Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Introduction
Under Title IV-E of the federal Social Security Act (Title IV-E), states that
meet certain conditions specified in Title IV-E and the regulations promulgated
under Title IV-E are reimbursed for the cost of providing care for children placed in
foster homes, treatment foster homes, group homes, child caring institutions, secure
detention facilities, or shelter care facilities (out-of-home placements). Recently,
the federal department of health and human services promulgated regulations
implementing the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (ASFA), which amended
Title IV-E. This bill conforms certain provisions of the Children's Code and the
Juvenile Justice Code relating to children placed in out-of-home placements to
conform those provisions to ASFA and its implementing regulations.
Permanency planning
Under current law, for each child living in an out-of-home placement, the
county department of human services or social services, the licensed child welfare
agency, the department of health and family services, in a county having a population
of 500,000 or more, or the department of corrections, in the case of a child who has
been adjudged delinquent, (collectively "agency") that placed the child or arranged
the placement of the child or the agency assigned primary responsibility for
providing services to the child must prepare a permanency plan for the child, which
is a plan designed to ensure that the child is reunified with his or her family
whenever appropriate or that the child quickly attains a placement or home
providing long-term stability. A permanency plan must be prepared within 60 days
after the date on which the child was first held in physical custody or placed outside
the home under an order of the court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under the
Children's Code and the Juvenile Justice Code (juvenile court) and must be prepared
if the child is being held under a physical custody order of the juvenile court, is under
the guardianship, legal custody, or supervision of an agency, is placed under a
voluntary agreement between the child's parents and an agency, or meets the
requirements for aid under the former aid to families with dependent children

program. This bill requires a permanency plan to be prepared for a child living in
the home of a relative, other than a parent, who meets any of those requirements.
The bill also requires a permanency plan to be prepared within 60 days after a child
was first removed from his or her home or, in the case of a child who on removal from
the home is first placed in a secure detention facility or secured correctional facility
for 60 days or more and then moved to a nonsecured out-of-home placement, within
60 days after the child was moved to the nonsecured placement.
A permanency plan must describe, among other things, the services that were
provided to prevent the placement of the child outside the home, the services that
have been and will be provided to make it possible for the child to return safely to the
home, and the conditions, if any, upon which the child will be returned to the home.
This bill requires the permanency plan to include certain additional information
including the goal or goals of the permanency plan, with those goals being return of
the child to the home or placement of the child for adoption, with a guardian, in the
home of a relative, or in some other alternative permanent placement. If a goal of
the permanency plan is any goal other than return of the child to the home, the
permanency plan must include the rationale for deciding on that goal and, if the goal
of the permanency plan is some other alternative permanent placement, the
permanency plan must document a compelling reason for not pursuing return of the
child to the home or placement of the child for adoption, with a guardian, or with a
relative.
The bill also requires a permanency plan to include a description of the
programs and services that are or will be provided to assist a child 15 years of age
or over in preparing for the transition from out-of-home care to independent living.
In addition, under the bill, if as a result of the child's placement the child has been
or will be transferred from his or her school, the permanency plan must include
documentation that the placement would be in the child's best interests or that a
placement that would maintain the child in his or her school is unavailable or
inappropriate. Finally, the bill requires the permanency plan to include the name,
address, and telephone number of the child's parent, guardian, and legal custodian,
the date on which the child was removed from his or her home and the date on which
the child was placed in out-of-home care, and certain educational and medical
information relating to the child.
Under current law, the juvenile court or a panel appointed by the juvenile court
must review a child's permanency plan every six months to determine, among other
things, the continuing necessity for and appropriateness of the placement, the
progress being made toward eliminating the causes of the child's placement and
returning the child to the home or obtaining a permanent placement for the child,
and whether reasonable efforts are being made to make it possible for the child to
return to his or her home. This bill requires the juvenile court or panel, in reviewing
a child's permanency plan, to determine whether reasonable efforts are being made
to achieve the goal of the child's permanency plan, whether the goal is return of the
child to the home or placement of the child for adoption, with a guardian, in the home
of a relative, or in some other alternative placement.

The bill also requires the juvenile court to hold a hearing to review a child's
permanency plan not later than 12 months after the child is removed from the home
and every 12 months after that hearing, which hearing may be held instead of or in
addition to review required under current law.
