Texas 2025 - 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2864 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/14/2025

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                            89R3745 MM-D
 By: Noble H.B. No. 2864




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to applying an active efforts standard for the removal of
 certain children in the managing conservatorship of the Department
 of Family and Protective Services.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Sections 161.001(a), (b), (f), and (g), Family
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In this section:
 (1)  "Active efforts" has the meaning described by
 Section 262.0001.
 (2)  "Born[, "born] addicted to alcohol or a controlled
 substance" means a child:
 (A) [(1)]  who is born to a mother who during the
 pregnancy used a controlled substance, as defined by Chapter 481,
 Health and Safety Code, other than a controlled substance legally
 obtained by prescription, or alcohol; and
 (B) [(2)]  who, after birth as a result of the
 mother's use of the controlled substance or alcohol:
 (i) [(A)]  experiences observable
 withdrawal from the alcohol or controlled substance;
 (ii) [(B)]  exhibits observable or harmful
 effects in the child's physical appearance or functioning; or
 (iii) [(C)]  exhibits the demonstrable
 presence of alcohol or a controlled substance in the child's bodily
 fluids.
 (b)  The court may order termination of the parent-child
 relationship if the court finds by clear and convincing evidence:
 (1)  that the parent has:
 (A)  voluntarily left the child alone or in the
 possession of another not the parent and expressed an intent not to
 return;
 (B)  voluntarily left the child alone or in the
 possession of another not the parent without expressing an intent
 to return, without providing for the adequate support of the child,
 and remained away for a period of at least three months;
 (C)  voluntarily left the child alone or in the
 possession of another without providing adequate support of the
 child and remained away for a period of at least six months;
 (D)  knowingly placed or knowingly allowed the
 child to remain in conditions or surroundings which endanger the
 physical or emotional well-being of the child;
 (E)  engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the
 child with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the
 physical or emotional well-being of the child;
 (F)  failed to support the child in accordance
 with the parent's ability during a period of one year ending within
 six months of the date of the filing of the petition;
 (G)  abandoned the child without identifying the
 child or furnishing means of identification, and the child's
 identity cannot be ascertained by the exercise of reasonable
 diligence;
 (H)  voluntarily, and with knowledge of the
 pregnancy, abandoned the mother of the child beginning at a time
 during her pregnancy with the child and continuing through the
 birth, failed to provide adequate support or medical care for the
 mother during the period of abandonment before the birth of the
 child, and remained apart from the child or failed to support the
 child since the birth;
 (I)  contumaciously refused to submit to a
 reasonable and lawful order of a court under Subchapter D, Chapter
 261;
 (J)  been the major cause of:
 (i)  the failure of the child to be enrolled
 in school as required by the Education Code; or
 (ii)  the child's absence from the child's
 home without the consent of the parents or guardian for a
 substantial length of time or without the intent to return;
 (K)  executed before or after the suit is filed an
 unrevoked or irrevocable affidavit of relinquishment of parental
 rights as provided by this chapter;
 (L)  been convicted or has been placed on
 community supervision, including deferred adjudication community
 supervision, for being criminally responsible for the death or
 serious injury of a child under the following sections of the Penal
 Code, or under a law of another jurisdiction that contains elements
 that are substantially similar to the elements of an offense under
 one of the following Penal Code sections, or adjudicated under
 Title 3 for conduct that caused the death or serious injury of a
 child and that would constitute a violation of one of the following
 Penal Code sections:
 (i)  Section 19.02 (murder);
 (ii)  Section 19.03 (capital murder);
 (iii)  Section 19.04 (manslaughter);
 (iv)  Section 21.11 (indecency with a
 child);
 (v)  Section 22.01 (assault);
 (vi)  Section 22.011 (sexual assault);
 (vii)  Section 22.02 (aggravated assault);
 (viii)  Section 22.021 (aggravated sexual
 assault);
 (ix)  Section 22.04 (injury to a child,
 elderly individual, or disabled individual);
 (x)  Section 22.041 (abandoning or
 endangering a child, elderly individual, or disabled individual);
 (xi)  Section 25.02 (prohibited sexual
 conduct);
 (xii)  Section 43.25 (sexual performance by
 a child);
 (xiii)  Section 43.26 (possession or
 promotion of child pornography);
 (xiv)  Section 21.02 (continuous sexual
 abuse of young child or disabled individual);
 (xv)  Section 20A.02(a)(7) or (8)
 (trafficking of persons); and
 (xvi)  Section 43.05(a)(2) (compelling
 prostitution);
 (M)  had his or her parent-child relationship
 terminated with respect to another child based on a finding that the
