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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Ronan F. v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS, Elena F. v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS (12/15/2023) sp-7676

Ronan F. v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS, Elena F. v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS (12/15/2023) sp-7676

       Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

       Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

        303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

        corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

                  THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  



RONAN F.,                                               )     

                                                        )   Supreme Court Nos. S-18588/18628  

                           Appellant,                   )   (Consolidated)  

                                                        )     

         v.                                             )   Superior Court No.   

                                                        )   4FA- 19-00043/00044 CN  

STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT  )                              (Consolidated)  

OF FAMILY & COMMUNITY                                   )     

SERVICES, OFFICE OF                                     )   O P I N I O N  

CHILDREN'S SERVICES,                                    )     

                                                        )   No . 7676 - December 15, 2023  

                           Appellee.                    )  

                                                        )  

ELENA F.,                                               )     

                                                        )     

                           Appellant,                   )  

                                                        )  

         v.                                              )  

                                                        )  

STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT  )  

OF FAMILY & COMMUNITY                                   )  

SERVICES, OFFICE OF                                     )  

CHILDREN'S SERVICES,                                    )  

                                                        )  

                           Appellee.                    )  

                                                        )  

  

                 Appeals  from  the  Superior  Court  of  the  State  of  Alaska,  

                 Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Terrence P. Haas, Judge.  

  

                 Appearances:    Michael  L.  Horowitz,  Kingsley,  Michigan,  

                 for  Appellant  Ronan  F.    Katrina  Larsen,  Ketchikan,  for  

                 Appellant Elena F.  Mary Ann Lundquist, Senior Assistant  

                 Attorney  General,  Fairbanks,  and  Treg  Taylor,  Attorney  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

                 General, Juneau, for Appellee.  

  

                 Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                 Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                   

                 CARNEY, Justice.  

  



        INTRODUCTION  



                 The Office of Children's Services (OCS) removed two Indian children  



from their parents' home because of reported domestic violence.  The superior court  



terminated both parents' parental rights two years later.  The parents appeal, arguing  



that OCS failed to make active efforts to reunify the family.   Because OCS failed to  



make active efforts toward the father, we reverse the termination of his parental rights.   



We affirm the termination of the mother's parental rights.  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.       Background Leading to Removal of the Children  



                                              1 

                 Elena F. and Ronan F.   are the parents of two Indian children:  Yannis,  



                                                2 

born in 2016, and Yuri, born in 2018.    OCS received 14 reports of concern about the  



children's welfare between 2016 and early 2019.  Yannis tested positive for marijuana  



and alcohol when he was born; OCS took emergency custody of Yannis a few months  



later  due  to  concerns  of  alcohol  abuse  and  domestic  violence  at  home,  but  he  was  



returned to his parents in  February 2018.  Yuri tested positive for marijuana at birth,  



and in April 2018 OCS investigated concerns that Elena was neglecting him but did not  



substantiate the concerns.   



                                   

         1       We use pseudonyms to protect the family's privacy.  



        2        The  children  are  eligible  for  enrollment  in  Elena's  tribe,  making  them  

Indian  children  within  the  meaning  of  the  Indian  Child  Welfare  Act  (ICWA).    See  

25 U.S.C. § 1903(4) (" 'Indian child' means any unmarried person who is under age  

eighteen and is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is eligible for membership  

in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an Indian tribe.").  



                                                     -2-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

               OCS was aware of Elena's history of substance abuse and serious mental  



health issues.   OCS had received reports that Elena abused  substances while she was  



pregnant and while caring for the children, and that she was aggressive toward hospital  



staff when she was admitted for Yuri's birth.   



               OCS also knew that Ronan had struggled with substance abuse and mental  



health  issues,  including  long-term depression  that  sometimes  included symptoms of  



psychosis and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).    Ronan's distrust and paranoia  



had at times prevented him from receiving needed medical care.    



               In addition to the parents' substance abuse and mental health issues, OCS  



was  concerned  about  domestic  violence  in  the  family.    Ronan  and  Elena  had  both  



committed domestic violence in their relationship.  



               Ronan and Elena have each previously had their parental rights to other  



children terminated.  Elena's rights to children from a prior relationship were terminated  



in 2012.  Ronan's rights to children from a previous marriage were terminated in 2020,  



after several years of OCS involvement.   



               In  March  2019  Elena  was  arrested  after  she  physically  assaulted  her  



mother, who was watching the children.  Both children witnessed the assault, as did a  



bystander  who  called  911.    OCS  later  reported  that  Elena  had  been  intoxicated  for  



several days and that she had threatened to commit suicide.   



