Texas Child Protection Law Bench Book
August 2015 edition
B. What Should Courts Do?
Before awarding permanent managing conservatorship to a relative under this program and dismissing DFPS from a case, the court should ensure that:
• The caregiver is verified (verified is not the same thing as licensed. DFPS licenses child placing agencies, and in turn, child placing agencies verify foster homes);
• The child has been placed with the verified kin for at least six months following the date of the verification;
• DFPS has determined that reunification and adoption are not appropriate permanency options for the child; and
• DFPS and the kin have signed a PCA agreement and it is on file PRIOR to the award of PMC to the caregiver – the child must be in the temporary or permanent managing conservatorship of DFPS on the day before PMC is transferred to the relative.
The one-year deadline to dismiss a case still applies. For example, if the 12-month deadline is approaching, and a child has not lived with his or her verified caregiver for at least six months after the verification, the case must be extended under Tex. Fam. Code § 263.401 or permanent managing conservatorship must be awarded to DFPS in order to allow sufficient time to satisfy the 6-month residency requirement prior to the relative being awarded PMC.
If a sibling is placed by CPS in the home of a child who is already the subject of a PCA agreement, the sibling is automatically eligible for PCA benefits and the six month residency requirement for the sibling is waived. However, the family must enter into a new PCA that includes the sibling BEFORE the court awards PMC of the sibling to the kin/caregiver and dismisses DFPS from the case.
The PCA program does not replace the existing DFPS program that offers financial and other supports to relative and other designated caregivers. Relatives who do not meet the eligibility criteria under the PCA program can continue to take advantage of the Relative and Other Designated Caregiver Program.
The maximum monthly amount of assistance payments under a PCA agreement may not exceed the amount of the month foster care maintenance payment DFPS would pay to a foster care provider caring for the child for whom the kinship provider is caring. Tex. Fam. Code § 264.854.