Contrary-to-welfare and reasonable-efforts findings
Under current law, a dispositional order of the juvenile court placing a child
outside the home must include a finding that continued placement of the child in the
home would be contrary to the welfare of the child and a finding as to whether the
agency primarily responsible for providing services under a juvenile court order has
made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child from the home or, if
applicable, a finding as to whether the agency has made reasonable efforts to make
it possible for the child to return safely to his or her home. The juvenile court,
however, is not required to find that those reasonable efforts have been made with
respect to a parent if the juvenile court finds that the parent has committed certain
crimes of homicide against a child of the parent; has committed battery, sexual
assault, or physical or sexual abuse resulting in great bodily harm or substantial
bodily harm to the child or to another child of the parent; has had his or her parental
rights terminated with respect to another child; or has subjected the child to
aggravated circumstances, which are defined as including criminal abandonment,
torture, chronic abuse, and sexual abuse. If the juvenile court finds that any of those
circumstances applies to a parent, the juvenile court must hold a hearing within 30
days after the date of that finding to determine the permanency plan for the child.
This bill requires a dispositional order that places a child outside the home to
include a finding that the agency has made reasonable efforts to achieve the goal of
the child's permanency plan, unless return of the child to the home is the goal of the
permanency plan and a circumstance applies to a parent under which reasonable
efforts to return the child to the home are not required. If the juvenile court finds
that such a circumstance applies to a parent, the dispositional order must include
a determination that the agency is not required to make those reasonable efforts with
respect to the parent.
In addition, the bill requires the juvenile court to make the same
contrary-to-welfare and reasonable-efforts findings that the juvenile court is
required to make in a dispositional order placing a child outside the home in a
temporary physical custody order holding a child outside the home, a change in
placement order changing the placement of a child from an in-home placement to an
out-of-home placement, and a consent decree maintaining a child placed outside the
home under a voluntary agreement or other living arrangement in that placement
or other living arrangement. If the juvenile court finds in the custody order, change
in placement order, or consent decree that a circumstance applies to a parent under
which reasonable efforts to return the child to the home are not required, the custody
order, change in placement order, or consent decree must include a determination
that the agency is not required to make those reasonable efforts with respect to the
parent and the juvenile court must hold a hearing within 30 days after the date of
the finding to determine the permanency plan for the child.

Finally, the bill requires the juvenile court to make the contrary-to-welfare
and reasonable-efforts findings on a case-by-case basis based on circumstances
specific to the child and to document or reference the specific information on which
those findings are based in the custody order, dispositional order, change in
placement order, or consent decree and also in an order extending the dispositional
order of a child placed outside the home, an order appointing a relative as the
guardian of a child in need of protection or services, and a sanction order placing a
child in a place of nonsecure custody. The bill further provides that such an order or
consent decree that merely references the statutes without documenting or
referencing that specific information in the order or consent decree or an amended
order or consent decree that retroactively corrects an earlier order or consent decree
that does not comply with those requirements is not sufficient to comply with those
requirements.
Termination of orders
Under current law, dispositional orders and extension orders of the juvenile
court terminate at the end of one year, unless the judge specifies a shorter period of
time, except that the judge may make a dispositional order placing a juvenile who
has been adjudged delinquent in a Type 2 child caring institution or a secured
correctional facility apply for up to two years or until the juvenile's 18th birthday,
whichever is earlier, and the judge must make a dispositional order placing a juvenile
who has committed a Class B felony in the serious juvenile offender program (SJOP)
apply for five years and must make a dispositional order placing a juvenile who has
committed a Class A felony in the SJOP apply until the juvenile reaches 25 years of
age. Under current law, a change in placement order may not extend the expiration
date of the original dispositional order.
