible when collecting information:
145.5    (1) audio recordings of all interviews with witnesses and collateral sources; and
145.6    (2) in cases of alleged sexual abuse, audio-video recordings of each interview with
145.7the alleged victim and child witnesses.
145.8    (k) In conducting an assessment or investigation involving a school facility as
145.9defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (i), the commissioner of education shall collect
145.10available and relevant information and use the procedures in paragraphs (i), (k), and
145.11subdivision 3d, except that the requirement for face-to-face observation of the child
145.12and face-to-face interview of the alleged offender is to occur in the initial stages of the
145.13assessment or investigation provided that the commissioner may also base the assessment
145.14or investigation on investigative reports and data received from the school facility and
145.15local law enforcement, to the extent those investigations satisfy the requirements of
145.16paragraphs (i) and (k), and subdivision 3d.

145.17    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10e, is amended to read:
145.18    Subd. 10e. Determinations. (a) The local welfare agency shall conclude the family
145.19assessment or the investigation within 45 days of the receipt of a report. The conclusion of
145.20the assessment or investigation may be extended to permit the completion of a criminal
145.21investigation or the receipt of expert information requested within 45 days of the receipt
145.22of the report.
145.23    (b) After conducting a family assessment, the local welfare agency shall determine
145.24whether services are needed to address the safety of the child and other family members
145.25and the risk of subsequent maltreatment.
145.26    (c) After conducting an investigation, the local welfare agency shall make two
145.27determinations: first, whether maltreatment has occurred; and, second, whether child
145.28protective services are needed. No determination of maltreatment shall be made when the
145.29alleged perpetrator is a child under the age of ten.
145.30    (d) If the commissioner of education conducts an assessment or investigation,
145.31the commissioner shall determine whether maltreatment occurred and what corrective
145.32or protective action was taken by the school facility. If a determination is made that
145.33maltreatment has occurred, the commissioner shall report to the employer, the school
145.34board, and any appropriate licensing entity the determination that maltreatment occurred
145.35and what corrective or protective action was taken by the school facility. In all other cases,
146.1the commissioner shall inform the school board or employer that a report was received,
146.2the subject of the report, the date of the initial report, the category of maltreatment alleged
146.3as defined in paragraph (f), the fact that maltreatment was not determined, and a summary
146.4of the specific reasons for the determination.
146.5    (e) When maltreatment is determined in an investigation involving a facility,
146.6the investigating agency shall also determine whether the facility or individual was
146.7responsible, or whether both the facility and the individual were responsible for the
146.8maltreatment using the mitigating factors in paragraph (i). Determinations under this
146.9subdivision must be made based on a preponderance of the evidence and are private data
146.10on individuals or nonpublic data as maintained by the commissioner of education.
146.11    (f) For the purposes of this subdivision, "maltreatment" means any of the following
146.12acts or omissions:
146.13    (1) physical abuse as defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (g);
146.14    (2) neglect as defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (f);
146.15    (3) sexual abuse as defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (d);
146.16    (4) mental injury as defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (m); or
146.17    (5) maltreatment of a child in a facility as defined in subdivision 2, paragraph (i).
146.18    (g) For the purposes of this subdivision, a determination that child protective
146.19services are needed means that the local welfare agency has documented conditions
146.20during the assessment or investigation sufficient to cause a child protection worker, as
146.21defined in section 626.559, subdivision 1, to conclude that a child is at significant risk of
146.22maltreatment if protective intervention is not provided and that the individuals responsible
146.23for the child's care have not taken or are not likely to take actions to protect the child
146.24from maltreatment or risk of maltreatment.
146.25    (h) This subdivision does not mean that maltreatment has occurred solely because
146.26the child's parent, guardian, or other person responsible for the child's care in good faith
146.27selects and depends upon spiritual means or prayer for treatment or care of disease
146.28or remedial care of the child, in lieu of medical care. However, if lack of medical care
146.29may result in serious danger to the child's health, the local welfare agency may ensure
146.30that necessary medical services are provided to the child.
146.31    (i) When determining whether the facility or individual is the responsible party, or
146.32whether both the facility and the individual are responsible for determined maltreatment in
146.33a facility, the investigating agency shall consider at least the following mitigating factors:
146.34    (1) whether the actions of the facility or the individual caregivers were according to,
146.35and followed the terms of, an erroneous physician order, prescription, individual care plan,
146.36or directive; however, this is not a mitigating factor when the facility or caregiver was
147.1responsible for the issuance of the erroneous order, prescription, individual care plan, or
147.2directive or knew or should have known of the errors and took no reasonable measures to
147.3correct the defect before administering care;
147.4    (2) comparative responsibility between the facility, other caregivers, and
147.5requirements placed upon an employee, including the facility's compliance with related
147.6regulatory standards and the adequacy of facility policies and procedures, facility training,
147.7an individual's participation in the training, the caregiver's supervision, and facility staffing
147.8levels and the scope of the individual employee's authority and discretion; and
147.9    (3) whether the facility or individual followed professional standards in exercising
147.10professional judgment.
147.11The evaluation of the facility's responsibility under clause (2) must not be based on the
147.12completeness of the risk assessment or risk reduction plan required under section 245A.66,
147.13but must be based on the facility's compliance with the regulatory standards for policies
147.14and procedures, training, and supervision as cited in Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota
147.15Rules.
147.16    (j) Notwithstanding paragraph (i), when maltreatment is determined to have been
147.17committed by an individual who is also the facility license holder, both the individual and
147.18the facility must be determined responsible for the maltreatment, and both the background
147.19study disqualification standards under section 245C.15, subdivision 4, and the licensing
147.20actions under sections 245A.06 or 245A.07 apply.
147.21(k) Individual counties may implement more detailed definitions or criteria that
147.22indicate which allegations to investigate, as long as a county's policies are consistent
147.23with the definitions in the statutes and rules and are approved by the county board. Each
147.24local welfare agency shall periodically inform mandated reporters under subdivision 3
147.25who work in the county of the definitions of maltreatment in the statutes and rules and any
147.26additional definitions or criteria that have been approved by the county board.