 parent's conduct was in violation of Paragraph (D) or (E) or
 substantially equivalent provisions of the law of another state;
 (N)  constructively abandoned the child who has
 been in the permanent or temporary managing conservatorship of the
 Department of Family and Protective Services for not less than six
 months, and:
 (i)  the department has made active
 [reasonable] efforts to return the child to the parent;
 (ii)  the parent has not regularly visited
 or maintained significant contact with the child; and
 (iii)  the parent has demonstrated an
 inability to provide the child with a safe environment;
 (O)  failed to comply with the provisions of a
 court order that specifically established the actions necessary for
 the parent to obtain the return of the child who has been in the
 permanent or temporary managing conservatorship of the Department
 of Family and Protective Services for not less than nine months as a
 result of the child's removal from the parent under Chapter 262 for
 the abuse or neglect of the child;
 (P)  used a controlled substance, as defined by
 Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, in a manner that endangered the
 health or safety of the child, and:
 (i)  failed to complete a court-ordered
 substance abuse treatment program; or
 (ii)  after completion of a court-ordered
 substance abuse treatment program, continued to abuse a controlled
 substance;
 (Q)  knowingly engaged in criminal conduct that
 has resulted in the parent's:
 (i)  conviction of an offense; and
 (ii)  confinement or imprisonment and
 inability to care for the child for not less than two years from the
 date of filing the petition;
 (R)  been the cause of the child being born
 addicted to alcohol or a controlled substance, other than a
 controlled substance legally obtained by prescription;
 (S)  voluntarily delivered the child to a
 designated emergency infant care provider under Section 262.302
 without expressing an intent to return for the child;
 (T)  been convicted of:
 (i)  the murder of the other parent of the
 child under Section 19.02 or 19.03, Penal Code, or under a law of
 another state, federal law, the law of a foreign country, or the
 Uniform Code of Military Justice that contains elements that are
 substantially similar to the elements of an offense under Section
 19.02 or 19.03, Penal Code;
 (ii)  criminal attempt under Section 15.01,
 Penal Code, or under a law of another state, federal law, the law of
 a foreign country, or the Uniform Code of Military Justice that
 contains elements that are substantially similar to the elements of
 an offense under Section 15.01, Penal Code, to commit the offense
 described by Subparagraph (i);
 (iii)  criminal solicitation under Section
 15.03, Penal Code, or under a law of another state, federal law, the
 law of a foreign country, or the Uniform Code of Military Justice
 that contains elements that are substantially similar to the
 elements of an offense under Section 15.03, Penal Code, of the
 offense described by Subparagraph (i); or
 (iv)  the sexual assault of the other parent
 of the child under Section 22.011 or 22.021, Penal Code, or under a
 law of another state, federal law, or the Uniform Code of Military
 Justice that contains elements that are substantially similar to
 the elements of an offense under Section 22.011 or 22.021, Penal
 Code;
 (U)  been placed on community supervision,
 including deferred adjudication community supervision, or another
 functionally equivalent form of community supervision or
 probation, for being criminally responsible for the sexual assault
 of the other parent of the child under Section 22.011 or 22.021,
 Penal Code, or under a law of another state, federal law, or the
 Uniform Code of Military Justice that contains elements that are
 substantially similar to the elements of an offense under Section
 22.011 or 22.021, Penal Code; or
 (V)  been convicted of:
 (i)  criminal solicitation of a minor under
 Section 15.031, Penal Code, or under a law of another state, federal
 law, the law of a foreign country, or the Uniform Code of Military
 Justice that contains elements that are substantially similar to
 the elements of an offense under Section 15.031, Penal Code; or
 (ii)  online solicitation of a minor under
 Section 33.021, Penal Code, or under a law of another state, federal
 law, the law of a foreign country, or the Uniform Code of Military
 Justice that contains elements that are substantially similar to
 the elements of an offense under Section 33.021, Penal Code; and
 (2)  that termination is in the best interest of the
 child.
 (f)  In a suit for termination of the parent-child
 relationship filed by the Department of Family and Protective
 Services, the court may not order termination of the parent-child
 relationship under Subsection (b)(1) unless the court finds by
 clear and convincing evidence and describes in writing with
 specificity in a separate section of the order that:
 (1)  the department made active [reasonable] efforts to
 return the child to the parent before commencement of a trial on the
 merits and despite those active [reasonable] efforts, a continuing
 danger remains in the home that prevents the return of the child to
 the parent; or
 (2)  active [reasonable] efforts to return the child to
 the parent, including the requirement for the department to provide
 a family service plan to the parent, have been waived under Section
 262.2015.