Under this bill, a dispositional order, extension order, or change in placement
order that places or continues the placement of a child in an out-of-home placement
terminates when the child reaches 18 years of age, at the end of one year after its
entry, or, if the child is a full-time student at a secondary school or its vocational or
technical equivalent and is reasonably expected to complete the program before
reaching 19 years of age, when the child reaches 19 years of age, whichever is later,
unless the judge specifies a shorter period of time or the judge terminates the order
sooner. The bill does not affect the length of a dispositional order or extension order
that places or continues the placement of a child in an in-home placement or a
dispositional order placing a juvenile in a Type 2 child caring institution, a secured
correctional facility, or the SJOP. The bill also requires, in the case of a change in
placement from an out-of-home placement to an in-home placement of a child who
is subject to an original order the expiration date of which is more than one year after
the date of the change in placement order, the juvenile court to shorten the expiration
date of the original order to the date that is one year after the date of the change in
placement order or to an earlier date as specified by the court.
Time limits
Under current law, certain actions in a proceeding under the Children's Code
or the Juvenile Justice Code must take place within certain time limits. If a time
limit under the Children's Code is not met, the juvenile court loses competency to

exercise its jurisdiction and, therefore, must dismiss the proceeding. Under the
Juvenile Justice Code, however, failure to meet a time limit does not deprive the
juvenile court of competency to exercise its jurisdiction. Instead, the juvenile court
may grant a continuance for good cause shown, dismiss the petition with or without
prejudice, release the child from custody, or grant any other relief that the juvenile
court considers appropriate. Certain time periods, such as a period of delay resulting
from a continuance or an extension granted by the juvenile court, however, are
excluded in computing the time requirements under those codes.
This bill prohibits the juvenile court from granting a continuance or an
extension of a time limit specified in the Children's Code or the Juvenile Justice Code
and from excluding a period of delay in computing a time requirement under those
codes if the continuance, extension, or exclusion would result in the juvenile court
making an initial finding that reasonable efforts have been made to prevent the
removal of a child from his or her home, or an initial finding that those efforts were
not required to be made because a circumstance under which those efforts are not
required applies, more than 60 days after the date on which the child was removed
from the home. The bill also prohibits such a continuance, extension, or exclusion
if the continuance, extension, or exclusion would result in the juvenile court making
an initial finding that the agency primarily responsible for providing services to the
child has made reasonable efforts to achieve the goals of the child's permanency plan
more than 12 months after the date on which the child was removed from the home
or making any subsequent findings as to those reasonable efforts more than 12
months after the date of a previous finding as to those reasonable efforts. In addition,
the bill provides that a failure to meet one of those time limits under the Children's
Code does not deprive the juvenile court of competency to exercise its jurisdiction.
Instead, the juvenile court, while assuring the safety of the child, may dismiss the
petition with or without prejudice, release the child from custody, or grant any other
relief that the juvenile court considers appropriate.
Termination of parental rights filing requirements
Under current law, subject to certain exceptions, if a child has been placed in
an out-of-home placement for 15 of the most recent 22 months, if a child was
abandoned as an infant, or if a child's parent has committed certain crimes of
homicide against another child of the parent or has committed battery, sexual
assault, or physical or sexual abuse resulting in great bodily harm or substantial
bodily harm to the child or to another child of the parent, an agency or the district
attorney, corporation counsel, or other appropriate official designated by the county
board to prosecute termination of parental rights (TPR) proceedings must file a TPR
petition with respect to the child or, if a TPR petition with respect to the child has
already been filed, must join in the petition. A person responsible for filing TPR
petitions, however, is not required to file or join in a TPR petition with respect to such
a child if the child is being cared for by a relative, if a TPR is not in the best interests
of the child, or if the agency primarily responsible for providing services to the child
and the family is required to make reasonable efforts to make it possible for the child
to return safely home and has not provided the services necessary for that safe
return.

This bill, for purposes of determining whether a child has been placed outside
the home for 15 of the most recent 22 months, excludes any period during which the
child was a runaway from the out-of-home placement or the first six months of any
period during which the child was returned to his or her home for a trial home visit.
If the child has been placed outside the home for 15 of the most recent 22 months,
as calculated under the bill, the TPR petition must be filed or joined in by the last
day of that 15th month. Similarly, if the child was abandoned as an infant, the TPR
petition must be filed or joined in within 60 days after a court of competent
jurisdiction finds that the child was so abandoned and, if the parent has committed
certain crimes of homicide against another child of the parent or has committed
battery, sexual assault, or physical or sexual abuse resulting in great bodily harm or
substantial bodily harm to the child or to another child of the parent, the TPR
petition must be filed or joined in within 60 days after the juvenile court determines,
based on a finding that the parent has committed such a serious felony, that
reasonable efforts to make it possible for the child to return safely home are not
required. The bill provides, however, that the filing or joining of a TPR petition is
not required if grounds for an involuntary TPR do not exist.
