§ 9-27-335 - Disposition -- Dependent-neglected -- Limitations.
               	 		
9-27-335.    Disposition -- Dependent-neglected -- Limitations.
    (a)    (1)  At  least five (5) working days before ordering the Department of Human  Services, excluding community-based providers, to provide or pay for  family services in any case in which the department is not a party, the  circuit court shall fax a written notice of intent to the Director of  the Department of Human Services and to the attorney of the local office  of chief counsel of the department.
      (2)  At  any hearing in which the department is ordered to provide family  services, the court shall provide the department with the opportunity to  be heard.
      (3)  Failure to provide  at least five (5) working days' notice to the department renders any  part of the order pertaining to the department void.
(b)  For  purposes of this section, the court shall not specify a particular  provider for placement or family services if the department is the payor  or provider.
(c)    (1)  In all  cases in which family services are ordered, the court shall determine  the ability of the parent, guardian, or custodian to pay, in whole or in  part, for these services.
      (2)  The  determination of ability to pay and the evidence supporting it shall be  made in writing in the order ordering family services.
      (3)  If  the court determines that the parent, guardian, or custodian is able to  pay, in whole or in part, for the services, the court shall enter a  written order setting forth the amount the parent, guardian, or  custodian is able to pay for the family services ordered and order the  parent, guardian, or custodian to pay the amount periodically to the  provider from whom family services are received.
(d)  Custody  of a juvenile may be transferred to a relative or other individual only  after a home study of the placement is conducted by the department or  by a licensed social worker who is approved to do home studies and  submitted to the court in writing and the court determines that the  placement is in the best interest of the juvenile.
(e)    (1)    (A)  The  court shall enter an order transferring custody of a juvenile in a  dependency-neglect case only after determining that reasonable efforts  have been made by the department to deliver family services designed to  prevent the need for out-of-home placement and that the need for  out-of-home placement exists.
            (B)  The  juvenile's health and safety shall be the paramount concern of the  court in determining if the department could have made reasonable  efforts to prevent the juvenile's removal.
      (2)  If  the court finds that reasonable efforts to deliver family services  could have been made with the juvenile safely remaining at home but were  not made, the court may:
            (A)  Dismiss the petition;
            (B)  Order family services reasonably calculated to prevent the need for out-of-home placement; or
            (C)  Transfer  custody of the juvenile despite the lack of reasonable efforts by the  department to prevent the need for out-of-home placement if the transfer  is necessary:
                  (i)  To protect the juvenile's health and safety; or
                  (ii)  To prevent the removal of the juvenile from the jurisdiction of the court.
(f)  In  a case of medical neglect involving a child's receiving treatment  through prayer alone in accordance with a religious method of healing in  lieu of medical care, the adjudication order shall be limited to:
      (1)  Preventing or remedying serious harm to the child; or
      (2)  Preventing the withholding of medically indicated treatment from a child with a life-threatening condition.
(g)  No  court may commit a juvenile found solely in criminal contempt to the  Division of Youth Services of the Department of Human Services.
(h)  For  purposes of this section, the court shall not order the department to  expend or forward social security benefits for which the department is  payee.