 (g)  In a suit for termination of the parent-child
 relationship filed by the Department of Family and Protective
 Services in which the department made active [reasonable] efforts
 to return the child to the child's home but a continuing danger in
 the home prevented the child's return, the court shall include in a
 separate section of its order written findings describing with
 specificity the active [reasonable] efforts the department made to
 return the child to the child's home.
 SECTION 2.  Section 161.003, Family Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (a-1) to read as
 follows:
 (a)  The court may order termination of the parent-child
 relationship in a suit filed by the Department of Family and
 Protective Services if the court finds that:
 (1)  the parent has a mental or emotional illness or a
 mental deficiency that renders the parent unable to provide for the
 physical, emotional, and mental needs of the child;
 (2)  the illness or deficiency, in all reasonable
 probability, proved by clear and convincing evidence, will continue
 to render the parent unable to provide for the child's needs until
 the 18th birthday of the child;
 (3)  the department has been the temporary or sole
 managing conservator of the child of the parent for at least six
 months preceding the date of the hearing on the termination held in
 accordance with Subsection (c);
 (4)  the department has made active [reasonable]
 efforts to return the child to the parent; and
 (5)  the termination is in the best interest of the
 child.
 (a-1)  In this section, "active efforts" has the meaning
 described by Section 262.0001.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter A, Chapter 262, Family Code, is
 amended by adding Section 262.0001 to read as follows:
 Sec. 262.0001.  DEFINITION; ACTIVE EFFORTS. (a) In this
 chapter, "active efforts" means affirmative, active, thorough, and
 timely efforts intended primarily to maintain or reunite a child
 with the child's family.
 (b)  In cases in which the Department of Family and
 Protective Services is involved in a suit affecting the
 parent-child relationship, the department's active efforts must
 involve assisting the parents through the steps of a case plan and
 with accessing or developing the resources necessary to satisfy the
 case plan. The department must tailor the active efforts to the
 facts and circumstances of each case, including by:
 (1)  conducting a comprehensive assessment of the
 circumstances of the child's family, with a focus on safe
 reunification as the most desirable goal;
 (2)  identifying appropriate services and helping the
 parents to overcome barriers, including actively assisting the
 parents in obtaining such services;
 (3)  conducting or causing to be conducted a diligent
 search for the child's extended family members, and contacting and
 consulting with extended family members to provide family structure
 and support for the child and the child's parents;
 (4)  taking steps to keep siblings together whenever
 possible;
 (5)  supporting regular visits with parents in the most
 natural setting possible as well as trial home visits of the child
 during any period of removal, consistent with the need to ensure the
 health, safety, and welfare of the child;
 (6)  identifying community resources including
 housing, financial, transportation, mental health, substance
 abuse, and peer support services and actively assisting the child's
 parents or, when appropriate, the child's family, in using and
 accessing those resources;
 (7)  monitoring progress and participation in
 services;
 (8)  considering alternative ways to address the needs
 of the child's parents and, where appropriate, the family, if the
 optimum services do not exist or are not available; and
 (9)  providing post-reunification services and
 monitoring.
 SECTION 4.  Section 262.001(b), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  In determining the active [reasonable] efforts that are
 required to be made with respect to preventing or eliminating the
 need to remove a child from the child's home or to make it possible
 to return a child to the child's home, the child's health and safety
 is the paramount concern.
 SECTION 5.  Section 262.101(a), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  An original suit filed by a governmental entity that
 requests permission to take possession of a child without prior
 notice and a hearing must be supported by an affidavit sworn to by a
 person with personal knowledge and stating facts sufficient to
 satisfy a person of ordinary prudence and caution that:
 (1)  there is an immediate danger to the physical
 health or safety of the child or the child has been a victim of
 neglect or sexual abuse;
 (2)  continuation in the home would be contrary to the
 child's welfare;
 (3)  there is no time, consistent with the physical
 health or safety of the child, for a full adversary hearing under
 Subchapter C;
 (4)  the child would not be adequately protected in the
 child's home with an order for the removal of the alleged
 perpetrator under Section 262.1015 or 262.1016 or a protective
 order issued under Title 4;
 (5)  placing the child with a relative or designated
 caregiver or with a caregiver under a parental child safety
 placement agreement authorized by Subchapter L, Chapter 264:
 (A)  was offered but refused;
 (B)  was not possible because there was no time,
 consistent with the physical health or safety of the child and the
 nature of the emergency, to conduct the caregiver evaluation; or
 (C)  would pose an immediate danger to the
 physical health or safety of the child; and
 (6)  active [reasonable] efforts, consistent with the
 circumstances and providing for the safety of the child, were made
 to prevent or eliminate the need for the removal of the child.