Foster parent debarment
Under current law, a person who has committed a crime against children that
is a felony, felony spousal abuse, or certain felonies involving violence or who has
committed, within the past five years, a felony battery or a drug-related felony may
not be licensed to operate a foster home or treatment foster home, including a foster
home or treatment foster home that is a placement for adoption of a child for whom
adoption assistance will be provided after the adoption is finalized. This bill
prohibits a person who has committed, within the past five years, certain
alcohol-related felonies from being licensed to operate such a foster home or
treatment foster home. Those felonies include homicide by intoxicated use of a
firearm or vehicle, causing injury by intoxicated use of a vehicle, felony operation of
a motor vehicle while intoxicated (fifth offense or with a minor under 16 years of age
in the vehicle), causing injury or death by providing alcohol beverages to a minor,
providing false proof of age to an underage person for money or other consideration,
impersonating an employee of the department of revenue or the department of
justice with intent to commit a crime, manufacturing intoxicating liquor without a
permit, and using, selling, or otherwise disposing of alcohol redistilled from
denatured alcohol.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB461, s. 1 1Section 1. 48.21 (1) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,9,13
148.21 (1) (a) If a child who has been taken into custody is not released under
2s. 48.20, a hearing to determine whether the child shall continue to be held in custody
3under the criteria of ss. 48.205 to 48.209 shall be conducted by the judge or juvenile
4court commissioner within 48 hours of the time the decision to hold the child was
5made, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. By the time of the hearing
6a petition under s. 48.25 shall be filed, except that no petition need be filed where a
7child is taken into custody under s. 48.19 (1) (b) or (d) 2. or 7. or where the child is
8a runaway from another state, in which case a written statement of the reasons for
9holding a child in custody shall be substituted if the petition is not filed. If no hearing
10has been held within 48 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays,
11or if no petition or statement has been filed at the time of the hearing, the child shall
12be released except as provided in par. (b). A parent not present at the hearing shall
13be granted a rehearing upon request for good cause shown.
SB461, s. 2 14Section 2. 48.21 (3) (am) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,9,1915 48.21 (3) (am) The parent, guardian, or legal custodian may waive his or her
16right to participate in
the hearing under this section. Agreement in writing of the
17child is required if he or she is over 12.
After any waiver, a hearing rehearing shall
18be granted at the request of any the parent, guardian, legal custodian, or any other
19interested party for good cause shown.
SB461, s. 3 20Section 3. 48.21 (5) (b) 1. of the statutes, as affected by 2001 Wisconsin Act 16,
21is repealed and recreated to read:
SB461,9,2522 48.21 (5) (b) 1. A finding that continued placement of the child in his or her
23home would be contrary to the welfare of the child. Unless the judge or juvenile court
24commissioner finds that any of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to
255. applies, the order shall in addition include a finding as to whether the person who

1took the child into custody and the intake worker have made reasonable efforts to
2prevent the removal of the child from the home, while assuring that the child's health
3and safety are the paramount concerns, and a finding as to whether the person who
4took the child into custody and the intake worker have made reasonable efforts to
5make it possible for the child to return safely home or, if for good cause shown
6sufficient information is not available for the judge or juvenile court commissioner
7to make a finding as to whether those reasonable efforts were made to prevent the
8removal of the child from the home, a finding as to whether those reasonable efforts
9were made to make it possible for the child to return safely home and an order for
10the county department, department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or
11more, or agency primarily responsible for providing services to the child under the
12custody order to file with the court sufficient information for the judge or juvenile
13court commissioner to make a finding as to whether those reasonable efforts were
14made to prevent the removal of the child from the home by no later than 5 days after
15the date of the order.
SB461, s. 4 16Section 4. 48.21 (5) (b) 3. of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,10,2217 48.21 (5) (b) 3. If the judge or juvenile court commissioner finds that any of the
18circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies with respect to a parent,
19a determination that the county department, department, in a county having a
20population of 500,000 or more, or agency primarily responsible for providing services
21under the custody order is not required to make reasonable efforts with respect to the
22parent to make it possible for the child to return safely to his or her home.