147.27    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10f, is amended to read:
147.28    Subd. 10f. Notice of determinations. Within ten working days of the conclusion
147.29of a family assessment, the local welfare agency shall notify the parent or guardian
147.30of the child of the need for services to address child safety concerns or significant risk
147.31of subsequent child maltreatment. The local welfare agency and the family may also
147.32jointly agree that family support and family preservation services are needed. Within ten
147.33working days of the conclusion of an investigation, the local welfare agency or agency
147.34responsible for assessing or investigating the report shall notify the parent or guardian
147.35of the child, the person determined to be maltreating the child, and if applicable, the
148.1director of the facility, of the determination and a summary of the specific reasons for
148.2the determination. When the investigation involves a child foster care setting that is
148.3monitored by a private licensing agency under section 245A.16, the local welfare agency
148.4responsible for assessing or investigating the report shall notify the private licensing
148.5agency of the determination and shall provide a summary of the specific reasons for
148.6the determination. The notice to the private licensing agency must include identifying
148.7private data, but not the identity of the reporter of maltreatment. The notice must also
148.8include a certification that the information collection procedures under subdivision 10,
148.9paragraphs (h), (i), and (j), were followed and a notice of the right of a data subject to
148.10obtain access to other private data on the subject collected, created, or maintained under
148.11this section. In addition, the notice shall include the length of time that the records will be
148.12kept under subdivision 11c. The investigating agency shall notify the parent or guardian
148.13of the child who is the subject of the report, and any person or facility determined to
148.14have maltreated a child, of their appeal or review rights under this section or section
148.15256.022 . The notice must also state that a finding of maltreatment may result in denial of a
148.16license application or background study disqualification under chapter 245C related to
148.17employment or services that are licensed by the Department of Human Services under
148.18chapter 245A, the Department of Health under chapter 144 or 144A, the Department of
148.19Corrections under section 241.021, and from providing services related to an unlicensed
148.20personal care provider organization under chapter 256B.

148.21    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10i, is amended to read:
148.22    Subd. 10i. Administrative reconsideration; review panel. (a) Administrative
148.23reconsideration is not applicable in family assessments since no determination concerning
148.24maltreatment is made. For investigations, except as provided under paragraph (e), an
148.25individual or facility that the commissioner of human services, a local social service
148.26agency, or the commissioner of education determines has maltreated a child, an interested
148.27person acting on behalf of the child, regardless of the determination, who contests
148.28the investigating agency's final determination regarding maltreatment, may request the
148.29investigating agency to reconsider its final determination regarding maltreatment. The
148.30request for reconsideration must be submitted in writing to the investigating agency within
148.3115 calendar days after receipt of notice of the final determination regarding maltreatment
148.32or, if the request is made by an interested person who is not entitled to notice, within
148.3315 days after receipt of the notice by the parent or guardian of the child. If mailed, the
148.34request for reconsideration must be postmarked and sent to the investigating agency
148.35within 15 calendar days of the individual's or facility's receipt of the final determination. If
149.1the request for reconsideration is made by personal service, it must be received by the
149.2investigating agency within 15 calendar days after the individual's or facility's receipt of the
149.3final determination. Effective January 1, 2002, an individual who was determined to have
149.4maltreated a child under this section and who was disqualified on the basis of serious or
149.5recurring maltreatment under sections 245C.14 and 245C.15, may request reconsideration
149.6of the maltreatment determination and the disqualification. The request for reconsideration
149.7of the maltreatment determination and the disqualification must be submitted within 30
149.8calendar days of the individual's receipt of the notice of disqualification under sections
149.9245C.16 and 245C.17. If mailed, the request for reconsideration of the maltreatment
149.10determination and the disqualification must be postmarked and sent to the investigating
149.11agency within 30 calendar days of the individual's receipt of the maltreatment
149.12determination and notice of disqualification. If the request for reconsideration is made by
149.13personal service, it must be received by the investigating agency within 30 calendar days
149.14after the individual's receipt of the notice of disqualification.
149.15    (b) Except as provided under paragraphs (e) and (f), if the investigating agency
149.16denies the request or fails to act upon the request within 15 working days after receiving
149.17the request for reconsideration, the person or facility entitled to a fair hearing under
149.18section 256.045 may submit to the commissioner of human services or the commissioner
149.19of education a written request for a hearing under that section. Section 256.045 also
149.20governs hearings requested to contest a final determination of the commissioner of
149.21education. For reports involving maltreatment of a child in a facility, an interested person
149.22acting on behalf of the child may request a review by the Child Maltreatment Review
149.23Panel under section 256.022 if the investigating agency denies the request or fails to act
149.24upon the request or if the interested person contests a reconsidered determination. The
149.25investigating agency shall notify persons who request reconsideration of their rights under
149.26this paragraph. The request must be submitted in writing to the review panel and a copy
149.27sent to the investigating agency within 30 calendar days of receipt of notice of a denial
149.28of a request for reconsideration or of a reconsidered determination. The request must
149.29specifically identify the aspects of the agency determination with which the person is
149.30dissatisfied. The hearings specified under this section are the only administrative appeal of
149.31a decision issued under paragraph (a). Determinations under this section are not subject to
149.32accuracy and completeness challenges under section 13.04.
149.33    (c) If, as a result of a reconsideration or review, the investigating agency changes
149.34the final determination of maltreatment, that agency shall notify the parties specified in
149.35subdivisions 10b, 10d, and 10f.
150.1    (d) Except as provided under paragraph (f), if an individual or facility contests the
150.2investigating agency's final determination regarding maltreatment by requesting a fair
150.3hearing under section 256.045, the commissioner of human services shall assure that the
150.4hearing is conducted and a decision is reached within 90 days of receipt of the request for
150.5a hearing. The time for action on the decision may be extended for as many days as the
150.6hearing is postponed or the record is held open for the benefit of either party.
150.7    (e) If an individual was disqualified under sections 245C.14 and 245C.15, on
150.8the basis of a determination of maltreatment, which was serious or recurring, and
150.9the individual has requested reconsideration of the maltreatment determination under
150.10paragraph (a) and requested reconsideration of the disqualification under sections 245C.21
150.11to 245C.27, reconsideration of the maltreatment determination and reconsideration of the
150.12disqualification shall be consolidated into a single reconsideration. If reconsideration
150.13of the maltreatment determination is denied and the individual remains disqualified
150.14following a reconsideration decision, the individual may request a fair hearing under
150.15section 256.045. If an individual requests a fair hearing on the maltreatment determination
150.16and the disqualification, the scope of the fair hearing shall include both the maltreatment
150.17determination and the disqualification.
150.18    (f) If a maltreatment determination or a disqualification based on serious or recurring
150.19maltreatment is the basis for a denial of a license under section 245A.05 or a licensing
150.20sanction under section 245A.07, the license holder has the right to a contested case hearing
150.21under chapter 14 and Minnesota Rules, parts 1400.8505 to 1400.8612. As provided for
150.22under section 245A.08, subdivision 2a, the scope of the contested case hearing shall
150.23include the maltreatment determination, disqualification, and licensing sanction or denial
150.24of a license. In such cases, a fair hearing regarding the maltreatment determination and
150.25disqualification shall not be conducted under section 256.045. Except for family child
150.26care and child foster care, reconsideration of a maltreatment determination as provided
150.27under this subdivision, and reconsideration of a disqualification as provided under section
150.28245C.22 , shall also not be conducted when:
150.29    (1) a denial of a license under section 245A.05 or a licensing sanction under section
150.30245A.07 , is based on a determination that the license holder is responsible for maltreatment
150.31or the disqualification of a license holder based on serious or recurring maltreatment;
150.32    (2) the denial of a license or licensing sanction is issued at the same time as the
150.33maltreatment determination or disqualification; and
150.34    (3) the license holder appeals the maltreatment determination or disqualification, and
150.35denial of a license or licensing sanction.
151.1    Notwithstanding clauses (1) to (3), if the license holder appeals the maltreatment
151.2determination or disqualification, but does not appeal the denial of a license or a licensing
151.3sanction, reconsideration of the maltreatment determination shall be conducted under
151.4sections 626.556, subdivision 10i, and 626.557, subdivision 9d, and reconsideration of the
151.5disqualification shall be conducted under section 245C.22. In such cases, a fair hearing
151.6shall also be conducted as provided under sections 245C.27, 626.556, subdivision 10i, and
151.7626.557, subdivision 9d .
151.8    If the disqualified subject is an individual other than the license holder and upon
151.9whom a background study must be conducted under chapter 245C, the hearings of all
151.10parties may be consolidated into a single contested case hearing upon consent of all parties
151.11and the administrative law judge.
151.12    (g) For purposes of this subdivision, "interested person acting on behalf of the
151.13child" means a parent or legal guardian; stepparent; grandparent; guardian ad litem; adult
151.14stepbrother, stepsister, or sibling; or adult aunt or uncle; unless the person has been
151.15determined to be the perpetrator of the maltreatment.