 SECTION 6.  Section 262.101(b), Family Code, as amended by
 Chapters 672 (H.B. 968) and 675 (H.B. 1087), Acts of the 88th
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2023, is reenacted and amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The affidavit required by Subsection (a) must describe
 with specificity in a separate section all active [reasonable]
 efforts, consistent with the circumstances and providing for the
 safety of the child, that were made to prevent or eliminate the need
 for the removal of the child.
 SECTION 7.  Sections 262.102(a) and (e), Family Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Before a court may, without prior notice and a hearing,
 issue a temporary order for the conservatorship of a child under
 Section 105.001(a)(1) or a temporary restraining order or
 attachment of a child authorizing a governmental entity to take
 possession of a child in a suit brought by a governmental entity,
 the court must find that:
 (1)  there is an immediate danger to the physical
 health or safety of the child or the child has been a victim of
 neglect or sexual abuse;
 (2)  continuation in the home would be contrary to the
 child's welfare;
 (3)  there is no time, consistent with the physical
 health or safety of the child and the nature of the emergency, for a
 full adversary hearing under Subchapter C;
 (4)  the child would not be adequately protected in the
 child's home with an order for the removal of the alleged
 perpetrator under Section 262.1015 or 262.1016 or a protective
 order issued under Title 4;
 (5)  placing the child with a relative or designated
 caregiver or with a caregiver under a parental child safety
 placement agreement authorized by Subchapter L, Chapter 264:
 (A)  was offered but refused;
 (B)  was not possible because there was no time,
 consistent with the physical health or safety of the child and the
 nature of the emergency, to conduct the caregiver evaluation; or
 (C)  would pose an immediate danger to the
 physical health or safety of the child; and
 (6)  active [reasonable] efforts, consistent with the
 circumstances and providing for the safety of the child, were made
 to prevent or eliminate the need for removal of the child.
 (e)  The temporary order, temporary restraining order, or
 attachment of a child rendered by the court under Subsection (a)
 must describe with specificity in a separate section the active
 [reasonable] efforts, consistent with the circumstances and
 providing for the safety of the child, that were made to prevent or
 eliminate the need for the removal of the child as required by
 Subsection (a)(4).
 SECTION 8.  Section 262.105(b), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  An original suit filed by a governmental entity after
 taking possession of a child under Section 262.104 must be
 supported by an affidavit stating facts sufficient to satisfy a
 person of ordinary prudence and caution that:
 (1)  based on the affiant's personal knowledge or on
 information furnished by another person corroborated by the
 affiant's personal knowledge, one of the following circumstances
 existed at the time the child was taken into possession:
 (A)  there was an immediate danger to the physical
 health or safety of the child;
 (B)  the child was the victim of sexual abuse or of
 trafficking under Section 20A.02 or 20A.03, Penal Code;
 (C)  the parent or person who had possession of
 the child was using a controlled substance as defined by Chapter
 481, Health and Safety Code, and the use constituted an immediate
 danger to the physical health or safety of the child; or
 (D)  the parent or person who had possession of
 the child permitted the child to remain on premises used for the
 manufacture of methamphetamine; and
 (2)  based on the affiant's personal knowledge:
 (A)  continuation of the child in the home would
 have been contrary to the child's welfare;
 (B)  there was no time, consistent with the
 physical health or safety of the child, for a full adversary hearing
 under Subchapter C;
 (C)  the child would not be adequately protected
 in the child's home with an order for the removal of the alleged
 perpetrator under Section 262.1015 or 262.1016 or a protective
 order issued under Title 4;
 (D)  placing the child with a relative or
 designated caregiver or with a caregiver under a parental child
 safety placement agreement authorized by Subchapter L, Chapter 264:
 (i)  was offered but refused;
 (ii)  was not possible because there was no
 time, consistent with the physical health or safety of the child and
 the nature of the emergency, to conduct the caregiver evaluation;
 or
 (iii)  would pose an immediate danger to the
 physical health or safety of the child; and
 (E)  active [reasonable] efforts, consistent with
 the circumstances and providing for the safety of the child, were
 made to prevent or eliminate the need for the removal of the child.