               When police arrived, Elena's mother was being treated by EMTs for a  



shoulder injury and scratches on her face.  Elena was inside the house with the children  



and refused to come to the door, and the police obtained a warrant.   



               An OCS caseworker  arrived after the police had  entered the home.  The  



caseworker observed that the children had injuries "consistent with being hit with an  



open hand."  The police reported to the caseworker that Yannis was wearing a urine- 



soaked  shirt,  and  there  were  feces  on  the  floor  in  the  kitchen  and  soiled  diapers  



throughout the home.   The bathtub was filled with dirty water and the bathroom sink  



contained cigarettes and ash.  Pills, a bag of marijuana,  a bottle of vodka  and energy  



                                               -3-                                          7676  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

drinks were out and open in front of the children.  Elena was arrested and charged with  



assault and child endangerment.   



                 OCS took emergency custody of Yannis and Yuri because Ronan had been  



                                                                                                          3 

arrested  a  week  earlier  for  a  domestic  violence  assault  and  remained  incarcerated.     



OCS  filed  an  emergency  petition  the  next  day  that  alleged  Yannis  and  Yuri  were  



                                                                                    4 

children in need of aid under AS 47.10.011 on a number of grounds.   OCS was unable  



to find a suitable relative or Native foster home, so the children were placed in a non- 



Native foster home.   



        B.       Ronan's Participation in Case Plan  



                 The family's initial caseworker met with Ronan in jail after OCS removed  



the children in March 2019.  The caseworker created a case plan for Ronan in May that  



required him to obtain a parental risk assessment, attend parenting classes, and establish  



stable housing.  The caseworker referred Ronan to agencies that provided the required  



services and worked with him to find housing options.   



                 Despite Ronan's initial mistrust, the caseworker was able to build rapport  



with  him  and  they  came  to  work  together  on  case  planning .    By  June  Ronan  had  



obtained a substance abuse assessment, started receiving mental health treatment, and  



signed releases of information for OCS.  Ronan met regularly with the caseworker and  



maintained good contact with her.  They created a new case plan together in September,  



which Ronan had largely completed by October.   



                 Ronan also had regular visits with the children during that time.    This  



caseworker testified that Ronan had a "good bond" with the children and came to visits  



with snacks and activities.  But after Elena showed up to one of his visits at a family  



                                   

        3        The case against Ronan was later dismissed.   



        4        These  included AS  47.10.011 subsections (2) (incarcerated parent), (6)  

(physical  harm),  (8)  (exposure  to  domestic  violence),  (9)  (neglect),  (10)  (substance  

abuse), and (11) (mental illness).  



                                                    -4-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

resource  center  unannounced,  visits  were  moved  from  the  "more  family-friendly"  



facility to OCS due to safety concerns, which the caseworker testified "was overall a  



detriment" to Ronan.  Elena's behavior at Yuri's scheduled ear surgery in October led  



to further OCS measures to protect the children and raised concerns about Ronan's  



ability to protect the children from Elena.   The caseworker testified that Ronan grew  



less  engaged  and  harder  to  reach  after  the  incident.    And  the  caseworker  was  soon  



reassigned in part because of that incident.   



                After  a  new  caseworker  was  assigned,  Ronan  continued  to  visit  the  



children regularly.   This caseworker testified that she had only sporadic contact with  



Ronan  even  though  the  record  showed  regular  email  contact  between  them.    And  



because the caseworker neither documented nor remembered what efforts she had made  



to  help  Ronan,  it  is  unclear  what  occurred  between  October  and  June  2020,  when  



                                          5 

another caseworker was assigned.    



                 The third and final caseworker met with Ronan only once after she was  



assigned in June.  At that meeting in September, they discussed Ronan's progress.  She  



filed the petition to terminate parental rights eleven days later.   



                 The  caseworker  tried  repeatedly  to  meet  with  Ronan  at  his  home  but  



refused his requests to meet at her office or by phone or videoconference instead.  Ronan  



told her that he was not comfortable with her coming to his home and that he needed to  



obtain permission for such visits because he was living at a church.  A behavioral health  



assessment Ronan completed in December 2020 had characterized him as "mistrustful,"  



noting  that  developing  trust  and  rapport  would  be  important  to  his  successful  



                                 6 

completion of a case plan.   But the caseworker attempted at least three unannounced  



visits to the church where she believed Ronan might be living despite his objections.   



                                   

        5        The caseworker was no longer employed by OCS at the time of trial and  

had not had the opportunity to review OCS's file.   