151.16    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 626.556, subdivision 10k, is amended to
151.17read:
151.18    Subd. 10k. Release of certain assessment or investigative records to other
151.19counties. Records maintained under subdivision 11c, paragraph (a), may be shared with
151.20another local welfare agency that requests the information because it is conducting an
151.21assessment or investigation under this section of the subject of the records.

151.22    Sec. 13. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
151.23(a) The revisor of statutes shall renumber each section of Minnesota Statutes listed
151.24in column A with the number listed in column B.
151.25
Column A
Column B
151.26
259.69
259A.05, subd. 5
151.27
260C.217
260C.139
151.28
260C.501
260C.177
151.29
260C.201, subd. 10
260C.202
151.30
260C.212, subd. 7
260C.203
151.31
260C.201, subd. 11a
260C.204
151.32
260C.212, subd. 4
260C.219
151.33
260C.212, subd. 5
260C.221
151.34
260C.213
260C.223
151.35
260C.206
260C.225
151.36
260C.212, subd. 8
260C.227
152.1
260C.212, subd. 6
260C.521, subd. 4
152.2
260C.205
260D.11
152.3(b) The revisor of statutes shall make necessary cross-reference changes in
152.4Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota Rules consistent with the numbering in articles 1 and
152.52 and the renumbering in paragraph (a).

152.6    Sec. 14. REPEALER.
152.7(a) Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 256.022; 259.67; 259.71; 260C.201,
152.8subdivision 11; 260C.215, subdivision 2; and 260C.456, are repealed.
152.9(b) Minnesota Rules, parts 9560.0071; 9560.0082; 9560.0083; 9560.0091;
152.109560.0093, subparts 1, 3, and 4; 9560.0101; and 9560.0102, are repealed.

152.11    Sec. 15. EFFECTIVE DATE.
152.12This article is effective August 1, 2012.

152.13ARTICLE 7
152.14CHILD CARE

152.15    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.09, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
152.16    Subd. 7. Date of eligibility for assistance. (a) The date of eligibility for child care
152.17assistance under this chapter is the later of the date the application was signed received by
152.18the county; the beginning date of employment, education, or training; the date the infant is
152.19born for applicants to the at-home infant care program; or the date a determination has
152.20been made that the applicant is a participant in employment and training services under
152.21Minnesota Rules, part 3400.0080, or chapter 256J.
152.22    (b) Payment ceases for a family under the at-home infant child care program when a
152.23family has used a total of 12 months of assistance as specified under section 119B.035.
152.24Payment of child care assistance for employed persons on MFIP is effective the date of
152.25employment or the date of MFIP eligibility, whichever is later. Payment of child care
152.26assistance for MFIP or DWP participants in employment and training services is effective
152.27the date of commencement of the services or the date of MFIP or DWP eligibility,
152.28whichever is later. Payment of child care assistance for transition year child care must be
152.29made retroactive to the date of eligibility for transition year child care.
152.30(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), payment of child care assistance for participants
152.31eligible under section 119B.05 may only be made retroactive for a maximum of six
152.32months from the date of application for child care assistance.

