Okla. Admin. Code § 340:75-7-10.1 - [Effective until 9/14/2025] Resource parent framework
(a)
General. The requirements in Oklahoma Administrative Code (OAC)
340:110-5 serve as the framework for families and Oklahoma Human Services
(OKDHS) in the mutual assessment process used to select the most suitable home
for the child in OKDHS custody in need of foster care. Each child in OKDHS
custody has the right to a safe, affirming, and family-like placement. As a
result, resource parents:
(1) are responsible,
mature, healthy adults capable of meeting the needs of the children in OKDHS
custody;
(2) apply the reasonable
and prudent parent standard;
(3)
demonstrate a capacity for setting realistic expectations for behavior and
performance based on the ages, abilities, and unique needs of the
children;
(4) have stable
relationships and a living arrangement whether married, single, separated, or
divorced; and
(5) ensure all
members of the household are informed of and agree to accept the child into the
home.
(b)
Age. Per Section 1-4-705 of Title 10A of the Oklahoma Statutes
(10A O.S. § 1-4-705), when a potential resource parent meets the minimum
age required, OKDHS may not use the age of an otherwise eligible adult as a
reason for denial of placement.
(c)
Income and employment. Resource parents must have sufficient
income or adequate financial support to meet their needs and ensure the
security and stability of the household without relying on the foster care
maintenance payment.
(d)
Foster principles. A resource parent commits to demonstrating to
each child in OKDHS custody basic fostering principles that include:
(1) understanding and meeting the child's
unique needs;
(2) actively
supporting each child's connections and ongoing relationships with family, kin,
culture, and community;
(3)
understanding the impact of separation, grief, loss, and trauma the child has
suffered;
(4) partnering with the
child's professional team to focus on his or her safety, permanency, and
well-being;
(5) recognizing that
foster care is a planned, temporary placement for a child whose goal is family
reunification or other permanency plan;
(6) actively mentoring the parent to help
improve the parent's ability to safely care for the child, when safe to do so;
and
(7) recognizing the impact of
secondary traumatic stress and the importance of the resource parent's
self-care.
(e)
Relationship with OKDHS. The resource parent acknowledges,
cooperates, and agrees to abide by applicable statutes and OKDHS rules
regarding the child in care that include, but are not limited to:
(1) OKDHS, as the legal custodian of the
child, has the right to move any child from any resource home at any time, when
in the child's best interests and, per statutes governing movement of the child
in OKDHS custody;
(2) the necessity
to maintain and respect the confidential nature of all information regarding a
child placed in the resource home. A breach of confidentiality may be grounds
for resource home closure and termination of the foster care contract;
and
(3) the requirement that OKDHS
investigate, in the same manner as any other abuse or neglect investigation
conducted by OKDHS, allegations of abuse, neglect, or maltreatment of any child
in OKDHS custody placed in an approved resource home.
Notes
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