2025 Session Last amended: 2024 session

§ 260C.607 — Review of Progress Toward Adoption

Plain-Language Summary

This section requires the court to review the responsible social services agency's progress toward finalizing the adoption of a child under the guardianship of the commissioner at least every 90 days. It sets who must receive notice and may participate, what the court reviews (the agency's reasonable efforts and the child's out-of-home placement plan), and special independent-living review once the child is age 14 and older. A relative or foster parent who has an approved adoption home study (or an affidavit of efforts) may file a motion within 30 days of notice of an adoptive placement asking the court to order an adoptive placement, and the court holds an evidentiary hearing if a prima facie showing is made. The court may review more often than every 90 days, and may review less often only in limited cases (such as a child at least 16 years old after 24 months of approved efforts), but never less frequently than every six months.

Practical Notes
This statute governs the ongoing court oversight of a foster child’s path to adoption, not the procedure for completing an adoption. It establishes recurring review hearings (at least every 90 days), the notice and participation rights of relatives, foster parents, and the child, and a process for a relative or foster parent to challenge the agency’s adoptive placement decision by motion and evidentiary hearing.