153.1    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.12, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
153.2    Subdivision 1. Fee schedule. All changes to parent fees must be implemented on
153.3the first Monday of the service period following the effective date of the change.
153.4    PARENT FEE SCHEDULE. The parent fee schedule is as follows, except as noted
153.5in subdivision 2:
153.6
153.7
153.8
Income Range (as a percent of the state
median income, except at the start of the
first tier)
Co-payment (as a percentage of adjusted
gross income)
153.9
0-74.99% of federal poverty guidelines
$0/month biweekly
153.10
75.00-99.99% of federal poverty guidelines
$5/month $2/biweekly
153.11
153.12
100.00% of federal poverty
guidelines-27.72%
2.61%
153.13
27.73-29.04%
2.61%
153.14
29.05-30.36%
2.61%
153.15
30.37-31.68%
2.61%
153.16
31.69-33.00%
2.91%
153.17
33.01-34.32%
2.91%
153.18
34.33-35.65%
2.91%
153.19
35.66-36.96%
2.91%
153.20
36.97-38.29%
3.21%
153.21
38.30-39.61%
3.21%
153.22
39.62-40.93%
3.21%
153.23
40.94-42.25%
3.84%
153.24
42.26-43.57%
3.84%
153.25
43.58-44.89%
4.46%
153.26
44.90-46.21%
4.76%
153.27
46.22-47.53%
5.05%
153.28
47.54-48.85%
5.65%
153.29
48.86-50.17%
5.95%
153.30
50.18-51.49%
6.24%
153.31
51.50-52.81%
6.84%
153.32
52.82-54.13%
7.58%
153.33
54.14-55.45%
8.33%
153.34
55.46-56.77%
9.20%
153.35
56.78-58.09%
10.07%
153.36
58.10-59.41%
10.94%
153.37
59.42-60.73%
11.55%
153.38
60.74-62.06%
12.16%
153.39
62.07-63.38%
12.77%
153.40
63.39-64.70%
13.38%
153.41
64.71-66.99 67.00%
14.00%
153.42
Greater than 67.00%
ineligible
154.1    A family's monthly biweekly co-payment fee is the fixed percentage established for
154.2the income range multiplied by the highest possible income within that income range.

154.3    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.12, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
154.4    Subd. 2. Parent fee. A family must be assessed a parent fee for each service period.
154.5A family's parent fee must be a fixed percentage of its annual gross income. Parent fees
154.6must apply to families eligible for child care assistance under sections 119B.03 and
154.7119B.05 . Income must be as defined in section 119B.011, subdivision 15. The fixed
154.8percent is based on the relationship of the family's annual gross income to 100 percent
154.9of the annual state median income. Parent fees must begin at 75 percent of the poverty
154.10level. The minimum parent fees for families between 75 percent and 100 percent of
154.11poverty level must be $5 per month $2 per biweekly period. Parent fees must provide
154.12for graduated movement to full payment. Payment of part or all of a family's parent
154.13fee directly to the family's child care provider on behalf of the family by a source other
154.14than the family shall not affect the family's eligibility for child care assistance, and the
154.15amount paid shall be excluded from the family's income. Child care providers who accept
154.16third-party payments must maintain family specific documentation of payment source,
154.17amount, and time period covered by the payment.

154.18    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.125, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
154.19    Subd. 1a. Background study required. This subdivision only applies to legal,
154.20nonlicensed family child care providers. Prior to authorization, and as part of each
154.21reauthorization required in subdivision 1, the county shall perform a background study on
154.22every member of the provider's household who is age 13 and older. The background study
154.23shall be conducted according to the procedures under subdivision 2. The county shall also
154.24perform a background study on an individual who has reached age ten but is not yet age
154.2513 and is living in the household where the nonlicensed child care will be provided when
154.26the county has reasonable cause as defined under section 245C.02, subdivision 15.

