IN RE TA.L. IN RE A.L. IN PETITION OF R.W. & A.W. IN RE PETITION OF E.A.A.H. AND T.L. , 149 A.3d 1060 ( 2016 )


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  •                             District of Columbia
    Court of Appeals
    Nos. 11-FS-1217, 11-FS-1218, 11-FS-1255, 11-FS-1256,                     DEC - 8 2016
    11-FS-1257, 11-FS-1258, 11-FS-1259 & 11-FS-1260
    IN RE TA.L.; IN RE A.L.; IN PETITION OF R.W. & A.W.;
    IN RE PETITION OF E.A.;                                            ADA-115-09;
    A.H. AND T.L.                                                      ADA-116-09;
    Appellants,                               NEG-235-08;
    ADA-172-09;
    ADA-173-09
    On Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    BEFORE: WASHINGTON, Chief Judge; GLICKMAN, FISHER, BLACKBURNE-
    RIGSBY, THOMPSON, BECKWITH, EASTERLY, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges; and REID,
    Senior Judge.
    JUDGMENT
    This case came to be heard on the transcript of record and the briefs filed,
    and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, and for the reasons set forth in
    the opinion filed this date, it is now hereby
    ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the judgment of the Superior Court is
    affirmed.
    For the Court:
    Dated: December 8, 2016.
    Opinion by Chief Judge Eric T. Washington.
    Associate Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby and Senior Judge Inez Smith Reid, joining in
    full; Associate Judge Phyllis D. Thompson, joining in Parts III and V (except for footnote
    38) and the judgment; Associate Judges Stephen Glickman, John Fisher, and Roy
    McLeese, concurring in the judgment; and Associate Judges Corinne Beckwith and
    Catharine Easterly, joining in Parts III and IV, but dissenting from the judgment.
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    Nos. 11-FS-1217, 11-FS-1218, 11-FS-1255, 11-FS-1256, 11-FS-1257,
    11-FS-1258, 11-FS-1259 & 11-FS-1260
    IN RE TA.L.                          12/8/16
    IN RE A.L.
    IN RE PETITION OF R.W. & A.W.
    IN RE PETITION OF E.A.
    A.H. AND T.L., APPELLANTS.
    Appeals from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (ADA-115-09)
    (ADA-116-09)
    (NEG-234-08)
    (NEG-235-08)
    (ADA-172-09)
    (ADA-173-09)
    (Hon. Neal E. Kravitz, Trial Judge)
    (Argued En Banc June 17, 2014                         Decided December 8, 2016)
    Tanya Asim Cooper, with whom Joyce Aceves-Amaya was on the brief, for
    appellant E.A.
    Leslie J. Susskind for appellant A.H.; N. Kate Deshler Gould for appellants
    A.H. and T.L.
    Melanie L. Katsur, with whom Matthew D. McGill, Lissa M. Percopo,
    Christopher B. Leach, and Lindsay M. Paulin were on the brief, for appellees R.W.
    and A.W.
    2
    Stacy L. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Irvin B. Nathan,
    Attorney General for the District of Columbia at the time the brief was filed, Todd
    S. Kim, Solicitor General, and Loren L. AliKhan, Deputy Solicitor General, were
    on the brief, for appellee the District of Columbia.
    Kelly Venci, guardian ad litem, filed a brief in support of appellees R.W.
    and A.W.
    James Klein, Public Defender Service, filed a brief as amicus curiae in
    support of appellants A.H., T.L., and E.A.
    Melissa Colangelo and Allen Snyder, Children’s Law Center, filed a brief as
    amicus curiae on limited issue and in support of neither party.
    John C. Keeney, Jr., Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia, Kyle J.
    Fiet, and David Reiser filed a brief for amici curiae Legal Aid Society of the
    District of Columbia; National Association of Counsel for Children; Center for
    Family Representation, Inc.; Family Defense Center; and Family Law Professors
    Vivek S. Sankaran, Christine Gottlieb, and Martin Guggenheim in support of
    appellants A.H., T.L., and E.A.
