Assigned to JUD FOR COMMITTEE ARIZONA STATE SENATE Fifty-Sixth Legislature, First Regular Session FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1431 right to jury; parent-child relationship Purpose Effective January 1, 2024, establishes the right to a trial by jury for a party involved in a preliminary protective hearing and prescribes a timeframe for when the jury trial must take place. Background The court must hold a preliminary protective hearing to review the taking of a child into temporary custody between five and seven days after the child is taken into custody. The court may grant a continuance not exceeding five days if it is clearly necessary to prevent abuse or neglect, to preserve the rights of a party or for other good cause shown. Persons that must be present at the hearing include the child's parents or guardian, unless they cannot be located or fail to appear, the parents' counsel, the child's guardian ad litem or attorney and the child safety worker. The court may also allow the child, relatives, witnesses and other advocates to be present if it is in the best interests of the child. The court must advise the parents of enumerated rights and make certain considerations as specified, and the parent or guardian must state whether they admit to or deny the allegations in the petition (A.R.S. ยง 8-824). There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation. Provisions 1. Establishes that a party in a preliminary protective hearing has a right to a trial by jury that may not be arbitrarily denied. 2. Requires the court to provide written notice to all parties of the right to a trial by jury. 3. Stipulates that, if the court fails to provide this notice, any subsequent proceedings or rulings do not have the force of law. 4. Requires the court, if a party believes that its rights have been substantially violated by court orders and subsequently files a jury demand within 20 days after the orders were filed, to set a new hearing before a jury within 20 days after the demand is filed. 5. Allows a party to reexamine discrete portions of the court's orders without the entire case being relitigated or reexamined. 6. Requires a jury trial to commence within 60 days after the court has entered orders following a hearing for the termination of the parent-child relationship. FACT SHEET S.B. 1431 Page 2 7. Applies the provisions of this legislation to matters before the court for a preliminary protective hearing for the termination of the parent-child relationship. 8. States that the right to a jury trial in this manner is only available to the people and not any state agency or political subdivision. 9. Becomes effective on January 1, 2024. Prepared by Senate Research February 8, 2023 ZD/sr