154.27    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.125, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
154.28    Subd. 2. Persons who cannot be authorized. (a) When any member of the
154.29legal, nonlicensed family child care provider's household meets any of the conditions
154.30under paragraphs (b) to (n), the provider must not be authorized as a legal nonlicensed
154.31family child care provider. To determine whether any of the listed conditions exist, the
154.32county must request information about the provider and other household members for
154.33whom a background study is required under subdivision 1a from the Bureau of Criminal
155.1Apprehension, the juvenile courts, and social service agencies. When one of the listed
155.2entities does not maintain information on a statewide basis, the county must contact
155.3the entity in the county where the provider resides and any other county in which the
155.4provider or any household member previously resided in the past year. For purposes of
155.5this subdivision, a finding that a delinquency petition is proven in juvenile court must be
155.6considered a conviction in state district court. The provider seeking authorization under
155.7this section shall collect the information required under section 245C.05, subdivision 1,
155.8and forward the information to the county agency. The background study must include
155.9a review of the information required under section 245C.08, subdivisions 2, 3, and 4,
155.10paragraph (b). A nonlicensed family child care provider is not authorized under this
155.11section if any household member who is the subject of a background study is determined
155.12to have a disqualifying characteristic under paragraphs (b) to (e) or under section 245C.14
155.13or 245C.15. If a county has determined that a provider is able to be authorized in that
155.14county, and a family in another county later selects that provider, the provider is able to
155.15be authorized in the second county without undergoing a new background investigation
155.16unless one of the following conditions exists:
155.17    (1) two years have passed since the first authorization;
155.18    (2) another person age 13 or older has joined the provider's household since the
155.19last authorization;
155.20    (3) a current household member has turned 13 since the last authorization; or
155.21    (4) there is reason to believe that a household member has a factor that prevents
155.22authorization.
155.23    (b) The person has been convicted of one of the following offenses or has admitted to
155.24committing or a preponderance of the evidence indicates that the person has committed an
155.25act that meets the definition of one of the following offenses: sections 609.185 to 609.195,
155.26murder in the first, second, or third degree; 609.2661 to 609.2663, murder of an unborn
155.27child in the first, second, or third degree; 609.322, solicitation, inducement, promotion
155.28of prostitution, or receiving profit from prostitution; 609.342 to 609.345, criminal sexual
155.29conduct in the first, second, third, or fourth degree; 609.352, solicitation of children to
155.30engage in sexual conduct; 609.365, incest; 609.377, felony malicious punishment of a
155.31child; 617.246, use of minors in sexual performance; 617.247, possession of pictorial
155.32representation of a minor; 609.2242 to 609.2243, felony domestic assault; a felony offense
155.33of spousal abuse; a felony offense of child abuse or neglect; a felony offense of a crime
155.34against children; or an attempt or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses as defined in
155.35Minnesota Statutes; or an offense in any other state or country where the elements are
155.36substantially similar to any of the offenses listed in this paragraph.
156.1    (c) Less than 15 years have passed since the discharge of the sentence imposed for
156.2the offense and the person has received a felony conviction for one of the following
156.3offenses, or the person has admitted to committing or a preponderance of the evidence
156.4indicates that the person has committed an act that meets the definition of a felony
156.5conviction for one of the following offenses: sections 609.20 to 609.205, manslaughter
156.6in the first or second degree; 609.21, criminal vehicular homicide; 609.215, aiding
156.7suicide or aiding attempted suicide; 609.221 to 609.2231, assault in the first, second,
156.8third, or fourth degree; 609.224, repeat offenses of fifth-degree assault; 609.228, great
156.9bodily harm caused by distribution of drugs; 609.2325, criminal abuse of a vulnerable
156.10adult; 609.2335, financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult; 609.235, use of drugs to
156.11injure or facilitate a crime; 609.24, simple robbery; 617.241, repeat offenses of obscene
156.12materials and performances; 609.245, aggravated robbery; 609.25, kidnapping; 609.255,
156.13false imprisonment; 609.2664 to 609.2665, manslaughter of an unborn child in the first or
156.14second degree; 609.267 to 609.2672, assault of an unborn child in the first, second, or third
156.15degree; 609.268, injury or death of an unborn child in the commission of a crime; 609.27,
156.16coercion; 609.275, attempt to coerce; 609.324, subdivision 1, other prohibited acts, minor
156.17engaged in prostitution; 609.3451, repeat offenses of criminal sexual conduct in the fifth
156.18degree; 609.378, neglect or endangerment of a child; 609.52, theft; 609.521, possession of
156.19shoplifting gear; 609.561 to 609.563, arson in the first, second, or third degree; 609.582,
156.20burglary in the first, second, third, or fourth degree; 609.625, aggravated forgery; 609.63,
156.21forgery; 609.631, check forgery, offering a forged check; 609.635, obtaining signature
156.22by false pretenses; 609.66, dangerous weapon; 609.665, setting a spring gun; 609.67,
156.23unlawfully owning, possessing, or operating a machine gun; 609.687, adulteration; 609.71,
156.24riot; 609.713, terrorist threats; 609.749, stalking; 260C.301, termination of parental rights;
156.25152.021 to 152.022 and 152.0262, controlled substance crime in the first or second degree;
156.26152.023, subdivision 1, clause (3) or (4), or 152.023, subdivision 2, clause (4), controlled
156.27substance crime in third degree; 152.024, subdivision 1, clause (2), (3), or (4), controlled
156.28substance crime in fourth degree; 617.23, repeat offenses of indecent exposure; an attempt
156.29or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses as defined in Minnesota Statutes; or an
156.30offense in any other state or country where the elements are substantially similar to any of
156.31the offenses listed in this paragraph.
156.32    (d) Less than ten years have passed since the discharge of the sentence imposed for
156.33the offense and the person has received a gross misdemeanor conviction for one of the
156.34following offenses or the person has admitted to committing or a preponderance of the
156.35evidence indicates that the person has committed an act that meets the definition of a gross
156.36misdemeanor conviction for one of the following offenses: sections 609.224, fifth-degree
157.1assault; 609.2242 to 609.2243, domestic assault; 518B.01, subdivision 14, violation of
157.2an order for protection; 609.3451, fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct; 609.746, repeat
157.3offenses of interference with privacy; 617.23, repeat offenses of indecent exposure;
157.4617.241, obscene materials and performances; 617.243, indecent literature, distribution;
157.5617.293, disseminating or displaying harmful material to minors; 609.71, riot; 609.66,
157.6dangerous weapons; 609.749, stalking; 609.224, subdivision 2, paragraph (c), fifth-degree
157.7assault against a vulnerable adult by a caregiver; 609.23, mistreatment of persons
157.8confined; 609.231, mistreatment of residents or patients; 609.2325, criminal abuse of a
157.9vulnerable adult; 609.2335, financial exploitation of a vulnerable adult; 609.233, criminal
157.10neglect of a vulnerable adult; 609.234, failure to report maltreatment of a vulnerable adult;
157.11609.72, subdivision 3, disorderly conduct against a vulnerable adult; 609.265, abduction;
157.12609.378, neglect or endangerment of a child; 609.377, malicious punishment of a child;
157.13609.324, subdivision 1a, other prohibited acts, minor engaged in prostitution; 609.33,
157.14disorderly house; 609.52, theft; 609.582, burglary in the first, second, third, or fourth
157.15degree; 609.631, check forgery, offering a forged check; 609.275, attempt to coerce; an
157.16attempt or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses as defined in Minnesota Statutes; or
157.17an offense in any other state or country where the elements are substantially similar to
157.18any of the offenses listed in this paragraph.
157.19    (e) Less than seven years have passed since the discharge of the sentence imposed
157.20for the offense and the person has received a misdemeanor conviction for one of the
157.21following offenses or the person has admitted to committing or a preponderance of the
157.22evidence indicates that the person has committed an act that meets the definition of a
157.23misdemeanor conviction for one of the following offenses: sections 609.224, fifth-degree
157.24assault; 609.2242, domestic assault; 518B.01, violation of an order for protection;
157.25609.3232, violation of an order for protection; 609.746, interference with privacy; 609.79,
157.26obscene or harassing telephone calls; 609.795, letter, telegram, or package opening,
157.27harassment; 617.23, indecent exposure; 609.2672, assault of an unborn child, third degree;
157.28617.293, dissemination and display of harmful materials to minors; 609.66, dangerous
157.29weapons; 609.665, spring guns; an attempt or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses
157.30as defined in Minnesota Statutes; or an offense in any other state or country where the
157.31elements are substantially similar to any of the offenses listed in this paragraph.
157.32    (f) The person has been identified by the child protection agency in the county where
157.33the provider resides or a county where the provider has resided or by the statewide child
157.34protection database as a person found by a preponderance of evidence under section
157.35626.556 to be responsible for physical or sexual abuse of a child within the last seven years.
158.1    (g) The person has been identified by the adult protection agency in the county
158.2where the provider resides or a county where the provider has resided or by the statewide
158.3adult protection database as the person responsible for abuse or neglect of a vulnerable
158.4adult within the last seven years.
158.5    (h) (b) The person has refused to give written consent for disclosure of criminal
158.6history records.
158.7    (i) (c) The person has been denied a family child care license or has received a fine
158.8or a sanction as a licensed child care provider that has not been reversed on appeal.
158.9    (j) (d) The person has a family child care licensing disqualification that has not
158.10been set aside.
158.11    (k) (e) The person has admitted or a county has found that there is a preponderance
158.12of evidence that fraudulent information was given to the county for child care assistance
158.13application purposes or was used in submitting child care assistance bills for payment.
158.14    (l) The person has been convicted of the crime of theft by wrongfully obtaining
158.15public assistance or has been found guilty of wrongfully obtaining public assistance by a
158.16federal court, state court, or an administrative hearing determination or waiver, through a
158.17disqualification consent agreement, as part of an approved diversion plan under section
158.18401.065, or a court-ordered stay with probationary or other conditions.
158.19    (m) The person has a household member age 13 or older who has access to children
158.20during the hours that care is provided and who meets one of the conditions listed in
158.21paragraphs (b) to (l).
158.22    (n) The person has a household member ages ten to 12 who has access to children
158.23during the hours that care is provided; information or circumstances exist which provide
158.24the county with articulable suspicion that further pertinent information may exist showing
158.25the household member meets one of the conditions listed in paragraphs (b) to (l); and the
158.26household member actually meets one of the conditions listed in paragraphs (b) to (l).

