NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS

OLLY NEAL, Judge

DIVISION I

CA01-833

JUNE 26, 2002 WENDY REED

RANDALL REED AN APPEAL FROM THE WHITE APPELLANTS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT

v. [J-99-70]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HONORABLE ROBERT EDWARDS,

HUMAN SERVICES JUDGE

APPELLEE

AFFIRMED

Wendy and Randall Reed appeal an order of a White County trial court terminating their parental rights with respect to their four minor children. On appeal, appellants assert that the trial court erred in its finding that they manifested an incapacity and an indifference to remedy their familial situation and that the Department of Human Services (DHS) had provided the statutorily-required and court-ordered services. We hold that the decision to terminate appellants' parental rights must be affirmed.

Appellants are the natural parents of four children, W.R., R.R., G.R., and S.R. On April 13, 1999, DHS filed a dependency-neglect petition, and on June 1, 1999, it filed a petition for emergency custody of R.R. All four children were adjudicated dependent-neglected on June 3, 1999. On July 12, 1999, DHS filed an emergency petition and tookcustody of the children. DHS filed a petition for termination of appellants' parental rights on February 1, 2001. A White County trial court ordered appellants' rights terminated on April 5, 2001, and it is from this order that appeal is taken.

The standard of review in termination cases is well-settled.

Bearden v. Dep't of Human Serv., 344 Ark. 317, 328, 42 S.W.3d 397, 403-04 (2001) (citing Ullom v. Dep't of Human Serv., 340 Ark. 615, 12 S.W.3d 208 (2000)) (citations omitted). Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-341(b)(1)(3) (Repl. 2002) provides, in part, that an order forever terminating parental rights shall be based upon a finding by clear and convincing evidence:

(B) Of one (1) or more of the following grounds:

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The legislative intent, as stated in section 9-27-341,

In its termination order, the court provided:

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There is no dispute that the children were adjudicated dependent-neglected on June 3, 1999, that they continued out of the home for more than twelve months, and that the conditions causing their removal from the home had not been remedied at the time of termination. Appellants argue on appeal, however, that the trial court erred because DHS failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that they manifested an incapacity and indifference to remedy their familial situation. We disagree. There is clear and convincing evidence found in the record to support these findings, and we can go to the record to affirm the trial court's decision. See Hosey v. Burgess, 319 Ark. 183, 890 S.W.2d 262 (1995).

During the June 3, 1999, adjudication hearing, DHS child maltreatment investigator, Kim Johnston, testified that prior to living in White County, the Reed family resided in Lawrence County, where DHS had an ongoing relationship with the family. Johnston indicated in her affidavit that in April of 1999, DHS received a complaint of neglect on the Reed family, alleging that the oldest child, W.R., age seven, was found in bed with his sister,G.R., age five, "touching and hunching on her." The affidavit provided that there had been a problem with the children "not being supervised," and that since 1993, there had been seventeen prior reports on the family, seven of which had been "founded" for physical abuse and neglect.

Johnston testified that she talked with appellants at great length about ensuring that the children were not left unsupervised. DHS had documented an unsubstantiated complaint in February of 1999 and substantiated complaints for lack of supervision in March and April of 1999. It was not until the incident between the children that Johnston decided to file the twenty-day petition for a court ordered protective services case. Johnston further testified that on

Additionally, Phyllis Pollard, a certified case manager, testified at the June 3, 1999, hearing that