SB461, s. 5 23Section 5. 48.21 (5) (c) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,11,624 48.21 (5) (c) The judge or juvenile court commissioner shall make the findings
25specified in par. (b) 1. and 3. on a case-by-case basis based on circumstances specific

1to the child and shall document or reference the specific information on which those
2findings are based in the custody order. A custody order that merely references par.
3(b) 1. or 3. without documenting or referencing that specific information in the
4custody order or an amended custody order that retroactively corrects an earlier
5custody order that does not comply with this paragraph is not sufficient to comply
6with this paragraph.
SB461, s. 6 7Section 6. 48.21 (5) (d) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,11,148 48.21 (5) (d) 1. If the judge or juvenile court commissioner finds that any of the
9circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies with respect to a parent,
10the judge or juvenile court commissioner shall hold a hearing within 30 days after
11the date of that finding to determine the permanency plan for the child. If a hearing
12is held under this subdivision, the agency responsible for preparing the permanency
13plan shall file the permanency plan with the court not less than 5 days before the date
14of the hearing.
SB461,11,1915 2. If a hearing is held under subd. 1., at least 10 days before the date of the
16hearing the court shall notify the child, any parent, guardian, and legal custodian
17of the child, and any foster parent, treatment foster parent, or other physical
18custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) of the child of the time, place, and purpose of the
19hearing.
SB461,12,520 3. The court shall give a foster parent, treatment foster parent, or other
21physical custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) who is notified of a hearing under subd.
222. an opportunity to be heard at the hearing by permitting the foster parent,
23treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian to make a written or oral
24statement during the hearing, or to submit a written statement prior to the hearing,
25relevant to the issues to be determined at the hearing. Any written or oral statement

1made under this subdivision shall be made upon oath or affirmation. A foster parent,
2treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian who receives a notice of a
3hearing under subd. 2. and an opportunity to be heard under this subdivision does
4not become a party to the proceeding on which the hearing is held solely on the basis
5of receiving that notice and opportunity to be heard.
SB461, s. 7 6Section 7. 48.255 (1) (f) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,12,147 48.255 (1) (f) If the child is being held in custody outside of his or her home,
8reliable and credible information showing that continued placement of the child in
9his or her home would be contrary to the welfare of the child and, unless any of the
10circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies, reliable and credible
11information showing that the person who took the child into custody and the intake
12worker have made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child from the
13home, while assuring that the child's health and safety are the paramount concerns,
14and to make it possible for the child to return safely home.
SB461, s. 8 15Section 8. 48.255 (1m) (f) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,12,2516 48.255 (1m) (f) If the expectant mother is a child and the child expectant
17mother is being held in custody outside of her home, reliable and credible information
18showing that continued placement of the child expectant mother in her home would
19be contrary to the welfare of the child expectant mother and, unless any of the
20circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies, reliable and credible
21information showing that the person who took the child expectant mother into
22custody and the intake worker have made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal
23of the child expectant mother from the home, while assuring that the child expectant
24mother's health and safety are the paramount concerns, and to make it possible for
25the child expectant mother to return safely home.
SB461, s. 9
1Section 9. 48.255 (2) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,13,42 48.255 (2) If any of the facts required under sub. (1) (a) to (cm) and (f) or (1m)
3(a) to (d) and (f) are not known or cannot be ascertained by the petitioner, the petition
4shall so state.
SB461, s. 10 5Section 10. 48.27 (3) (a) 1m. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,13,166 48.27 (3) (a) 1m. The court shall give a foster parent, treatment foster parent,
7or other physical custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) who is notified of a hearing under
8subd. 1. an opportunity to be heard at the hearing by permitting the foster parent,
9treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian to make a written or oral
10statement during the hearing, or to submit a written statement prior to the hearing,
11relevant to the issues to be determined at the hearing. Any written or oral statement
12made under this subdivision shall be made upon oath or affirmation.
A foster parent,
13treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) who
14receives a notice of a hearing under subd. 1. and an opportunity to be heard under
15this subdivision does not become a party to the proceeding on which the hearing is
16held solely on the basis of receiving that notice and opportunity to be heard.