158.27    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.125, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
158.28    Subd. 6. Record-keeping requirement. All providers receiving child care
158.29assistance payments must keep daily attendance records for children receiving child care
158.30assistance and must make those records available immediately to the county upon request.
158.31The attendance records must be completed daily and include the date, the first and last
158.32name of each child in attendance, and the times when each child is dropped off and picked
158.33up. To the extent possible, the times that the child was dropped off to and picked up from
158.34the child care provider must be entered by the person dropping off or picking up the child.
158.35The daily attendance records must be retained for six years after the date of service.
159.1A county may deny authorization as a child care provider to any applicant or rescind
159.2authorization of any provider when the county knows or has reason to believe that the
159.3provider has not complied with the record-keeping requirement in this subdivision.

159.4    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 119B.13, subdivision 1, is
159.5amended to read:
159.6    Subdivision 1. Subsidy restrictions. (a) Beginning October 31, 2011, the maximum
159.7rate paid for child care assistance in any county or multicounty region under the child care
159.8fund shall be the rate for like-care arrangements in the county effective July 1, 2006,
159.9decreased by 2.5 percent.
159.10    (b) Every year Biennially beginning in 2012, the commissioner shall survey rates
159.11charged by child care providers in Minnesota to determine the 75th percentile for
159.12like-care arrangements in counties. When the commissioner determines that, using the
159.13commissioner's established protocol, the number of providers responding to the survey is
159.14too small to determine the 75th percentile rate for like-care arrangements in a county or
159.15multicounty region, the commissioner may establish the 75th percentile maximum rate
159.16based on like-care arrangements in a county, region, or category that the commissioner
159.17deems to be similar.
159.18    (c) A rate which includes a special needs rate paid under subdivision 3 or under a
159.19school readiness service agreement paid under section 119B.231, may be in excess of the
159.20maximum rate allowed under this subdivision.
159.21    (d) The department shall monitor the effect of this paragraph on provider rates. The
159.22county shall pay the provider's full charges for every child in care up to the maximum
159.23established. The commissioner shall determine the maximum rate for each type of care
159.24on an hourly, full-day, and weekly basis, including special needs and disability care. The
159.25maximum payment to a provider for one day of care must not exceed the daily rate. The
159.26maximum payment to a provider for one week of care must not exceed the weekly rate.
159.27(e) Child care providers receiving reimbursement under this chapter must not be
159.28paid activity fees or an additional amount above the maximum rates for care provided
159.29during nonstandard hours for families receiving assistance.
159.30    (f) When the provider charge is greater than the maximum provider rate allowed,
159.31the parent is responsible for payment of the difference in the rates in addition to any
159.32family co-payment fee.
159.33    (g) All maximum provider rates changes shall be implemented on the Monday
159.34following the effective date of the maximum provider rate.

160.1    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 119B.13, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
160.2    Subd. 6. Provider payments. (a) The provider shall bill for services provided
160.3within ten days of the end of the service period. If bills are submitted within ten days of
160.4the end of the service period, payments under the child care fund shall be made within 30
160.5days of receiving a bill from the provider. Counties or the state may establish policies that
160.6make payments on a more frequent basis.
160.7(b) If a provider has received an authorization of care and been issued a billing form
160.8for an eligible family, the bill must be submitted within 60 days of the last date of service
160.9on the bill. A bill submitted more than 60 days after the last date of service must be
160.10paid if the county determines that the provider has shown good cause why the bill was
160.11not submitted within 60 days. Good cause must be defined in the county's child care
160.12fund plan under section 119B.08, subdivision 3, and the definition of good cause must
160.13include county error. Any bill submitted more than a year after the last date of service on
160.14the bill must not be paid.
160.15(c) If a provider provided care for a time period without receiving an authorization
160.16of care and a billing form for an eligible family, payment of child care assistance may only
160.17be made retroactively for a maximum of six months from the date the provider is issued
160.18an authorization of care and billing form.
160.19(d) A county may refuse to issue a child care authorization to a licensed or legal
160.20nonlicensed provider, revoke an existing child care authorization to a licensed or legal
160.21nonlicensed provider, stop payment issued to a licensed or legal nonlicensed provider, or
160.22may refuse to pay a bill submitted by a licensed or legal nonlicensed provider if:
160.23(1) the provider admits to intentionally giving the county materially false information
160.24on the provider's billing forms; or
160.25(2) a county finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the provider intentionally
160.26gave the county materially false information on the provider's billing forms.;
160.27(3) the provider is in violation of licensing or child care assistance program rules and
160.28the provider has not corrected the violation;
160.29(4) the provider submits false attendance reports or refuses to provide documentation
160.30of the child's attendance upon request; or
160.31(5) the provider gives false child care price information.
160.32(e) A county's payment policies must be included in the county's child care plan
160.33under section 119B.08, subdivision 3. If payments are made by the state, in addition to
160.34being in compliance with this subdivision, the payments must be made in compliance
160.35with section 16A.124.

161.1    Sec. 9. CHILD CARE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM RULE CHANGE.
161.2The commissioner shall amend Minnesota Rules, part 3400.0035, subpart 2, to
161.3remove the requirement that applications must be submitted by mail or delivered to the
161.4agency within 15 calendar days after the date of signature. The commissioner shall
161.5comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 14.389, in adopting the amendment.