Also in June of 1999, DHS filed a petition for emergency custody of R.R. The factsindicate that on May 27, 1999, an on-call worker for DHS received a call from the Searcy Police Department in reference to R.R. The parents had called the police department at 6:14 p.m. to report a missing child. Searcy Police, the White County Sheriff's Office, and Arkansas State Troopers conducted a search for the child, who was found approximately two miles from the residence that the family was visiting in Searcy. Wendy Reed had reported that she noticed R.R. missing about 4:00-4:30 p.m., and that she and other people were looking for the child, but had no success in finding him. Ms. Johnston testified at the June 3, 1999, hearing, that Mrs. Reed said that "Mr. Reed was working on [a] vehicle," and when Mrs. Reed could not find R.R., "Mr. Reed and the other children started looking for him." The Searcy Police Department found R.R. at 6:15 p.m. To ensure the child's safety, a seventy-two-hour hold was placed on him. Johnston acknowledged that DHS had previously filed a dependency-neglect petition in 1996, and that "Mr. Reed had come in and asked for a supportive service case to be opened on his family [sic]." Ms. Johnston further testified that there was a substantiated complaint of neglect on November 4, 1993, finding that Randall Reed had given beer to his son W.R.

Following the hearing, the court ordered that appellants (1) cooperate with DHS, DDS, and any other agency offering appropriate services to the family; (2) pursue and obtain medical coverage for the children; (3) make W.R. available for a psychosexual evaluation; (4) make W.R., G.R., R.R., and S.R. available for counseling; (5) attend family and individual counseling; (6) attend and complete a marriage counseling program; (7) maintain utilities in the home; (8) provide appropriate supervision for the children at all times; (9)participate in and complete budgeting skills; (10) cooperate with the Social Security Administration to address the problem of getting the juveniles' SSI reinstated and take the necessary steps to do so; (11) follow up on any medication that the doctor prescribed once it was determined whether or not Wendy was pregnant; (12) have G.R. and S.R. attend community school; (13) protect all the children from W.R.; (14) follow all court orders; (15) sign any needed releases of information; and (16) cooperate fully with the intensive family services. The children were also adjudicated dependent-neglected.

On June 22, 1999, DHS filed a report with the court. The report indicated that the family home had electricity, but did not have water service or a septic sewer system. The family hauled water from a nearby store for drinking, bathing, and washing clothes. Mrs. Reed did not have reliable transportation, thus, DHS assisted her. On July 12, 1999, DHS filed a motion for ex parte emergency change of custody. In the supporting affidavit, it was attested to that on July 7, 1999, Nancy Van Patten, an intensive family services specialist, had transported the family to various medical appointments and errands. Upon return to the family home, Mrs. Reed

At the hearing, Ms. Van Patten further testified that she was trying to get the children out of the house, including Mrs. Reed's teenage niece and her friend who were babysitting W.R., G.R., and S.R. She stated

In a subsequent court report, family service workers, Nancy Van Patten reported that the family still resided in their mobile home absent water connections or a sewage system. The report further provided that Mr. Reed had signed an agreement with the Social Security Administration to begin repayment of money misused in 1998 from W.R.'s Social Security checks. Mrs. Reed was paying fines in municipal court for fictitious tags and failure to appear and fines in circuit court for possession of a firearm. During a visit with the children at the DHS office, Mrs. Reed became upset with W.R. and went to the locked front door of the building and threatened to kick out the glass if she was not let out. Someone unlocked the door and she left the building. Following the visit, workers could not find Mrs. Reed sothat she could say good-bye to the children. Due to a threat to blow up Bridgeway Hospital, the staff at the hospital would not allow Mrs. Reed to visit W.R. during his stay there. Mr. and Mrs. Reed were allowed to visit with the other children and had difficulty keeping up with the children to keep them from running away.

On August 20, 1999, Van Patten submitted another court report indicating that R.R., G.R., and S.R. were doing well in their foster care placement; however, W.R. was in shelter placement because he had been found with his penis out of his pants "hunching" on top of the five-year-old foster sister. Appellants still lacked water service and a sewer system. Appellants had completed psychological evaluations, which indicated that they both functioned within the range of mild retardation. It was further stated that Mrs. Reed's ability to be an effective parent was "questionable." Both parents continued to have difficulty controlling the children during visitations.

