Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 300.120 - Taking Children Into Temporary Protective Custody
a) Local law enforcement officers, Department
child protection staff, and physicians treating a child may take temporary
protective custody of a child without the consent of the persons responsible
for the child's welfare, if they have reason to believe that:
1) leaving the child in the home or in the
care and custody of the child's caregiver presents an imminent danger to the
child's life or health. The child shall not be taken into protective custody
for the sole reason that the child was left with a relative, so long as the
relative is willing to keep the child, and the Department has reason to believe
that the relative can adequately and safely care for the child; and
2) there is insufficient time to obtain a
Juvenile Court order authorizing temporary custody.
b) In addition to the above requirements,
Department child protection staff shall ensure and document that reasonable
efforts were made to prevent or eliminate the need to remove a child from the
child's home. However, it may be that due to the individual circumstances of
the family and the child's best interest, safety and well-being, no efforts
reasonably can be made to maintain the child in the child's home. Reasonable
efforts shall not be required if there exists any of the grounds for expedited
termination of parental rights as described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 309 (Adoption
Services for Children for Whom the Department of Children and Family Services
Is Legally Responsible). Such a determination that no efforts reasonably can be
made must be documented. If no efforts reasonably can be made to safely prevent
or eliminate the removal of the child, the child shall be taken into protective
custody.
c) Local law enforcement
officers or physicians who take temporary protective custody of a child must
immediately notify the Department of their action.
d) When taking temporary protective custody
of a child or receiving a child who was taken into temporary protective custody
by the local law enforcement officer or by a physician, Department child
protection staff shall:
1) immediately notify
the State Central Register of this action;
2) make every reasonable effort to notify the
child's parents, personal guardian, legal custodian, and any relative caregiver
from whom the child was removed, of the action;
3) request that the Guardianship
Administrator or designee authorize any ordinary medical care or treatment
necessary for those children taken into temporary protective custody;
4) if the child needs treatment of an
emergency nature and the parent or guardian is unavailable or unwilling to
provide consent, the physician or hospital shall be asked to proceed under the
Consent by Minors to Medical Procedures Act [410 ILCS 210 ], which allows
treatment to be given to minors without consent; and
5) obtain a shelter care hearing under the
provisions of the Juvenile Court Act within 48 hours, excluding Saturdays,
Sundays, and holidays, in order to retain custody for more than 48
hours.
e) The Department
recognizes the importance of maintaining sibling relationships in those
situations in which children must be placed away from their parents. The
Department shall provide training for child protection specialists, their
supervisors and managers regarding the importance of maintaining sibling
relationships and the child's sense of attachment to his/her siblings, the
importance of maintaining sibling relationships over the child's lifespan, and
the impact on the child if those relationships are severed.
f) At any time during the investigation, but
no later than 30 days prior to the date of the scheduled adjudicatory hearing,
the child protection specialist shall request a legal screening to determine
whether the State's Attorney should be asked to file a petition for expedited
termination of parental rights, if:
1) it
becomes known that there is present one or more of the grounds for seeking
expedited termination of parental rights described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code
309.50 (Identification
of Children for Potential Adoption Planning); and
2) the parents are unwilling to voluntarily
surrender the child for adoption or consent to the adoption of the child by a
specified person.
Notes
Amended at 22 Ill. Reg. 18847, effective October 1, 1998
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