        6        The assessor also observed that Ronan had shown "the ability to commit  

to  his  treatment  plan  goals"  and  his  prognosis  for  recovery  was  fair.    The  assessor  



                                                    -5-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                 The caseworker testified that she tried to talk to Ronan about working on  



his case plan in the summer of 2021 but that he refused to talk to her.  She acknowledged  



that Ronan had requested that she communicate with him through his attorney but stated  



that it was "just not possible" for her to do so.  She testified that from November 2020  



until March 2021, her schedule only allowed her to meet with Ronan at his home.  She  



explained that drop-in home visits were convenient for her when she would already be  



in the area for other caseworker visits.   



                 Ronan began missing videoconference visits with his children in August  



       7 

2021.   When he began attending the visits regularly again a few months later, he often  



did not speak to the children or would point the camera to the ceiling or at a window.    



                 The  caseworker updated  Ronan's  case plan  in  February  2022,  the  first  



time since September 2019.  She noted that Ronan believed he had completed his case  



plan.  There is no evidence that the caseworker made any additional efforts.   



        C.       Elena's Participation in Case Plan  



                 The first case plan that OCS drafted for Elena in May 2019 required her  



to  complete  substance  abuse,  parental  risk,  and  child  development  assessments  and  



follow their recommendations, and obtain stable housing.  Based on Elena's resistance  



to mental health  treatment in a previous case, the caseworker did not include mental  



health services in the initial case plan.    Elena signed the case plan but later tried to  



withdraw her signature.    She refused to sign any releases of information for OCS to  



make referrals for treatment.   



                 Elena missed half of her scheduled visits with the children and was often  



uncooperative with OCS.  In June the transportation company that OCS used to get the  



children to visits refused to continue transporting them after Elena stalked employees,  



                                   

recommended  continued  outpatient  therapy  but  noted  that  Ronan  had  not  returned  

follow-up calls to arrange his participation.   

        7        Visits were not taking place in person at the time due to the pandemic.  



                                                    -6-                                                 7676  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

harassed them in the parking lot, and  allegedly  slashed their tires.  During supervised  



visits in July and August 2019,  Elena accused OCS caseworkers of kidnapping and  



abusing the children.  She called 911 during one of the visits while refusing to let go of  



one of the children.  The caseworker and an OCS supervisor later contacted Elena by  



phone to discuss the incident and set rules for future visits.  Elena refused to agree to  



the rules and her visitation was suspended.   



               By October Elena was "pretty steadily escalating unsafely" and had not  



made any progress on case plan goals.    The caseworker emailed and called Elena to  



collaborate on the case plan but "there was no productive conversation with her."  That  



month Yuri required ear surgery.  Ronan gave permission for the operation and he and  



Elena  met  Yuri  and  the  caseworker  at  the  surgery  center.    But  after  arriving  Elena  



confronted the caseworker and medical staff and raised her fist at the caseworker.  Elena  



was eventually removed from the surgery center by police.  OCS consulted with police  



and developed a safety plan for handling future interactions with Elena.   



               The caseworker created a new case plan for Elena later in October.  The  



new case plan required her to address domestic violence, mental health, and substance  



use concerns, and to attend parenting and child development classes and counseling in  



addition to the assessments required in the initial plan.  The caseworker later testified  



that the  case plan was designed to help  Elena "communicate without threatening or  



harassing people."   



               After  the  first  caseworker  was  removed  from  the  case  following  the  



incident at the surgery center, the next caseworker created another case plan for Elena  



in  January  2020.    The  new  case  plan  added  requirements  to  complete  an  anger  



management program and participate in random drug testing in addition to those in the  



previous case plans.  The case plan also required Elena to comply with visitation rules  



and communicate with OCS without threats.  The caseworker testified that she did not  



remember what other efforts she made in the case but  recalled that it was difficult to  



reach Elena and that their interactions often involved Elena yelling.   



                                               -7-                                           7676  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

               The third caseworker was assigned in June 2020.  Elena was incarcerated  



at that time and was not permitted to have in-person visits due to pandemic restrictions.  



The caseworker attempted to contact her by phone but Elena refused to speak to her.  In  



late June  Elena contacted the caseworker to let her know that she had been released  



from  jail  and  had  a  new  address.    The  caseworker  called  Elena  a  number  of  times  



between June and September, but Elena usually refused to speak to her.  When Elena  



did take calls from the caseworker, she would not talk about case planning or services.   



The caseworker attempted to set up visits with the children by videoconference, but  



Elena did not participate.   



               Elena returned to jail in October.  While there Elena told the caseworker  



that  she  believed  the  children  were  dead.    In  response  the  caseworker  sent  her  



photographs of the children to prove they were not dead.  The caseworker testified that  



she attempted to coordinate services with the correctional facility,  but was told that  



Elena would have to request the services.   