161.6ARTICLE 8
161.7SIMPLIFICATION OF MFIP AND DWP

161.8    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.08, subdivision 11, is amended to
161.9read:
161.10    Subd. 11. Caregiver. "Caregiver" means a minor child's natural birth or adoptive
161.11parent or parents and stepparent who live in the home with the minor child. For purposes
161.12of determining eligibility for this program, caregiver also means any of the following
161.13individuals, if adults, who live with and provide care and support to a minor child when
161.14the minor child's natural birth or adoptive parent or parents or stepparents do not reside
161.15in the same home: legal custodian or guardian, grandfather, grandmother, brother, sister,
161.16half brother, half sister, stepbrother, stepsister, uncle, aunt, first cousin or first cousin once
161.17removed, nephew, niece, person of preceding generation as denoted by prefixes of "great,"
161.18"great-great," or "great-great-great," or a spouse of any person named in the above groups
161.19even after the marriage ends by death or divorce.

161.20    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.24, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
161.21    Subd. 2. Mandatory assistance unit composition. Except for minor caregivers
161.22and their children who must be in a separate assistance unit from the other persons in
161.23the household, when the following individuals live together, they must be included in
161.24the assistance unit:
161.25(1) a minor child, including a pregnant minor;
161.26(2) the minor child's minor siblings, minor half siblings, and minor stepsiblings;
161.27(3) the minor child's natural birth parents, adoptive parents, and stepparents; and
161.28(4) the spouse of a pregnant woman.
161.29A minor child must have a caregiver for the child to be included in the assistance unit.

161.30    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.32, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
161.31    Subd. 6. Recertification. (a) The county agency shall recertify eligibility in an
161.32annual face-to-face interview with the participant and. The county agency may waive the
162.1face-to-face interview and conduct a phone interview for participants who qualify under
162.2paragraph (b). During the interview the county agency shall verify the following:
162.3    (1) presence of the minor child in the home, if questionable;
162.4    (2) income, unless excluded, including self-employment expenses used as a
162.5deduction or deposits or withdrawals from business accounts;
162.6    (3) assets when the value is within $200 of the asset limit;
162.7    (4) information to establish an exception under section 256J.24, subdivision 9, if
162.8questionable;
162.9    (5) inconsistent information, if related to eligibility; and
162.10    (6) whether a single caregiver household meets requirements in section 256J.575,
162.11subdivision 3.
162.12(b) A participant who is employed any number of hours must be given the option of
162.13conducting a face-to-face or phone interview to recertify eligibility. The participant must
162.14be employed at the time the interview is scheduled. If the participant loses the participant's
162.15job between the time the interview is scheduled and when it is to be conducted, the phone
162.16interview may still be conducted.
162.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective October 1, 2012.

162.18    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.575, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
162.19    Subdivision 1. Purpose. (a) The Family stabilization services serve families who
162.20are not making significant progress within the regular employment and training services
162.21track of the Minnesota family investment program (MFIP) due to a variety of barriers to
162.22employment.
162.23    (b) The goal of the services is to stabilize and improve the lives of families at risk
162.24of long-term welfare dependency or family instability due to employment barriers such
162.25as physical disability, mental disability, age, or providing care for a disabled household
162.26member. These services promote and support families to achieve the greatest possible
162.27degree of self-sufficiency.

162.28    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.575, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
162.29    Subd. 2. Definitions. The terms used in this section have the meanings given them
162.30in paragraphs (a) to (d) and (b).
162.31    (a) "Case manager" means the county-designated staff person or employment
162.32services counselor.
162.33    (b) "Case management" "Family stabilization services" means the services
162.34programs, activities, and services provided by or through the county agency or through the
163.1employment services agency to participating families, including. Services include, but
163.2are not limited to, assessment as defined in section 256J.521, subdivision 1, information,
163.3referrals, and assistance in the preparation and implementation of a family stabilization
163.4plan under subdivision 5.
163.5    (c) (b) "Family stabilization plan" means a plan developed by a case manager
163.6and with the participant, which identifies the participant's most appropriate path to
163.7unsubsidized employment, family stability, and barrier reduction, taking into account the
163.8family's circumstances.
163.9    (d) "Family stabilization services" means programs, activities, and services in this
163.10section that provide participants and their family members with assistance regarding,
163.11but not limited to:
163.12    (1) obtaining and retaining unsubsidized employment;
163.13    (2) family stability;
163.14    (3) economic stability; and
163.15    (4) barrier reduction.
163.16    The goal of the services is to achieve the greatest degree of economic self-sufficiency
163.17and family well-being possible for the family under the circumstances.

163.18    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.575, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
163.19    Subd. 5. Case management; Family stabilization plans; coordinated services.
163.20    (a) The county agency or employment services provider shall provide family stabilization
163.21services to families through a case management model. A case manager shall be assigned
163.22to each participating family within 30 days after the family is determined to be eligible
163.23for family stabilization services. The case manager, with the full involvement of the
163.24participant, shall recommend, and the county agency shall establish and modify as
163.25necessary, a family stabilization plan for each participating family. Once a participant
163.26has been determined eligible for family stabilization services, the county agency or
163.27employment services provider must attempt to meet with the participant to develop a
163.28plan within 30 days.
163.29(b) If a participant is already assigned to a county case manager or a
163.30county-designated case manager in social services, disability services, or housing services
163.31that case manager already assigned may be the case manager for purposes of these services.
163.32    (b) The family stabilization plan must include:
163.33    (1) each participant's plan for long-term self-sufficiency, including an employment
163.34goal where applicable;
164.1    (2) an assessment of each participant's strengths and barriers, and any special
164.2circumstances of the participant's family that impact, or are likely to impact, the
164.3participant's progress towards the goals in the plan; and
164.4    (3) an identification of the services, supports, education, training, and
164.5accommodations needed to reduce or overcome any barriers to enable the family to
164.6achieve self-sufficiency and to fulfill each caregiver's personal and family responsibilities.
164.7    (c) The case manager and the participant shall meet within 30 days of the family's
164.8referral to the case manager. The initial family stabilization plan must be completed within
164.930 days of the first meeting with the case manager. The case manager shall establish a
164.10schedule for periodic review of the family stabilization plan that includes personal contact
164.11with the participant at least once per month. In addition, the case manager shall review
164.12and, if necessary, modify the plan under the following circumstances:
164.13    (1) there is a lack of satisfactory progress in achieving the goals of the plan;
164.14    (2) the participant has lost unsubsidized or subsidized employment;
164.15    (3) a family member has failed or is unable to comply with a family stabilization
164.16plan requirement;
164.17    (4) services, supports, or other activities required by the plan are unavailable;
164.18    (5) changes to the plan are needed to promote the well-being of the children; or
164.19    (6) the participant and case manager determine that the plan is no longer appropriate
164.20for any other reason. Participants determined eligible for family stabilization services must
164.21have access to employment and training services under sections 256J.515 to 256J.575, to
164.22the extent these services are available to other MFIP participants.