SB461, s. 11 17Section 11. 48.315 (2m) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,13,2118 48.315 (2m) (a) No continuance or extension of a time limit specified in this
19chapter may be granted and no period of delay specified in sub. (1) may be excluded
20in computing a time requirement under this chapter if the continuance, extension,
21or exclusion would result in any of the following:
SB461,14,322 1. The court making an initial finding under s. 48.21 (5) (b) 1., 48.355 (2) (b) 6.,
23or 48.357 (2v) (a) 1. that reasonable efforts have been made to prevent the removal
24of the child from the home, while assuring that the child's health and safety are the
25paramount concerns, or an initial finding under s. 48.21 (5) (b) 3., 48.355 (2) (b) 6r.,

1or 48.357 (2v) (a) 3. that those efforts were not required to be made because a
2circumstance specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies, more than 60 days after
3the date on which the child was removed from the home.
SB461,14,94 2. The court making an initial finding under s. 48.38 (5m) that the agency
5primarily responsible for providing services to the child has made reasonable efforts
6to achieve the goals of the child's permanency plan more than 12 months after the
7date on which the child was removed from the home or making any subsequent
8findings under s. 48.38 (5m) as to those reasonable efforts more than 12 months after
9the date of a previous finding as to those reasonable efforts.
SB461,14,1510 (b) Failure to comply with any time limit specified in par. (a) does not deprive
11the court of personal or subject matter jurisdiction or of competency to exercise that
12jurisdiction. If a party does not comply with a time limit specified in par. (a), the
13court, while assuring the safety of the child, may dismiss the proceeding with or
14without prejudice, release the child from custody, or grant any other relief that the
15court considers appropriate.
SB461, s. 12 16Section 12. 48.32 (1) of the statutes is renumbered 48.32 (1) (a).
SB461, s. 13 17Section 13. 48.32 (1) (b) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,15,818 48.32 (1) (b) 1. If at the time the consent decree is entered into the child is placed
19outside the home under a voluntary agreement under s. 48.63 or is otherwise living
20outside the home without a court order and if the consent decree maintains the child
21in that placement or other living arrangement, the consent decree shall include a
22finding that placement of the child in his or her home would be contrary to the welfare
23of the child, a finding as to whether the county department, the department, in a
24county having a population of 500,000 or more, or the agency primarily responsible
25for providing services to the child has made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal

1of the child from the home, while assuring that the child's health and safety are the
2paramount concerns, unless the judge or juvenile court commissioner finds that any
3of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies, and a finding as
4to whether the county department, department, or agency has made reasonable
5efforts to achieve the goal of the child's permanency plan, unless return of the child
6to the home is the goal of the permanency plan and the judge or juvenile court
7commissioner finds that any of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to
85. applies.
SB461,15,159 2. If the judge or juvenile court commissioner finds that any of the
10circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies with respect to a parent,
11the consent decree shall include a determination that the county department,
12department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or agency primarily
13responsible for providing services under the consent decree is not required to make
14reasonable efforts with respect to the parent to make it possible for the child to return
15safely to his or her home.
SB461,15,2316 3. The judge or juvenile court commissioner shall make the findings specified
17in subds. 1. and 2. on a case-by-case basis based on circumstances specific to the
18child and shall document or reference the specific information on which those
19findings are based in the consent decree. A consent decree that merely references
20subd. 1. or 2. without documenting or referencing that specific information in the
21consent decree or an amended consent decree that retroactively corrects an earlier
22consent decree that does not comply with this subdivision is not sufficient to comply
23with this subdivision.
SB461, s. 14 24Section 14. 48.32 (1) (c) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,16,7
148.32 (1) (c) 1. If the judge or juvenile court commissioner finds that any of the
2circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies with respect to a parent,
3the judge or juvenile court commissioner shall hold a hearing within 30 days after
4the date of that finding to determine the permanency plan for the child. If a hearing
5is held under this subdivision, the agency responsible for preparing the permanency
6plan shall file the permanency plan with the court not less than 5 days before the date
7of the hearing.