               In January 2021 the caseworker scheduled a time to go to the correctional  



facility to review a new case plan with Elena, including its changed goal of adoption  



rather than reunification.  But when the time came for their meeting, Elena refused to  



speak with the caseworker and refused to sign the evaluation.   



               In  August  another  meeting  scheduled  to  go  over  Elena's  case  plan  



progress had to be rescheduled after jail personnel informed the caseworker that Elena  



was behaving too aggressively to speak to her.  Elena refused to accept a scheduled call  



from the caseworker in September, but did speak to her in October.  During that call  



Elena  would  not  listen  to  the  caseworker  and  claimed  that  the  children  were  being  



burned, bruised, starved, and used in pornography.  Elena informed the caseworker that  



                                              -8-                                          7676  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

she  had  applied  for  a  substance  abuse  assessment  and  treatment,  but  was  on  the  



          8 

waitlist.     



                 The caseworker had brief phone calls with Elena in November, December,  



January, and February, but in each  call Elena was suspicious of OCS and would not  



discuss her case plan.  The caseworker testified that it was "very, very difficult" to have  



a  conversation  with  Elena  because  she  rapidly  switched  between  subjects,  talked  



"quickly  and  aggressively,"  and  was  "not  willing  to  engage  in  any  kind  of  a  real  



conversation about how [to] move forward."  Elena made various claims the caseworker  



could not substantiate, including that the children were being abused, that their daycare  



had been shut down because of child abuse, and that OCS had denied her a bus pass  



even though buses were free at the time.   



                 Elena was transferred to the Alaska Psychiatric Institute (API) in March  



2022 after she was found incompetent to stand trial in her criminal cases.  While at API  



Elena  participated  in  treatment,  including  classes  and  medication.    Although  the  



caseworker attempted to set up videoconference visits with the children while Elena  



was at API, they did not happen because Elena would not agree to OCS's rules for her  



behavior during visits.    The caseworker testified that Elena had not made significant  



progress on any case plan since the children were removed from her care.   



        D.       Proceedings  



                 1.      Pre-Trial Proceedings  



                 The children were adjudicated in need of aid in October 2019 after a two- 



day hearing.    Ronan stipulated that they were in need of aid under AS 47.10.011(9)  



(neglect); that OCS had made active efforts to prevent the breakup of the family; and  



that temporary OCS custody was in their best interests.  Elena, who was representing  



                                   

        8        The  record  indicates  that  Elena  applied  to  the  facility's  Residential  

Substance  Abuse  Treatment  Program  in  May  2021  but  remained  on  the  waitlist  

throughout her incarceration.   She later tried to find out about obtaining assessments  

outside the facility.   



                                                    -9-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

herself, failed to appear at the hearing, so the court accepted OCS's offer of proof.  The  



superior court found the children in need of aid under subsections (6) (physical harm),  



(8)  (exposure  to  domestic  violence),  (9)  (neglect),  (10)  (substance  abuse),  and  



(11) (mental illness); that OCS had made active efforts to prevent the breakup of the  



family; and that temporary OCS custody was in the children's best interests.   



                 2.      Termination Trial  



                 In September 2020 OCS filed a petition to terminate Elena's and Ronan's  



parental rights.  The trial was held over seven days between February and June 2022.   



OCS  presented  testimony  from  eight  OCS  workers,  a  forensic  toxicologist,  a  tribal  



representative, a child welfare expert, Elena's psychiatrist at API, the children's foster  



mother, and a police officer.    These witnesses testified to the facts described above,  



including the events giving rise to OCS's removal of the children, the efforts taken by  



OCS, and the parents' engagement.  Ronan and Elena each testified on their own behalf.   



                 OCS called a tribal representative as a cultural expert and a former OCS  



                                                                                          9 

caseworker  as  an  expert  in  child  welfare   as  required  by   ICWA.      The  tribal  



representative testified that although the Tribe had not been able to provide any services  



to the family because they were not living nearby, the Tribe supported the efforts that  



OCS had made to reunify the family.   She testified that the Tribe would support the  



children's return if the parents worked with OCS and treatment providers to address the  



issues that endangered the children.  The tribal representative testified that because the  



parents had not made the  necessary progress, the Tribe supported the foster parents'  



plan to adopt the children.  The child welfare expert testified that, based upon her review  



                                   

        9        See  25 U.S.C. § 1912(f) (requiring qualified expert witness testimony);  

25 C.F.R. § 23.122(a) (2023) ("A qualified expert witness must be qualified to testify  

regarding whether the child 's continued custody by the parent . . . is likely to result in  

serious emotional or physical damage to the child. . . . A person may be designated by  

the Indian child's Tribe as being qualified to testify to the prevailing social and cultural  

standards of the Indian child's Tribe.").  



