Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2536 Comm Sub / Analysis

                    SESSION OF 2024
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON HOUSE BILL NO. 2536
As Amended by House Committee on Child 
Welfare and Foster Care
Brief*
HB 2536, as amended, would establish a new legal 
permanency option for children 16 years of age or older who 
are in the custody of the Secretary for Children and Families 
(Secretary). The bill would also amend various statutes 
contained in the Revised Kansas Code for Care of Children 
(CINC Code) to reference this new form of permanency, 
which would be designated as “SOUL Family Legal 
Permanency” (SFLP).
Establishment of SOUL Family Legal Permanency (New 
Section 1)
The appointment of SOUL Family Legal Permanency 
(SFLP) could be made with:
●Agreement and approval of a child 16 years of age 
or older;
●Agreement and consent of the child’s parent unless 
there has been a finding of unfitness or termination 
of parental rights and consent is no longer 
required; and
●Approval of the court set forth in a court order.
The bill would allow a court to order SFLP:
____________________
*Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research 
Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental 
note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at 
http://www.kslegislature.org ●After a finding of parental unfitness;
●After termination of parental rights; or
●When determined to be in the best interests of the 
child and the requirements of the appointment 
described above are met.
Parental Consent Requirements
When parental consent is required for the appointment 
of SFLP, the bill would require the consent to be in writing and 
acknowledged by a judge of a court of record or before an 
officer authorized by law to take acknowledgments. The bill 
would require that before any consent is acknowledged by a 
court of record, the court must advise the consenting parent 
of the consequences of the consent by asking five questions, 
as specified by the bill.
Parental consent would be final when executed, unless 
the parent contesting consent proves by clear and convincing 
evidence the consent was not freely and voluntarily given. 
The bill would specify the burden of proving consent was not 
freely and voluntarily given rests with the contesting parent. 
The bill would require the parent to contest consent prior to 
the issuance of the order appointing a SFLP custodian.
The bill would also specify that when a parent has 
consented to SFLP based upon a belief that the child’s other 
parent would also consent or be found unfit but the other 
parent does not consent, the consent would be null and void.
Potential SFLP Custodian Review
Prior to making the SFLP appointment, the bill would 
require the Secretary to submit a report to the court 
containing the following determinations:
2- 2536 ●The ability and suitability of a potential custodian to 
care for the child, after observing the child in the 
home of the custodian with whom the child will 
reside;
●Whether the names of any potential SFLP 
custodians appear on the Department for Children 
and Families (DCF) Child Abuse and Neglect 
Registry;
●Whether any potential SFLP custodians have been 
convicted of any crime specified in KSA 59-
2132(e); and
●The consideration of the appointment of a relative 
or an individual with whom the child has close 
emotional ties, to the extent the Secretary 
determines the appointment to be in the best 
interests of the child.
Review and Approval by the Court
Prior to ordering SFLP, the bill would require the court to 
review and consider the Secretary’s report described above 
and additional information provided by the Secretary related 
to benefits of the SFLP, including, but not limited to, financial 
support, medical coverage, and educational support if SFLP 
is established. The bill would require the court ensures the 
child has access to the maximum allowable benefits available 
under other legal permanency options.
When appointing SFLP, the bill would require the court 
to consider, to the extent the court finds it in the child’s best 
interest, appointing a relative or an individual with whom the 
child has close emotional ties. The bill would provide if a court 
appoints more than one individual as SFLP custodian, the 
child and the individual may be unrelated.
The bill would provide that upon the establishment of 
SFLP, the Secretary’s custody would end, and the court’s 
3- 2536 jurisdiction over the child would continue unless the court 
enters an order terminating jurisdiction.
Effect of SFLP on Parental Rights
If SFLP is ordered after a judicial finding of parental 
unfitness without a termination of parental rights, the bill 
would provide all parental rights transfer to the SFLP 
custodian, except for:
●The obligation to pay child support and medical 
support;
●The right to inherit from the child; and
●The right to consent to adoption of the child.
If SFLP is ordered after termination of parental rights, 
the bill would provide the parent retains no rights or 
responsibilities to the child upon termination.
Rights and Responsibilities of Custodian
Pursuant to the bill, a custodian would stand in loco 
parentis to the child and exercise all the rights and 
responsibilities of a parent, except that the custodian could 
not consent to an adoption of the child or be subject to court-
ordered child support or medical support for the child. [Note: 
“In loco parentis” means acting in the place of a parent.]
The bill would also allow a custodian to share parental 
responsibilities with a parent of a child if the custodian 
believes it is in the best interests of the child, and there has 
not been a finding of parental unfitness or another court-
ordered limitation. However, this would not relieve the 
custodian of legal responsibility.
The bill would allow the court, upon motion of parties, 
interested parties, or its own motion, to impose limitations or 
4- 2536 conditions upon the rights and responsibilities of the 
custodian, if determined by the court to be in the best 
interests of the child.
Documentation Required to be Filed With the Court
The bill would require certain documents to be signed 
and filed with the court with respect to the appointment of a 
custodian:
●A document confirming the custodian’s willingness 
to serve as custodian; and
●An order of the court appointing such custodian.
When Multiple Custodians Appointed
When more than one custodian has been appointed, the 
bill would require the court to designate one individual as 
primary custodian, with the approval of the child and the 
individual. This primary custodian would be required to 
consider information provided by the child and other 
custodians for possible resolution in any dispute that may 
arise between the child and the custodian, or between 
multiple custodians.