 SECTION 9.  Section 262.105(c), Family Code, as amended by
 Chapters 672 (H.B. 968) and 675 (H.B. 1087), Acts of the 88th
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2023, is reenacted and amended to
 read as follows:
 (c)  The affidavit required by Subsection (b) must describe
 with specificity in a separate section all active [reasonable]
 efforts, consistent with the circumstances and providing for the
 safety of the child, that were made to prevent or eliminate the need
 for the removal of the child.
 SECTION 10.  Sections 262.107(a) and (c), Family Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The court shall order the return of the child at the
 initial hearing regarding a child taken in possession without a
 court order by a governmental entity unless the court is satisfied
 that:
 (1)  the evidence shows that one of the following
 circumstances exists:
 (A)  there is a continuing danger to the physical
 health or safety of the child if the child is returned to the
 parent, managing conservator, possessory conservator, guardian,
 caretaker, or custodian who is presently entitled to possession of
 the child;
 (B)  the child has been the victim of sexual abuse
 or of trafficking under Section 20A.02 or 20A.03, Penal Code, on one
 or more occasions and that there is a substantial risk that the
 child will be the victim of sexual abuse or of trafficking in the
 future;
 (C)  the parent or person who has possession of
 the child is currently using a controlled substance as defined by
 Chapter 481, Health and Safety Code, and the use constitutes an
 immediate danger to the physical health or safety of the child; or
 (D)  the parent or person who has possession of
 the child has permitted the child to remain on premises used for the
 manufacture of methamphetamine;
 (2)  continuation of the child in the home would be
 contrary to the child's welfare;
 (3)  the child would not be adequately protected in the
 child's home with an order for the removal of the alleged
 perpetrator under Section 262.1015 or 262.1016 or a protective
 order issued under Title 4;
 (4)  placing the child with a relative or designated
 caregiver or with a caregiver under a parental child safety
 placement agreement authorized by Subchapter L, Chapter 264:
 (A)  was offered but refused;
 (B)  was not possible because there was no time,
 consistent with the physical health or safety of the child and the
 nature of the emergency, to conduct the caregiver evaluation; or
 (C)  would pose an immediate danger to the
 physical health or safety of the child; and
 (5)  active [reasonable] efforts, consistent with the
 circumstances and providing for the safety of the child, were made
 to prevent or eliminate the need for removal of the child.
 (c)  If the court does not order the return of the child at an
 initial hearing under Subsection (a), the court must describe in
 writing and in a separate section the active [reasonable] efforts,
 consistent with the circumstances and providing for the safety of
 the child, that were made to prevent or eliminate the need for the
 removal of the child.
 SECTION 11.  Sections 262.201(g), (g-1), and (g-2), Family
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (g)  In a suit filed under Section 262.101 or 262.105, at the
 conclusion of the full adversary hearing, the court shall order the
 return of the child to the parent, managing conservator, possessory
 conservator, guardian, caretaker, or custodian entitled to
 possession from whom the child is removed unless the court finds
 sufficient evidence to satisfy a person of ordinary prudence and
 caution that:
 (1)  there was a danger to the physical health or safety
 of the child, including a danger that the child would be a victim of
 trafficking under Section 20A.02 or 20A.03, Penal Code, which was
 caused by an act or failure to act of the person entitled to
 possession and for the child to remain in the home is contrary to
 the welfare of the child;
 (2)  the urgent need for protection required the
 immediate removal of the child and active [reasonable] efforts,
 consistent with the circumstances and providing for the safety of
 the child, were made to eliminate or prevent the child's removal;
 and
 (3)  active [reasonable] efforts have been made to
 enable the child to return home, but there is a substantial risk of
 a continuing danger if the child is returned home.
 (g-1)  In a suit filed under Section 262.101 or 262.105, if
 the court does not order the return of the child under Subsection
 (g) and finds that another parent, managing conservator, possessory
 conservator, guardian, caretaker, or custodian entitled to
 possession did not cause the immediate danger to the physical
 health or safety of the child or was not the perpetrator of the
 neglect or abuse alleged in the suit, the court shall order
 possession of the child by that person unless the court finds
 sufficient evidence to satisfy a person of ordinary prudence and
 caution that, specific to each person entitled to possession:
 (1)  the person cannot be located after the exercise of
 due diligence by the Department of Family and Protective Services,
 or the person is unable or unwilling to take possession of the
 child; or
 (2)  active [reasonable] efforts have been made to
 enable the person's possession of the child, but possession by that
 person presents a continuing danger to the physical health or
 safety of the child caused by an act or failure to act of the person,
 including a danger that the child would be a victim of trafficking
 under Section 20A.02 or 20A.03, Penal Code.