SB461,16,128 2. If a hearing is held under subd. 1., at least 10 days before the date of the
9hearing the court shall notify the child, any parent, guardian, and legal custodian
10of the child, and any foster parent, treatment foster parent, or other physical
11custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) of the child of the time, place, and purpose of the
12hearing.
SB461,16,2313 3. The court shall give a foster parent, treatment foster parent, or other
14physical custodian described in s. 48.62 (2) who is notified of a hearing under subd.
152. an opportunity to be heard at the hearing by permitting the foster parent,
16treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian to make a written or oral
17statement during the hearing, or to submit a written statement prior to the hearing,
18relevant to the issues to be determined at the hearing. Any written or oral statement
19made under this subdivision shall be made upon oath or affirmation. A foster parent,
20treatment foster parent, or other physical custodian who receives a notice of a
21hearing under subd. 2. and an opportunity to be heard under this subdivision does
22not become a party to the proceeding on which the hearing is held solely on the basis
23of receiving that notice and opportunity to be heard.
SB461, s. 15 24Section 15. 48.33 (4) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,17,5
148.33 (4) Other out-of-home placements. (intro.) A report recommending
2placement of an adult expectant mother outside of her home shall be in writing. A
3report recommending placement of a child in a foster home, treatment foster home,
4group home, or child caring institution or in the home of a relative other than a
5parent
shall be in writing and shall include all of the following:
SB461, s. 16 6Section 16. 48.33 (4) (c) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,17,177 48.33 (4) (c) Specific information showing that continued placement of the child
8in his or her home would be contrary to the welfare of the child, specific information
9showing that the county department, the department, in a county having a
10population of 500,000 or more, or the agency primarily responsible for providing
11services to the child has made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child
12from the home, while assuring that the child's health and safety are the paramount
13concerns, unless any of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5.
14applies, and specific information showing that the county department, department,
15or agency has made reasonable efforts to achieve the goal of the child's permanency
16plan, unless return of the child to the home is the goal of the permanency plan and
17any of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies.
SB461, s. 17 18Section 17. 48.335 (3g) of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,18,819 48.335 (3g) At hearings under this section, if the agency, as defined in s. 48.38
20(1) (a), is recommending placement of the child in a foster home, treatment foster
21home, group home, or child caring institution or in the home of a relative other than
22a parent, the agency shall present as evidence specific information showing that
23continued placement of the child in his or her home would be contrary to the welfare
24of the child, specific information showing that the county department, the
25department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or the agency

1primarily responsible for providing services to the child has made reasonable efforts
2to prevent the removal of the child from the home, while assuring that the child's
3health and safety are the paramount concerns, unless any of the circumstances
4specified in s. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies, and specific information showing that
5the county department, department, or agency has made reasonable efforts to
6achieve the goal of the child's permanency plan, unless return of the child to the home
7is the goal of the permanency plan and any of the circumstances specified in s. 48.355
8(2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies.
SB461, s. 18 9Section 18. 48.355 (2) (b) 6. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,19,410 48.355 (2) (b) 6. If the child is placed outside the home, a finding that continued
11placement of the child in his or her home would be contrary to the health, safety and
12welfare of the child and, if sub. (2d) does not apply, a finding as to whether the county
13department, the department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or
14the agency primarily responsible for providing services under a court order has made
15reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child from the home, while assuring
16that the child's health and safety are the paramount concerns, or, if applicable,
17unless the court finds that any of the circumstances specified in sub. (2d) (b) 1. to 5.
18applies, and
a finding as to whether the county department, department, or agency
19primarily responsible for providing services under a court order has made reasonable
20efforts to make it possible for the child to return safely to his or her home achieve the
21goal of the child's permanency plan, unless return of the child to the home is the goal
22of the permanency plan and the court finds that any of the circumstances specified
23in sub. (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies. The court shall make the findings specified in this
24subdivision on a case-by-case basis based on circumstances specific to the child and
25shall document or reference the specific information on which those findings are

1based in the court order. A court order that merely references this subdivision
2without documenting or referencing that specific information in the court order or
3an amended court order that retroactively corrects an earlier court order that does
4not comply with this subdivision is not sufficient to comply with this subdivision
.