                                                    -10-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

of records from OCS and treatment providers, returning the children to either parent  

would likely result in serious physical or emotional damage.10   



                 Ronan testified and disputed the third caseworker's account that he was  



difficult  to  reach.    He  testified  that  he  was  afraid  after  she  showed  up  at  his  home  



unannounced.    He  testified  that  he  explained  "at  least  half  a  dozen  times"  that  his  



experience in the military made him more wary of unannounced visits, but that the  



caseworker ignored his concerns and continued to do things how she wanted to "with  



no procedure."  He confirmed that he was willing to meet with her at the OCS office or  



by phone or videoconference.  He described feeling "bullied" by the tone of her emails  



and stated that she broke his trust.   



                 Ronan  testified  that  he  completed  extensive  counseling  and  classes  on  



parenting, domestic violence, and child development.   He testified that for a time he  



was juggling this case with the OCS case involving his older children, which involved  



different caseworkers, visitation schedules, and case plans, and was difficult to manage.   



He also testified that the videoconference visits had become difficult for him because  



the children were often distracted or off-camera, and he believed that undermined the  



bond he had developed with them through in-person visits.   



                 The court ordered Elena's phone line to be muted throughout trial because  



she was interrupting proceedings, using foul language, and making accusations against  



the court, parties, and counsel.  When Elena later testified, she disputed OCS's account  



of events.  She testified that her mother had lied about the assault that resulted in OCS  



taking emergency custody of the children.  She testified that OCS and the foster parents  



were harming the children.  She stated that she believed the children were dead.  OCS  



submitted into evidence court records showing Elena's prior convictions for crimes of  



dishonesty.   



                                   

        10       See 25 U.S.C. § 1912(f).  



                                                    -11-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

               3.      Termination Order  



               The superior court issued a written termination order in November 2022.   



Although the court acknowledged "the obvious love and concern both parents have  



expressed for their children," it found that termination of Elena's and Ronan's parental  



rights was in the children's best interests.   



               The    court   found   that   the   children   were    in  need   of   aid   under  



AS 47.10.011(10) (substance abuse) and (11) (mental health), and that the parents failed  



to remedy the conduct and conditions that made them children in need of aid.  The court  



noted  that  the  second  caseworker's  testimony  about  the  services  she  provided  the  



parents was "somewhat vague" and that the third caseworker did not document her  



efforts to engage with Ronan "as well as she might have."  But it found that there was  



clear and convincing evidence that OCS had made active efforts.  The court noted that  



although  those  efforts  "were  not  perfect  and  at  times  overly  rigid,"  "the  history  of  



parental  conduct,  the  likelihood  that  such  conduct  will  occur  in  the  future,  the  



significant time it would still take to address the conduct, the present placement, and  



the parents' stated unwillingness to work with OCS" made it "more likely than not" that  



termination was in the children's best interests.   



               The  court  concluded  that  OCS  proved  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt  that  



being  placed  in  their  parents'  custody  would  likely  result  in  serious  emotional  or  



physical  harm  to  the  children,  citing  ongoing  substance  abuse  and  mental  health  



concerns,      police    involvement,       and     their    repeated     incarcerations      and  



institutionalizations.   



               Elena and Ronan both appeal, arguing that the court erred by concluding  



OCS made active efforts.  In particular Ronan alleges the second and third caseworkers  



did not meet with him or refer him to services.   



        STANDARD OF REVIEW  



               "Whether [OCS] complied with the 'active efforts' requirement . . . is a  



                                               -12-                                           7676  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

mixed question of law and fact."11  We will affirm the superior court's factual findings  



in a CINA case so long as they are not clearly erroneous.12   "Whether the superior  



court's factual findings . . . satisfy ICWA is a question of law to which we apply our  

independent judgment."13  "We bear in mind at all times that terminating parental rights  



is a drastic measure."14  



        DISCUSSION  



        A.      It Was Error To Conclude That OCS Made Active Efforts To Reunify  

                Ronan With The Children.   



                Ronan argues that the last two caseworkers failed to make active efforts  



to reunify him with his children.  Before terminating parental rights to an Indian child,  



a court must find by clear and convincing evidence "that active efforts have been made  



to  provide  remedial  services  and  rehabilitative  programs  designed  to  prevent  the  

breakup of the Indian family and that these efforts have proved unsuccessful."15  ICWA  



defines active efforts as "affirmative, active, thorough, and timely."16  There is "no pat  



formula" for determining active efforts17  and we consider OCS's involvement with a  



                                  

        11      Maisy W. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

175 P.3d 1263, 1267 (Alaska 2008).   

        12      Dale H. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 235  

P.3d 203, 209 (Alaska 2010).   