 (g-2)  If, at the conclusion of a full adversary hearing, the
 court renders an order under Subsection (g) or (g-1), the court must
 describe in writing and in a separate section:
 (1)  the active [reasonable] efforts that were made to
 enable the child to return home and the substantial risk of a
 continuing danger if the child is returned home, as required by
 Subsection (g)(3); or
 (2)  the active [reasonable] efforts that were made to
 enable a person's possession of the child and the continuing danger
 to the physical health or safety of the child as required by
 Subsection (g-1)(2).
 SECTION 12.  Sections 262.2015(a), (c), and (d), Family
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The court may waive the requirement of a service plan
 and the requirement to make active [reasonable] efforts to return
 the child to a parent and may accelerate the trial schedule to
 result in a final order for a child under the care of the Department
 of Family and Protective Services at an earlier date than provided
 by Subchapter D, Chapter 263, if the court finds that the parent has
 subjected the child to aggravated circumstances.
 (c)  On finding that active [reasonable] efforts to make it
 possible for the child to safely return to the child's home are not
 required, the court shall at any time before the 30th day after the
 date of the finding, conduct an initial permanency hearing under
 Subchapter D, Chapter 263. Separate notice of the permanency plan
 is not required but may be given with a notice of a hearing under
 this section.
 (d)  The Department of Family and Protective Services shall
 make active [reasonable] efforts to finalize the permanent
 placement of a child for whom the court has made the finding
 described by Subsection (c).  The court shall set the suit for
 trial on the merits as required by Subchapter D, Chapter 263, in
 order to facilitate final placement of the child.
 SECTION 13.  Section 263.202(b), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  Except as otherwise provided by this subchapter, a
 status hearing shall be limited to matters related to the contents
 and execution of the service plan filed with the court.  The court
 shall review the service plan that the department filed under this
 chapter for reasonableness, accuracy, and compliance with
 requirements of court orders and make findings as to whether:
 (1)  a plan that has the goal of returning the child to
 the child's parents adequately ensures that active [reasonable]
 efforts are made to enable the child's parents to provide a safe
 environment for the child;
 (2)  the child's parents have reviewed and understand
 the plan and have been advised that unless the parents are willing
 and able to provide the child with a safe environment, even with the
 assistance of a service plan, within the reasonable period of time
 specified in the plan, the parents' parental and custodial duties
 and rights may be subject to restriction or to termination under
 this code or the child may not be returned to the parents;
 (3)  the plan is narrowly tailored to address any
 specific issues identified by the department;
 (4)  the child's parents and the representative of the
 department have signed the plan;
 (5)  based on the court's determination under Section
 263.002, continued placement is appropriate if the child is placed
 in a residential treatment center; and
 (6)  based on the court's determination under Section
 263.00201, continued placement is appropriate if the child is
 placed in a qualified residential treatment program.