SB461, s. 19 5Section 19. 48.355 (2) (b) 6r. of the statutes is created to read:
SB461,19,116 48.355 (2) (b) 6r. If the court finds that any of the circumstances specified in
7sub. (2d) (b) 1. to 5. applies with respect to a parent, a determination that the county
8department, department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or
9agency primarily responsible for providing services under the court order is not
10required to make reasonable efforts with respect to the parent to make it possible for
11the child to return safely to his or her home.
SB461, s. 20 12Section 20. 48.355 (2b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,19,2213 48.355 (2b) Concurrent reasonable efforts permitted. A county
14department, the department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or
15the agency primarily responsible for providing services to a child under a court order
16may, at the same time as the county department, department, or agency is making
17the reasonable efforts required under sub. (2) (b) 6. to prevent the removal of the child
18from the home or to make it possible for the child to return safely to his or her home
,
19work with the department, a county department under s. 48.57 (1) (e) or (hm), or a
20child welfare agency licensed under s. 48.61 (5) in making reasonable efforts to place
21the child for adoption, with a guardian, with a fit and willing relative, or in some
22other alternative permanent placement.
SB461, s. 21 23Section 21. 48.355 (2c) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,20,724 48.355 (2c) (b) When a court makes a finding under sub. (2) (b) 6. as to whether
25the county department, department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or

1more, or
agency primarily responsible for providing services to the child under a
2court order has made reasonable efforts to make it possible for the child to return
3safely to his or her home
achieve the goal of the permanency plan, the court's
4consideration of reasonable efforts shall include, but not be limited to, the
5considerations listed under par. (a) 1. to 5. and whether visitation schedules between
6the child and his or her parents were implemented, unless visitation was denied or
7limited by the court.
SB461, s. 22 8Section 22. 48.355 (2d) (b) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,20,209 48.355 (2d) (b) (intro.) Notwithstanding sub. (2) (b) 6., the court need not is not
10required to
include in a dispositional order a finding as to whether the county
11department, the department, in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, or
12the agency primarily responsible for providing services under a court order has made
13reasonable efforts with respect to a parent of a child to prevent the removal of the
14child from the home, while assuring that the child's health and safety are the
15paramount concerns, or, if applicable, a finding as to whether the county department,
16department, or
agency primarily responsible for providing services under a court
17order
has made reasonable efforts with respect to a parent of a child to make it
18possible for the child to return
achieve the permanency plan goal of returning the
19child
safely to his or her home, if the court finds, as evidenced by a final judgment
20of conviction,
any of the following:
SB461, s. 23 21Section 23. 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,20,2322 48.355 (2d) (b) 1. That the parent has subjected the child to aggravated
23circumstances, as evidenced by a final judgment of conviction.
SB461, s. 24 24Section 24. 48.355 (2d) (b) 2. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,21,6
148.355 (2d) (b) 2. That the parent has committed, has aided or abetted the
2commission of, or has solicited, conspired, or attempted to commit, a violation of s.
3940.01, 940.02, 940.03, or 940.05 or a violation of the law of any other state or federal
4law, if that violation would be a violation of s. 940.01, 940.02, 940.03, or 940.05 if
5committed in this state, as evidenced by a final judgment of conviction, and that the
6victim of that violation is a child of the parent.
SB461, s. 25 7Section 25. 48.355 (2d) (b) 3. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,21,158 48.355 (2d) (b) 3. That the parent has committed a violation of s. 940.19 (2), (3),
9(4), or (5), 940.225 (1) or (2), 948.02 (1) or (2), 948.025, or 948.03 (2) (a) or (3) (a) or
10a violation of the law of any other state or federal law, if that violation would be a
11violation of s. 940.19 (2), (3), (4), or (5), 940.225 (1) or (2), 948.02 (1) or (2), 948.025,
12or 948.03 (2) (a) or (3) (a) if committed in this state, as evidenced by a final judgment
13of conviction,
and that the violation resulted in great bodily harm, as defined in s.
14939.22 (14), or in substantial bodily harm, as defined in s. 939.22 (38), to the child
15or another child of the parent.
SB461, s. 26 16Section 26. 48.355 (2d) (b) 4. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB461,21,1917 48.355 (2d) (b) 4. That the parental rights of the parent to another child have
18been involuntarily terminated, as evidenced by a final order of a court of competent
19jurisdiction terminating those parental rights
.
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