        13      Mona J.  v.  State, Dep't  of Health  & Soc. Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s Servs.,  

511 P.3d 553, 560 (Alaska 2022) (quoting Ronald H. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc.  

Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 490 P.3d 357, 365 (Alaska 2021)).  

        14      Id. (quoting Jon S. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child.'s  

Servs., 212 P.3d 756, 761 (Alaska 2009) (internal quotations omitted)).  

        15      Mona J. , 511 P.3d at 560-61; see also  25  U.S.C.  §  1912(d); 25  C.F.R.  

§ 23. 120(a).  

        16      25 C.F.R. § 23.2.  



        17      Mona J. , 511 P.3d at 561 (quoting Philip J. v. State, Dep't of  Health &  

Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 314 P.3d 518, 527 (Alaska 2013)).  



                                                  -13-                                               7676  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

family "in its entirety."18  When OCS's efforts have been inconsistent over time, the  



court may consider whether the period when active efforts were made compensated for  

the time during which they were not.19  



                 Ronan does not dispute that the original caseworker made active efforts to  



assist  him.    And  that  caseworker  testified  positively  about  Ronan's  engagement  in  



completing his case plan, his faithfulness in visiting his children and devotion to them,  



and her good working relationship with him.  She also testified that changes OCS made  



in response to Elena's threats and behavior were "overall a detriment" to  Ronan, and  



she was removed from the case due to safety concerns resulting from Elena's behavior.   



                 But Ronan argues that after the  first caseworker was reassigned, neither  



of  the  subsequent  caseworkers  made  active  efforts.    He  argues  that  the  second  



caseworker made no efforts at all and that the third caseworker met with him only once  



and "artificially conditioned" the success of his  case on whether he would agree to a  



meeting at his home without pursuing other options he proposed, like a phone call or a  



scheduled meeting at the OCS office.  Ronan argues that his reluctance to work with  



the third caseworker did not excuse OCS's failure to make active efforts after the first  



caseworker left.  



                                   

         18      See, e.g., Maisy W. , 175 P.3d at 1268-69.  



         19      See, e.g., E.A.  v.  State, Div.  of Fam.  &  Youth  Servs.,  46  P.3d  986,  990  

(Alaska  2002)  (holding  that  OCS's failure to make active efforts over seven months  

was "insignificant in light of the extensive remedial efforts the state [had] provided  

throughout its involvement" with the family);  compare  Walker  E.  v.  State,  Dep't  of  

Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  Servs.,  480  P.3d  598,  607-08  (Alaska  2021)  

(explaining that failure in one area or for some period does not preclude active efforts  

finding over entirety of case), with Clark J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off.  

of Child.'s Servs., 483 P.3d 896, 904 (Alaska 2021) (holding that OCS's active efforts  

for first half of a four-year-long case did not excuse its failure to make any efforts for  

latter two years).  



                                                    -14-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

                 The  record  supports  Ronan's  argument  about  the  second  caseworker.   



There  is  no  evidence  the  second  caseworker  made  or  documented  any  efforts  with  



regard to Ronan.  The caseworker's vague memory that Ronan "sporadically" contacted  



her is unsupported and, despite a separate statutory requirement that OCS document its  

efforts, there is no documentation.20  OCS failed to demonstrate by clear and convincing  



evidence any efforts, let alone active ones, between October 2019 and June 2020.  



                 The third caseworker took over in June 2020, following this seven-month  



lapse in OCS efforts.  She met with Ronan for the first and only time three months later,  



in  September.    It  was  not  until  February  2022  that  she  updated  Ronan's  case  plan,  



despite OCS's policy to update case plans every six months.   She acknowledged that  



Ronan had been engaged in case planning and services before the initial caseworker  



was reassigned.   



                 Despite the pending termination trial and lack of OCS efforts, as well as  



Ronan's "disengagement" from visits with the children, the caseworker insisted that she  



needed to meet with Ronan at his home.  She testified that she needed to see his home  



because "if he did prevail in the termination trial, it would be helpful if I could see what  



his plan was for his boys[, s]uch as where they would sleep."    She testified that she  



attempted to set up in-person meetings with Ronan at his home throughout the summer  



of 2021.   



                 She also testified that Ronan repeatedly  offered to meet with her at her  



office or to speak to her by phone.  She acknowledged that he repeatedly requested that  



she communicate with him through his attorney, but that she was unwilling to do so.   



                                   

        20       See AS 47.10.086(a)(3); see also 25 C.F.R. § 23.120(b) ("Active efforts  

must be documented in detail in the record."); Bill S. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc.  

Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  Servs.,  436  P.3d  976,  983  (Alaska  2019)  (pointing  to  OCS's  

"failure  to  make  and  demonstrate  its  efforts"  in  concluding  record  lacked  sufficient  

evidence to show OCS made active efforts).  



                                                    -15-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

                 The  caseworker  was  aware  that  Ronan's  recent  psychiatric  evaluation  



noted his strong distrust of government institutions and recommended that OCS and  



service  providers  work  to  build  rapport  with  him  to  overcome  his  distrust.    She  



acknowledged that she was aware that Ronan had experienced trauma throughout his  



life,  and  his  assessments  indicated  a  number  of  mental  health  conditions,  including  



PTSD that he attributed to his military experiences.   But she still made at least three  



unannounced visits to the church she believed was Ronan's residence.   



                 The caseworker also testified at trial that she made multiple attempts to  



contact Ronan's lawyer.   The documentary  evidence presented to the superior court,  



however,  includes only a single automatic reply to an email from Ronan's lawyer to  



her.   



                 The superior court accurately described the third caseworker's attempts to  



get Ronan to work with her as "overly rigid."  She repeatedly attempted to meet Ronan  



at his home after he told her he was not willing to do so without his lawyer, he told her  



how uncomfortable and frightened her unannounced visits made him, and he offered to  



meet her at her office or by videoconference or telephone.   



                 Ronan  argues  that  both of  the  latter  caseworkers failed  to make  active  



efforts.    In  Clark  J.  v.  State,  Department  of  Health  &  Social  Services,  Office  of  



Children's Services, we held that although OCS made active efforts during the first half  



of a four-year-long case, by failing to make any efforts in the latter two years, it failed  

to make active efforts.21   We held that OCS's failure to make active efforts for the  



second half of the case "was so egregious that the efforts during the earlier period [could  

not] make up for it."22    



                 OCS's failure to make efforts toward Ronan after the reassignment of the  



first caseworker is similarly egregious.  There is no evidence that the second caseworker  



                                    

        21       483 P.3d 896, 904 (Alaska 2021).  



        22       Id.  



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----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

made any efforts.  And the third caseworker's "overly rigid" insistence on working with  



Ronan only if he was willing to meet with her at his home - in spite of his documented  



PTSD  and  repeated  requests  to  meet  elsewhere  -  resulted  in  her  making  no  other  



efforts to assist him.  OCS must prove by clear and convincing evidence that it made  



active efforts toward Ronan, yet it presented no evidence that either the second or third  



caseworker attempted to "tak[e] [Ronan] through the steps of [his] reunification  case  

plan."23  



                 OCS   argues   that   the   superior   court   properly   considered   Ronan's  



noncooperation in finding that active efforts were met.  But as we recently reiterated in  



Mona J. , "[a] parent's lack of cooperation or unwillingness to participate in treatment  

does not excuse OCS from making active efforts and proving that it has made them."24   



While  we  recognized  that  there  are  limited  circumstances  under  which  a  parent's  

noncooperation can be considered,25 an active efforts finding "turn[s] on OCS's efforts"  



rather than a parent's actions, and "OCS must always show that it made active efforts  

in the first place."26  



                 The  second  caseworker's  failure  to  provide  any  evidence  or  testimony  



about any efforts and the third caseworker's refusal to work with Ronan unless and until  

he consented to her visiting him at home were not "minor failures."27    Rather than  



                                    

         23      See  Chloe  O.  v.  State,  Dep't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  

Servs., 309 P.3d 850, 856 (Alaska 2013).  

         24      Mona J.  v.  State, Dep't  of Health  & Soc. Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s Servs.,  

511 P.3d 553, 562 (Alaska 2022).  



         25      Id.  at 562-63 (listing three ways parent's unwillingness to cooperate can  

impact active efforts analysis:  "(1) it can excuse further  active efforts once it is clear  

those efforts would be futile; (2) it can excuse 'minor failures by [OCS]'; and (3) it can  

influence what actions qualify as active efforts" (emphasis and brackets in original)).  

         26      Id . at 563.  



         27      See id.  



                                                    -17-                                                 7676  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

working  to  overcome  the  mistrust  called  to  OCS's  attention  by  the  psychiatric  



evaluation  it  had  required  of  Ronan,  the  third  caseworker's  overly  rigid  approach  



exacerbated it.  OCS proved that it made active efforts for seven months of the three  



years that it was required to provide them to Ronan.  By failing to make active efforts  



for the vast majority of that time, OCS failed to make active efforts toward Ronan.  We  



therefore reverse the termination of his parental rights.  