164.23    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.575, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
164.24    Subd. 6. Cooperation with services requirements. (a) A participant who is eligible
164.25for family stabilization services under this section shall comply with paragraphs (b) to (d).
164.26    (b) Participants shall engage in family stabilization plan services for the appropriate
164.27number of hours per week that the activities are scheduled and available, based on the
164.28needs of the participant and the participant's family, unless good cause exists for not
164.29doing so, as defined in section 256J.57, subdivision 1. The appropriate number of hours
164.30must be based on the participant's plan.
164.31    (c) The case manager county agency or employment services agency shall review
164.32the participant's progress toward the goals in the family stabilization plan every six
164.33months to determine whether conditions have changed, including whether revisions to
164.34the plan are needed.
165.1    (d) A participant's requirement to comply with any or all family stabilization plan
165.2requirements under this subdivision is excused when the case management services,
165.3training and educational services, or family support services identified in the participant's
165.4family stabilization plan are unavailable for reasons beyond the control of the participant,
165.5including when money appropriated is not sufficient to provide the services.

165.6    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.575, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
165.7    Subd. 8. Funding. (a) The commissioner of human services shall treat MFIP
165.8expenditures made to or on behalf of any minor child under this section, who is part of a
165.9household that meets criteria in subdivision 3, as expenditures under a separately funded
165.10state program. These expenditures shall not count toward the state's maintenance of effort
165.11requirements under the federal TANF program.
165.12    (b) A family is no longer part of a separately funded program under this section if
165.13the caregiver no longer meets the criteria for family stabilization services in subdivision
165.143, or if it is determined at recertification that a caregiver with a child under the age of six
165.15is working at least 87 hours per month in paid or unpaid employment, or a caregiver
165.16without a child under the age of six is working at least 130 hours per month in paid or
165.17unpaid employment, whichever occurs sooner.

165.18    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.621, is amended to read:
165.19256J.621 WORK PARTICIPATION CASH BENEFITS.
165.20    (a) Effective October 1, 2009, upon exiting the diversionary work program (DWP)
165.21or upon terminating the Minnesota family investment program with earnings, a participant
165.22who is employed may be eligible for work participation cash benefits of $25 per month
165.23to assist in meeting the family's basic needs as the participant continues to move toward
165.24self-sufficiency.
165.25    (b) To be eligible for work participation cash benefits, the participant shall not
165.26receive MFIP or diversionary work program assistance during the month and the
165.27participant or participants must meet the following work requirements:
165.28    (1) if the participant is a single caregiver and has a child under six years of age, the
165.29participant must be employed at least 87 hours per month;
165.30    (2) if the participant is a single caregiver and does not have a child under six years of
165.31age, the participant must be employed at least 130 hours per month; or
165.32    (3) if the household is a two-parent family, at least one of the parents must be
165.33employed an average of at least 130 hours per month.
166.1    Whenever a participant exits the diversionary work program or is terminated from
166.2MFIP and meets the other criteria in this section, work participation cash benefits are
166.3available for up to 24 consecutive months.
166.4    (c) Expenditures on the program are maintenance of effort state funds under
166.5a separate state program for participants under paragraph (b), clauses (1) and (2).
166.6Expenditures for participants under paragraph (b), clause (3), are nonmaintenance of effort
166.7funds. Months in which a participant receives work participation cash benefits under this
166.8section do not count toward the participant's MFIP 60-month time limit.

166.9    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.68, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
166.10    Subd. 7. Exclusive procedure. The procedure established by this section is
166.11exclusive of all other legal, equitable, and statutory remedies against the state, its political
166.12subdivisions, or employees of the state or its political subdivisions. The claimant shall
166.13not be entitled to seek damages from any state, county, tribal, or reservation insurance
166.14policy or self-insurance program. A provider who accepts or agrees to accept an injury
166.15protection program payment for services provided to an individual must not require any
166.16payment from the individual.

166.17    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256J.95, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
166.18    Subd. 3. Eligibility for diversionary work program. (a) Except for the categories
166.19of family units listed below in clauses (1) to (8), all family units who apply for cash
166.20benefits and who meet MFIP eligibility as required in sections 256J.11 to 256J.15 are
166.21eligible and must participate in the diversionary work program. Family units or individuals
166.22that are not eligible for the diversionary work program include:
166.23    (1) child only cases;
166.24    (2) a single-parent family unit units that includes include a child under 12 months of
166.25age. A parent is eligible for this exception once in a parent's lifetime;
166.26    (3) family units with a minor parent without a high school diploma or its equivalent;
166.27    (4) family units with an 18- or 19-year-old caregiver without a high school diploma
166.28or its equivalent who chooses to have an employment plan with an education option;
166.29    (5) a caregiver age 60 or over;
166.30    (6) (5) family units with a caregiver who received DWP benefits in within the 12
166.31months prior to the month the family applied for DWP, except as provided in paragraph (c);
166.32    (7) (6) family units with a caregiver who received MFIP within the 12 months prior
166.33to the month the family unit applied for DWP;
167.1    (8) a (7) family unit units with a caregiver who received 60 or more months of
167.2TANF assistance; and
167.3    (9) (8) family units with a caregiver who is disqualified from the work participation
167.4cash benefit program, DWP, or MFIP due to fraud; and.
167.5    (10) refugees and asylees as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, part
167.6400, subpart d, section 400.43, who arrived in the United States in the 12 months prior to
167.7the date of application for family cash assistance.
167.8    (b) A two-parent family must participate in DWP unless both caregivers meet the
167.9criteria for an exception under paragraph (a), clauses (1) through (5), or the family unit
167.10includes a parent who meets the criteria in paragraph (a), clause (6), (7), (8), (9), or (10).
167.11    (c) Once DWP eligibility is determined, the four months run consecutively. If a
167.12participant leaves the program for any reason and reapplies during the four-month period,
167.13the county must redetermine eligibility for DWP.
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