2025 Session Last amended: 2024 session

§ 260C.515 — Permanency Disposition Orders

Plain-Language Summary

This section lists the permanency disposition orders a court must choose from when a child is not returned home at the end of permanency proceedings. The options are termination of parental rights, guardianship to the commissioner through a parent's consent to adopt (with conditions such as review at least every 90 days and pursuit of another adoptive home if the adoption is not finalized within six months), transfer of permanent legal and physical custody to a parent or a fit and willing relative, permanent custody to the responsible social services agency, and temporary legal custody to the agency. Permanent agency custody is allowed only on compelling reasons and generally requires the child to be at least 16; temporary agency custody is limited to foster care for no longer than one year.

Practical Notes
When a child cannot go home, the judge must pick one of several permanent outcomes: ending parental rights, guardianship by the commissioner through a consent to adopt, transferring permanent legal and physical custody to a parent or a fit and willing relative, permanent custody to the social services agency, or temporary agency custody. These are the choices the court selects among, not steps that happen only after parental rights are already terminated; termination is itself one of the options. Some options carry conditions, such as a 90-day review for commissioner guardianship, a six-month window to finalize an identified adoption, an age-16 requirement for permanent agency custody, and a one-year cap on temporary agency custody.