2025 Session Last amended: 2025 session

§ 260C.150 — Diligent Efforts to Identify Parents of a Child; Procedures for Review; Reasonable Efforts

Plain-Language Summary

This section requires the responsible social services agency to make diligent efforts to identify and locate both parents of a child in a protection or services proceeding, including asking the known parent for information, checking child support records, and requesting a search of the Minnesota Fathers' Adoption Registry 30 days after the child's birth. The court must ask at hearings whether both parents' identities and whereabouts are known, and may have a known parent answer questions under oath to help identify the other parent. If the agency has made diligent efforts and a parent still cannot be identified or located, the court may find that reasonable reunification efforts were made and that further efforts would be futile. A biological father confirmed by genetic testing is treated like a presumed father, with the right to notice and consideration for the child's care.

Practical Notes
This section is about finding and identifying a child’s parents, not about removing a child or placing the child in protective care. The agency must document its efforts to locate any missing parent, and the court reviews whether those efforts were diligent and whether both parents were properly served. If a parent reports that disclosing the other parent’s identity would endanger the parent, child, or another family member, the court may issue a protective order or waive notice. The duty to search for parents does not apply when the agency is proceeding under the safe place for newborns law.