 SECTION 14.  Section 263.306(a-1), Family Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a-1)  At each permanency hearing before a final order is
 rendered, the court shall:
 (1)  identify all persons and parties present at the
 hearing;
 (2)  review the efforts of the department or other
 agency in:
 (A)  locating and requesting service of citation
 on all persons entitled to service of citation under Section
 102.009; and
 (B)  obtaining the assistance of a parent in
 providing information necessary to locate an absent parent, alleged
 father, relative of the child, or other adult identified by the
 child as a potential relative or designated caregiver;
 (3)  ask all parties present whether the child or the
 child's family has a Native American heritage and identify any
 Native American tribe with which the child may be associated;
 (4)  review the extent of the parties' compliance with
 temporary orders and the service plan and the extent to which
 progress has been made toward alleviating or mitigating the causes
 necessitating the placement of the child in foster care;
 (5)  review the permanency progress report to
 determine:
 (A)  the safety and well-being of the child and
 whether the child's needs, including any medical or special needs,
 are being adequately addressed;
 (B)  the continuing necessity and appropriateness
 of the placement of the child, including with respect to a child who
 has been placed outside of this state, whether the placement
 continues to be in the best interest of the child;
 (C)  the appropriateness of the primary and
 alternative permanency goals for the child developed in accordance
 with department rule and whether the department has made active
 [reasonable] efforts to finalize the permanency plan, including the
 concurrent permanency goals, in effect for the child;
 (D)  whether the child has been provided the
 opportunity, in a developmentally appropriate manner, to express
 the child's opinion on any medical care provided;
 (E)  whether the child has been provided the
 opportunity, in a developmentally appropriate manner, to identify
 any adults, particularly an adult residing in the child's
 community, who could be a relative or designated caregiver for the
 child;
 (F)  for a child receiving psychotropic
 medication, whether the child:
 (i)  has been provided appropriate
 nonpharmacological interventions, therapies, or strategies to meet
 the child's needs; or
 (ii)  has been seen by the prescribing
 physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice nurse at least
 once every 90 days;
 (G)  whether an education decision-maker for the
 child has been identified, the child's education needs and goals
 have been identified and addressed, and there have been major
 changes in the child's school performance or there have been
 serious disciplinary events;
 (H)  for a child 14 years of age or older, whether
 services that are needed to assist the child in transitioning from
 substitute care to independent living are available in the child's
 community;
 (I)  for a child whose permanency goal is another
 planned permanent living arrangement:
 (i)  the desired permanency outcome for the
 child, by asking the child;
 (ii)  whether, as of the date of the hearing,
 another planned permanent living arrangement is the best permanency
 plan for the child and, if so, provide compelling reasons why it
 continues to not be in the best interest of the child to:
 (a)  return home;
 (b)  be placed for adoption;
 (c)  be placed with a legal guardian;
 or
 (d)  be placed with a fit and willing
 relative;
 (iii)  whether the department has conducted
 an independent living skills assessment under Section
 264.121(a-3);
 (iv)  whether the department has addressed
 the goals identified in the child's permanency plan, including the
 child's housing plan, and the results of the independent living
 skills assessment;
 (v)  if the youth is 16 years of age or
 older, whether there is evidence that the department has provided
 the youth with the documents and information listed in Section
 264.121(e); and
 (vi)  if the youth is 18 years of age or
 older or has had the disabilities of minority removed, whether
 there is evidence that the department has provided the youth with
 the documents and information listed in Section 264.121(e-1);
 (J)  based on the court's determination under
 Section 263.002, whether continued placement is appropriate if the
 child is placed in a residential treatment center; and
 (K)  based on the court's determination under
 Section 263.00201, whether continued placement is appropriate if
 the child is placed in a qualified residential treatment program;
 (6)  determine whether to return the child to the
 child's parents if the child's parents are willing and able to
 provide the child with a safe environment and the return of the
 child is in the child's best interest;
 (7)  estimate a likely date by which the child may be
 returned to and safely maintained in the child's home, placed for
 adoption, or placed in permanent managing conservatorship; and
 (8)  announce in open court the dismissal date and the
 date of any upcoming hearings.
 SECTION 15.  Section 263.5031(a), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  At each permanency hearing after the court renders a
 final order, the court shall:
 (1)  identify all persons and parties present at the
 hearing;
 (2)  review the efforts of the department or other
 agency in notifying persons entitled to notice under Section
 263.0021;
 (3)  for a child placed with a relative of the child or
 other designated caregiver, review the efforts of the department to
 inform the caregiver of:
 (A)  the option to become verified by a licensed
 child-placing agency to operate an agency foster home, if
 applicable; and
 (B)  the permanency care assistance program under
 Subchapter K, Chapter 264; and
 (4)  review the permanency progress report to
 determine:
 (A)  the safety and well-being of the child and
 whether the child's needs, including any medical or special needs,
 are being adequately addressed;
 (B)  whether the child has been provided the
 opportunity, in a developmentally appropriate manner, to identify
 any adult, particularly an adult residing in the child's community,
