Oregon Code § 418.324·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Independent assessment.
(1) The Department of Human Services shall ensure that an independent,
qualified individual assesses the strengths and needs of each child or ward the
department places in a qualified residential treatment program described in ORS
418.323.
(2) The
assessment described in this section may occur prior to the childs or wards
placement in the program, but shall occur no later than 30 days following the
date of placement.
(3) The
assessment described in this section must, at a minimum:
(a) Assess the
strengths and needs of the child or ward using an age-appropriate,
evidence-based, validated, functional assessment tool;
(b) Determine
whether the needs of the child or ward can be met with family members or
through placement in a foster family home or, if not, which setting would
provide the most effective and appropriate level of care for the child or ward
in the least restrictive environment and be consistent with the short-term and
long-term goals for the child or ward, as specified in the permanency plan for
the child or ward; and
(c) Develop a
list of individualized, specific short-term and long-term mental and behavioral
health goals.
(4)(a) The
qualified individual conducting the assessment shall work in conjunction with
the childs or wards family and permanency team, including:
(A) Appropriate
biological family members, relatives and fictive kin of the child or ward;
(B) Appropriate
professionals who are a resource to the family of the child or ward, including
teachers and medical or mental health providers who have treated the child or
ward;
(C) Clergy; or
(D) If the child
or ward has attained the age of 14 years, individuals selected by the child or
ward.
(b) The
department shall document the following in the childs or wards case plan:
(A) The
reasonable and good faith efforts of the department to identify and include all
of the individuals identified in paragraph (a) of this subsection on the childs
or wards family and permanency team.
(B) Contact
information for members of the childs or wards family and permanency team and
for any of the childs or wards family members or fictive kin who are not part
of the childs or wards family and permanency team.
(C) Evidence that
meetings of the family and permanency team, including meetings related to the
required assessment, are held at a time and place convenient for the childs or
wards family.
(D) If
reunification is the goal, evidence demonstrating that the parent from whom the
child or ward was removed provided input on the members of the family and
permanency team.
(E) Evidence that
the assessment is determined in conjunction with the family and permanency
team.
(F) If the
setting recommended by the qualified individual conducting the assessment is
different than the placement preferences of the family and permanency team and
of the child or ward, the reasons why the preferences of the team and of the
child or ward were not recommended.
(5) If the
qualified individual conducting the assessment determines the child or ward
should not be placed in a foster family home, the qualified individual shall
specify in writing the reasons why the needs of the child or ward cannot be met
by the family of the child or ward or in a foster family home. A shortage or
lack of foster family homes is not a valid reason for not placing a child or
ward in a foster family home under this subsection. The qualified individual
shall specify in writing why the recommended placement in a qualified
residential treatment program is the setting that will provide the child or
ward with the most effective and appropriate level of care in the least
restrictive environment and how that placement is consistent with the short-term
and long-term goals for the child or ward, as specified in the childs or wards
permanency plan.
(6) As used in
this section:
(a) Fictive kin
has the meaning given that term by the department by rule.
(b) Qualified
individual means an individual who is:
(A) A trained
professional or licensed clinician;
(B) Not an
employee of the department or of the Oregon Health Authority; and
(C) Not connected
to, or affiliated with, any placement setting in which children or wards are
placed by the department. [2020 s.s.1 c.19 §13b]
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Independent assessment. AI-powered analysis coming soon.
Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 418.324
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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