It is interesting
to contrast this opinion, which limited the constitutional protections
available to foster parents, with New York
Coalition for Families, “Beyond
the Best Interests of the Child Is Being Used to Legitimize
the Destruction of Poor Black and Hispanic Families,” mid-1970s.
In that document, an advocacy organization argued that birth
parents were disadvantaged in comparison with foster parents
and charged that foster care
was a system that destroyed poor and minority families while claiming
to help them.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellees, individual foster parents and an organization of foster
parents, brought this civil rights class action. . .in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New
York, on their own behalf and on behalf of children for whom they
have provided homes for a year or more. They sought declaratory
and injunctive relief against New York State and New York City officials,
alleging that the procedures governing the removal of foster children
from foster homes. . .violated the Due Process and Equal
Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. . . .
A divided three-judge District Court concluded that “the
pre-removal procedures presently employed by the State are constitutionally
defective,” holding that “before a foster child can
be peremptorily transferred from the foster home in which he has
been living, be it to another foster home or to the natural parents
who initially placed him in foster care, he is entitled to a hearing
at which all concerned parties may present any relevant information
to the administrative decisionmaker charged with determining the
future placement of the child.” . . . . We
reverse.
The expressed central policy of the New York system is that “it
is generally desirable for the child to remain with or be returned
to the natural parent because the child’s need for a normal
family life will usually best be met in the natural home, and. . .parents
are entitled to bring up. . .their own children unless
the best interests of the child would be thereby endangered.”
But the State has opted for foster care as one response to those
situations where the natural parents are unable to provide the “positive,
nurturing family relationships” and “normal family life
in a permanent home” that offer “the best opportunity
for children to develop and thrive.”
Foster care has been defined as “[a] child welfare service
which provides substitute family care for a planned period for a
child when his own family cannot care for him for a temporary or
extended period, and when adoption is neither desirable nor possible.”
Thus, the distinctive features of foster care are, first, “that
it is care in a family, it is noninstitutional substitute care,”
and, second, “that it is for a planned period—either
temporary or extended. This is unlike adoptive placement, which
implies a permanent substitution of one home for another.”
Under the New York scheme children may be placed in foster care
either by voluntary placement or by court order. Most foster-care
placements are voluntary. . . . Voluntary placement
requires the signing of a written agreement by the natural parent
or guardian, transferring the care and custody of the child to an
authorized child welfare agency. . . . The agency
may maintain the child in an institutional setting, but more commonly
acts under its authority to “place out and board out”
children in foster homes. Foster parents, who are licensed by the
State or an authorized foster-care agency, provide care under a
contractual arrangement with the agency, and are compensated for
their services. The typical contract expressly reserves the right
of the agency to remove the child on request. Conversely, the foster
parent may cancel the agreement at will. . . .
The appellees’ basic contention is that when a child has
lived in a foster home for a year or more, a psychological tie is
created between the child and the foster parents which constitutes
the foster family the true “psychological family.” of
the child. That family, they argue, has a “liberty interest”
in its survival as a family protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. . . .
It is, of course, true that “freedom of personal choice in
matters of. . .family life is one of the liberties protected
by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” There
does exist a “private realm of family life which the state
cannot enter,” that has been afforded both substantive and
procedural protection. But is the relation of foster parent to foster
child sufficiently akin to the concept of “family” recognized
in our precedents to merit similar protection? Although considerable
difficulty has attended the task of defining “family”
for purposes of the Due Process Clause, we are not without guides
to some of the elements that define the concept of “family”
and contribute to its place in our society.
First, the usual understanding of “family” implies
biological relationships, and most decisions treating the relation
between parent and child have stressed this element. . . .
A biological relationship is not present in the case of the usual
foster family. But biological relationships are not exclusive determination
of the existence of a family. . . .
No one would seriously dispute that a deeply loving and interdependent
relationship between an adult and a child in his or her care may
exist even in the absence of blood relationship. At least where
a child has been placed in foster care as an infant, has never known
his natural parents, and has remained continuously for several years
in the care of the same foster parents, it is natural that the foster
family should hold the same place in the emotional life of the foster
child, and fulfill the same socializing functions, as a natural
family. For this reason, we cannot dismiss the foster family as
a mere collection of unrelated individuals.
But there are also important distinctions between the foster family
and the natural family. First, unlike the earlier cases recognizing
a right to family privacy, the State here seeks to interfere, not
with a relationship having its origins entirely apart from the power
of the State, but rather with a foster family which has its source
in state law and contractual arrangements. . . .
[W]hatever emotional ties may develop between foster parent and
foster child have their origins in an arrangement in which the State
has been a partner from the outset. . . . In this
case, the limited recognition accorded to the foster family by the
New York statutes and the contracts executed by the foster parents
argue against any but the most limited constitutional “liberty”
in the foster family.
It is one thing to say that individuals may acquire a liberty interest
against arbitrary governmental interference in the family-like associations
into which they have freely entered, even in the absence of biological
connection or state-law recognition of the relationship. It is quite
another to say that one may acquire such an interest in the face
of another’s constitutionally recognized liberty interest
that derives from blood relationship, state-law sanction, and basic
human right—an interest the foster parent has recognized by
contract from the outset. Whatever liberty interest might otherwise
exist in the foster family as an institution, that interest must
be substantially attenuated where the proposed removal from the
foster family is to return the child to his natural parents. . . .
We are persuaded that, even on the assumption that appellees have
a protected “liberty interest,” the District Court erred
in holding that the preremoval procedures presently employed by
the State are constitutionally defective. . . . Since
we hold that the procedures provided by New York State in §392
and by New York City’s SSC [Social Services for Children]
Procedure No. 5 are adequate to protect whatever liberty interests
appellees may have, the judgment of the District Court is Reversed. |