The bill would allow the court to order alternative dispute 
resolution upon motion by the child or custodian if a dispute 
remains unresolved prior to:
●The child reaching 18 years of age;
●June 1 of the school year in which the child 
reached 18 years of age, if still attending high 
school.
In the event the court has previously terminated 
jurisdiction of a child’s case, the bill would direct that a court 
5- 2536 could reinstate the jurisdiction to consider a motion for 
alternative dispute resolution.
Effect of Divorce
The bill would provide if custodians are married at the 
time of the appointment but subsequently divorce, the 
marriage is annulled, or the court orders separate 
maintenance with respect to the custodians, the court would 
be required to make custody determinations between the 
custodians.
Rights of Inheritance
The bill would require the custodians to consider, and 
separately sign, agreements stating whether they will provide 
any rights of inheritance to the child and medical power of 
attorney for the child. 
Other Supportive Individuals
The bill would state a court could also recognize other 
individuals who testify to the court that they will provide 
support to the child, at the request and approval of the child 
and custodian. The bill would specify such individuals do not 
have legal obligations or rights related to the child.
Amendments to CINC Code
Definitions (Section 2)
The bill would define the term “Support, Opportunity, 
Unity, Legal Relationships Family Legal Permanency” or 
“SOUL Family Legal Permanency” to mean the appointment 
of one or more adults, approved by a child who is 16 years of 
age or older and the subject of a child in need of care (CINC) 
proceeding. The bill would add the establishment of SFLP as 
6- 2536 one outcome of the permanency planning process in the 
definition of “permanency goal.”
The bill would also make a technical amendment to add 
the definition of “behavioral health crisis” in this section. 
[Note: This is a technical amendment reconciling two versions 
of the statute enacted during the 2023 Legislative Session 
and is not new language.]
Other Provisions (Sections 3-9)
The bill would add references to SFLP in sections of the 
CINC Code where other types of permanency are discussed, 
including provisions governing: jurisdiction; contents of the 
CINC petition; authorized dispositions in a CINC case; 
permanency hearings; request for termination of parental 
rights and appointment of custodian; and voluntary 
relinquishment and appointment of custodian. [Note: Only 
substantive amendments are described below.]
In the section governing jurisdiction, the bill would 
specify that when a child has been ordered a SFLP 
custodian, the court’s jurisdiction over the child may continue 
until:
●The child has reached 18 years of age; or
●June 1 of the school year in which the child 
reached 18 years of age, if still attending high 
school.
In the section governing the voluntary relinquishment 
and appointment of a permanent custodian, the bill would 
specify when a parent voluntarily relinquishes his or her rights 
to a SFLP custodian, a parent may consent to the 
custodianship pursuant to provisions outlined in New Section 
1 of the bill. The bill would provide if the individual designated 
as the SFLP custodian consents to the appointment and is 
approved by the court, the custodian would have all the rights 
and responsibilities of a permanent custodian, subject to the 
7- 2536 provisions of New Section 1. The bill would also require each 
consent to the appointment of a SFLP custodian to be in 
writing and signed by either parent or legal guardian of the 
child.
The bill would also make technical amendments 
throughout to ensure consistency in statutory phrasing.
Background
The bill was introduced by the House Committee on 
Child Welfare and Foster Care at the request of a 
representative of the Children’s Alliance of Kansas (CAK).
In the House Committee hearing, two private citizens, 
four representatives of the SFLP Implementation Team, and 
representatives of CAK, Center for the Rights of Abused 
Children, DCF, FosterAdopt Connect, Kansas Action for 
Children, Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, and 
KVC Kansas testified as proponents of the bill. The 
proponents stated that creating this permanency option would 
address the specific needs of older foster youth who would 
benefit from establishing legal relationships with supportive 
adults in their lives, while still maintaining legal relationships 
with birth parents and siblings.
Written-only proponent testimony was provided by one 
private citizen and representatives of Cornerstones of Care, 
Kansas Citizens Review Custody to Transition Panel, and 
Kansas Family Advisory Network.
Written-only neutral testimony was provided by a 
representative of Saint Francis Ministries.
No other testimony was provided.
The House Committee adopted a technical amendment 
to correct a grammatical error.
8- 2536 Fiscal Information
According to the fiscal note prepared by the Division of 
the Budget on the bill, as introduced, DCF indicates 
enactment of the bill would result in a fiscal effect on 
expenditures of the agency for fiscal years (FYs) 2024, 2025, 
and 2026, as follows:
●FY 2024: $714,199; 
●FY 2025: $2,364,741; and 
●FY 2026: $2,429,939.
[Note: The fiscal note provides a list of assumptions that 
were used in calculating the bill’s fiscal impact on DCF, 
including: 
●25.0 percent of youth who age out of the foster 
care system and all youth ages 16 and over who 
currently exit guardianship would establish SFLP;
●All youth who are expected to establish SFLP 
would have formerly aged out of foster care making 
costs related to the young adult subsidy, 
independent living start-up costs, and vehicle 
repair and maintenance costs budget neutral; and
●44 young people would opt for SFLP in FY 2024; 
91 in FY 2025, and 135 in FY2026.]
The Office of Judicial Information indicates enactment of 
the bill would have a negligible fiscal effect on expenditures of 
the Judicial Branch and would not affect revenues. Any fiscal 
effect associated with enactment of the bill is not reflected in 
The FY 2025 Governor’s Budget Report. 
Children; minors; Revised Kansas Code for Care of Children; permanency; SOUL 
Family Legal Permanency; parental rights
9- 2536