        B.       The Court Did Not Err By Concluding OCS Made Active Efforts To  

                 Reunify Elena With The Children.   



                 Elena argues that OCS failed to make active efforts because it  did not  



address her mental illness, provide services while she was incarcerated, and work harder  



to gain her cooperation.   



                 Elena  argues  that because her  mental  illness  was  "the most  significant  



barrier" to gaining her cooperation, OCS should have tailored its efforts to address it.   



She argues that OCS should have required a mental health assessment or psychiatric  



evaluation in her case plan as a necessary starting point for engaging with her in her  



mental state.  But OCS argues that it has reasonable discretion to tailor case plans to the  



circumstances of each case and individual.  OCS presented evidence that in a previous  



case Elena refused mental health treatment but was willing to participate in substance  



abuse treatment because she believed that her substance abuse caused her mental health  



problems.  OCS therefore focused the first case plan on substance abuse treatment.   



                 In  Chloe O. v. State, Department of Health & Social Services, Office of  



Children's Services, we rejected a mother's similar argument that OCS could not meet  



the requirements of active efforts by "passively accept[ing]" her resistance to mental  

health evaluation.28   That mother completed substance abuse treatment after having  



"outright  refused"  to  participate  in  mental  health  services.29    We  agreed  with  the  



                                   

        28       309 P.3d 850, 857 (Alaska 2013).  



        29      Id. at 853.  



                                                   -18-                                                7676  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

superior  court's  conclusion  that  OCS  had  appropriately  decided  to  focus  on  other  



services  to  which  the  mother  was  more  receptive  and  affirmed  its  active  efforts  

finding.30  



                 Although  Elena  did  not  "flatly  refuse"  to  participate  in  mental  health  



treatment, she denied having any mental health issues but acknowledged problems with  

substance abuse.31   In light of OCS's experience working with Elena in her previous  



case,  it  appropriately  exercised  its  "significant  discretion  to  determine  how  best  to  

provide [active] efforts in light of the facts of the particular case ."32  



                 Elena also argues that OCS should have done more to assist her while she  



was incarcerated.  She claims that OCS failed to arrange any visitation with the children;  



failed to take her mental illness into account when it tried to reach her or advise her how  



to work toward reunification; and failed to identify what services were available to her  



in prison.   



                 Elena asserts that even though OCS was aware that she was suffering from  



delusions, it continued to try to talk to her as if she were not.    She argues that OCS  



could have tried to overcome her belief that the children were dead by providing videos  



or medical records, or allowing her to write to them.  OCS responds that it did provide  



her dated photographs as proof that her children were alive and well.  OCS's failure to  



do more or to have taken the specific steps Elena now argues might have been  more  

effective does not mean that its overall efforts were not active.33  



                                    

         30      Id. at 857.  



         31      See id.  



         32      See  Ronald H. v. State,  Dep't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  

Servs.,  490  P.3d  357,  366  (Alaska  2021)  (citing  BUREAU  OF  INDIAN  AFFAIRS,  U.S.  

DEP 'T   OF   THE   INTERIOR,        GUIDELINES   FOR         IMPLEMENTING   THE          INDIAN      CHILD  

WELFARE ACT § E.4 (2016)).   

         33      See Mona J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

511 P.3d 553,  561 (Alaska  2022) ("A  court's  concern  is not  with whether  [OCS's]  



                                                     -19-                                                 7676  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                Elena finally argues that OCS should have done more to connect her with  



services  while  she was  incarcerated  and  that  it  should have  sought  a  court  order  to  



enable it to make referrals for mental health treatment.   But "requiring OCS to seek  



court orders for every uncooperative parent would put a huge and pointless burden on  

[OCS] and the court system."34  OCS's failure to do so does not render its efforts less  



than active.  



                Elena's serious mental illness, her substance abuse, and her increasingly  



violent threats and behavior required OCS to take stringent security measures and led  



to  Elena's  repeated  incarceration.    When  we  consider  OCS's  efforts  in  light  of  the  



entirety of its involvement with Elena and her family, we see no error in the superior  



court's determination that OCS made active efforts.   



        CONCLUSION  



                We  REVERSE  the  order  terminating  Ronan's  parental  rights.    We  



AFFIRM the order terminating Elena's parental rights.   



                                   

efforts were ideal, but with whether they crossed the threshold between passive and  

active efforts.") (internal quotation marks omitted).  

        34       Chloe O., 309 P.3d at 857 (Alaska 2013) (quoting Wilson W. v. State, Off.  

of Child.'s Servs.,  185 P.3d 94, 102 (Alaska 2008)).  



                                                   -20-                                                7676  

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