 who could be a relative or designated caregiver for the child;
 (C)  whether the department placed the child with
 a relative or designated caregiver and the continuing necessity and
 appropriateness of the placement of the child, including with
 respect to a child who has been placed outside of this state,
 whether the placement continues to be in the best interest of the
 child;
 (D)  if the child is placed in institutional care,
 whether efforts have been made to ensure that the child is placed in
 the least restrictive environment consistent with the child's best
 interest and special needs;
 (E)  the appropriateness of the primary and
 alternative permanency goals for the child, whether the department
 has made active [reasonable] efforts to finalize the permanency
 plan, including the concurrent permanency goals, in effect for the
 child, and whether:
 (i)  the department has exercised due
 diligence in attempting to place the child for adoption if parental
 rights to the child have been terminated and the child is eligible
 for adoption; or
 (ii)  another permanent placement,
 including appointing a relative as permanent managing conservator
 or returning the child to a parent, is appropriate for the child;
 (F)  for a child whose permanency goal is another
 planned permanent living arrangement:
 (i)  the desired permanency outcome for the
 child, by asking the child;
 (ii)  whether, as of the date of the hearing,
 another planned permanent living arrangement is the best permanency
 plan for the child and, if so, provide compelling reasons why it
 continues to not be in the best interest of the child to:
 (a)  return home;
 (b)  be placed for adoption;
 (c)  be placed with a legal guardian;
 or
 (d)  be placed with a fit and willing
 relative;
 (iii)  whether the department has conducted
 an independent living skills assessment under Section
 264.121(a-3);
 (iv)  whether the department has addressed
 the goals identified in the child's permanency plan, including the
 child's housing plan, and the results of the independent living
 skills assessment;
 (v)  if the youth is 16 years of age or
 older, whether there is evidence that the department has provided
 the youth with the documents and information listed in Section
 264.121(e); and
 (vi)  if the youth is 18 years of age or
 older or has had the disabilities of minority removed, whether
 there is evidence that the department has provided the youth with
 the documents and information listed in Section 264.121(e-1);
 (G)  if the child is 14 years of age or older,
 whether services that are needed to assist the child in
 transitioning from substitute care to independent living are
 available in the child's community;
 (H)  whether the child is receiving appropriate
 medical care and has been provided the opportunity, in a
 developmentally appropriate manner, to express the child's opinion
 on any medical care provided;
 (I)  for a child receiving psychotropic
 medication, whether the child:
 (i)  has been provided appropriate
 nonpharmacological interventions, therapies, or strategies to meet
 the child's needs; or
 (ii)  has been seen by the prescribing
 physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice nurse at least
 once every 90 days;
 (J)  whether an education decision-maker for the
 child has been identified, the child's education needs and goals
 have been identified and addressed, and there are major changes in
 the child's school performance or there have been serious
 disciplinary events;
 (K)  for a child for whom the department has been
 named managing conservator in a final order that does not include
 termination of parental rights, whether to order the department to
 provide services to a parent for not more than six months after the
 date of the permanency hearing if:
 (i)  the child has not been placed with a
 relative or other individual, including a foster parent, who is
 seeking permanent managing conservatorship of the child; and
 (ii)  the court determines that further
 efforts at reunification with a parent are:
 (a)  in the best interest of the child;
 and
 (b)  likely to result in the child's
 safe return to the child's parent;
 (L)  whether the department has identified a
 family or other caring adult who has made a permanent commitment to
 the child;
 (M)  based on the court's determination under
 Section 263.002, whether continued placement is appropriate if the
 child is placed in a residential treatment center; and
 (N)  based on the court's determination under
 Section 263.00201, whether continued placement is appropriate if
 the child is placed in a qualified residential treatment program.
 SECTION 16.  Section 263.602(b), Family Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  A court with extended jurisdiction over a young adult in
 extended foster care shall conduct extended foster care review
 hearings every six months for the purpose of reviewing and making
 findings regarding:
 (1)  whether the young adult's living arrangement is
 safe and appropriate and whether the department has made active
 [reasonable] efforts to place the young adult in the least
 restrictive environment necessary to meet the young adult's needs;
 (2)  whether the department is making active
 [reasonable] efforts to finalize the permanency plan that is in
 effect for the young adult, including a permanency plan for
 independent living;
 (3)  whether, for a young adult whose permanency plan
 is independent living:
 (A)  the young adult participated in the
 development of the plan of service;
 (B)  the young adult's plan of service reflects
 the independent living skills and appropriate services needed to
 achieve independence by the projected date; and
 (C)  the young adult continues to make reasonable
 progress in developing the skills needed to achieve independence by
 the projected date; and
 (4)  whether additional services that the department is
 authorized to provide are needed to meet the needs of the young
 adult.
 SECTION 17.  To the extent of any conflict, this Act prevails
 over another Act of the 89th Legislature, Regular Session, 2025,
 relating to nonsubstantive additions to and corrections in enacted
 codes.
 SECTION 18.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.