In a review hearing held September 2, 1999, the trial court found that appellants had minimally complied with the case plan in that "they have not been able to establish a stable environment for the children to return to." In a court report filed February 14, 2000, social worker Betty Wadkins noted that during visitations, "people come and go in the home, the Reeds have difficulty knowing where the children are," and Mrs. Reed's uncle came into the home bleeding profusely from a reported fight. Clinical therapist, Joyce O'Neal, also filed a court report on February 14, 2000. She indicated that G.R. had come to the counseling session with skinned knuckles that she had burned at appellants' home. Further, W.R. disclosed further incidents of past sexual abuse. His foster mother reported that he returnedto her home after two separate visitations with "inappropriate articles in his pockets: two cigarette lighters and counterfeit money (one $100.00 bill)." W.R. also reported to his foster mother that he had been smoking at his parents' home. O'Neal recommended that the court decrease the children's visitation with their parents.

The marriage and family therapy counselors indicated that the "Reeds showed a lack of insight of the role their behavior plays into their legal situation. They tend to blame the court, DHS, and other involved parties for the removal of their children." This letter was filed with the court on February 25, 2000, and following a review hearing, the trial court reduced the children's visitation with their parents from twice weekly to one time per week. Following the decrease in visitation, DHS reported that there had been a decrease in the children's "acting out behaviors."

In April of 2000, the Searcy Children's Home submitted a report on the general behavior of the Reed children. It was reported that when the children first went to the home, "they were very wild and difficult to control." They reported that "[w]e would begin to get them settled down, then they would have a visit (during this time they had two unsupervised visits per week).... Their bad behavior was exaggerated after visits." The home reported that

It was also reported by a Rivendell Day Treatment School supervisor, that W.R.'s behavior had

It was also reported in W.R.'s monthly foster care report that he appeared to be making a very good adjustment to their home and that his interaction was very good.

Ms. Virginia Barrett, a licensed psychological examiner, testified at a hearing held on November 30, 2000, that she felt that Mrs. Reed would not be able to independently maintain good parenting skills or a stable environment for the children for any length of time. Ms. Barrett stated that "[t]here was really no progress noted" with Mrs. Reed during therapy and that she found Mrs. Reed to be "very impulsive. She shows very poor judgment, and has difficulty making even minor decisions, difficulty in keeping up with her peers in a wide variety of situations that require age appropriate thinking and reasoning abilities." A psychological evaluation was performed by Keith Norwood, M.S. and Charles Spellmann, Ph.D. It was determined that Mrs. Reed's intellectual functioning was in the mentally deficient to borderline range.

Ms. Barrett also testified that she felt that Mr. Reed would not be able to independently maintain good parenting skills or a stable environment for his children for any length of time. Ms. Barrett further stated that when Mr. Reed would come in, "he was very resistant," and that during sessions, Randall Reed has been very "closed" to her. She acknowledged that

DHS filed a termination of parental rights petition in February of 2001, and in April of 2001, appellants' parental rights were terminated as to their four minor children. Based on the record before us, we conclude there is clear and convincing evidence to terminate the parental rights of Wendy and Randall Reed as to their four minor children. Appellants, despite meaningful efforts by DHS to rehabilitate the home and correct the conditions which caused removal, were unable to remedy those conditions. Therefore, we affirm the trial court on this point.

As to their second point, appellants argue that the trial court erred in finding that DHS had provided the statutorily-required and court-ordered services. We disagree and affirm on this point.

Undisputedly, the family was consistently provided services. The statutory definition of "family services" found at Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-303(23)(A) (Repl. 2002) includes child care, homemaker services, counseling, cash assistance, transportation, therapy, psychological or psychiatric evaluations and treatment. Most, if not all, of these services were rendered to the family while this case file was open. According to the testimony, DHS workers provided Mrs. Reed with transportation and medication. They also provided the family with, inter alia, referrals to psychological evaluations, intensive family services, parenting classes, andindividual, family, and marital counseling.

Affirmed.

Bird, J., agrees.

Hart, J., concurs.