    Richard P. Goldberg and Jeremy C. Doernberger filed a brief for amicus
    curiae Dr. Robert S. Marvin in support of appellees R.W. and A.W.
    Douglas H. Hallward-Dreimeier filed a brief for amici curiae Law
    Professors James G. Dwyer, J. Herbie Difonzo, Jennifer A. Drobac, Deborah L.
    Forman, William Ladd, Ellen Marrus, and Deborah Paruch, in support of appellees
    R.W. and A.W.
    Before WASHINGTON, Chief Judge, GLICKMAN, FISHER, BLACKBURNE-
    RIGSBY, THOMPSON, BECKWITH, EASTERLY, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and
    REID, Senior Judge.
    Opinion by Chief Judge WASHINGTON, with whom BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY,
    Associate Judge and REID, Senior Judge, join in full; THOMPSON, Associate Judge,
    joins in Parts III and V (except for footnote 38) and the judgment; GLICKMAN,
    FISHER, and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, concur in the judgment; and BECKWITH
    3
    and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, join in parts III and IV, but dissent from the
    judgment.
    Concurring and dissenting opinion by GLICKMAN, Associate Judge, with
    whom FISHER and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, join in full, and THOMPSON,
    Associate Judge, joins in Parts III and IV, at page 55.
    Concurring and dissenting opinion by Associate Judges BECKWITH and
    EASTERLY, with whom WASHINGTON, Chief Judge, joins in Part I and II, at page
    137.
    WASHINGTON, Chief Judge: A.H. and T.L., biological parents of minor
    children A.L. and Ta.L., along with the children’s aunt, E.A., challenge the trial
    court’s decision granting the adoption of A.L. and Ta.L. by their foster parents,
    R.W. and A.W. (the “W.s”), and denying E.A.’s adoption petition. This court
    granted the petition by appellees R.W. and A.W. for rehearing en banc, thereby
    vacating its original opinion in this case, In re Ta.L., 
    75 A.3d 122
    (D.C. 2013),
    vacated sub nom. In re R.W., 
    91 A.3d 1020
    (D.C. 2014), in part because this appeal
    raises serious concerns about our prior decision in In re K.M.T., 
    795 A.2d 688
    (D.C. 2002), where a division of this court held that permanency goal decisions of
    the trial court are not appealable.1 Specifically, appellants A.H. and T.L. complain
    that the informal process used to change the permanency goal for their family from
    ____________________
    
    1 795 A.2d at 690
    (“In the context of neglect proceedings after the court has
    made an adjudication of neglect, finality has generally been held to mean either a
    restoration of physical custody, a termination of parental rights, or an adoption.
    An order that is merely a step toward one of those acts is therefore not final and
    appealable.”).
    4
    reunification to adoption, a decision they could not challenge on appeal and one
    that ultimately resulted in a termination of their parental rights, violated their
    constitutional due process rights. In addition, appellants argue that the trial court
    erred in granting the W.s’ adoption petition because, in considering the competing
    adoption petitions, the trial court failed to give weighty consideration to the
    adoption petition of the biological parents’ preferred caregiver, E.A. We agree
    with appellants that when the Child and Family Services Agency, (“CFSA”)—the
    agency charged with assisting parents in their efforts to reunite with their children
    that have been removed from their home—requests that the trial court change the
    goal for the family from reunification to adoption, the parents must have the right
    to contest the goal change before they are forced to make a Hobson’s choice
    between contesting the adoption petition of a stranger or consenting to the adoption
    of their children by a family member. Additionally, the parents should be able to
    appeal such a change because it marks a point in time when the trial court has
    effectively authorized CFSA to transfer its support to someone else to parent the
    child. Despite our ruling here today, we affirm the trial court’s decision to grant
    the adoption petition of the W.s because it is supported by clear and convincing
    evidence that at the time of the adoption hearing, the biological parents, T.L. and
    A.H., withheld their consent to the adoption against the best interest of the children
    5
    and there was clear and convincing evidence that adoption by E.A. was not in the
    best interests of the children.
    I. Facts
    On March 24, 2008, A.L. and Ta.L. were removed from the care and custody
    of their biological parents, A.H. and T.L., following the arrest and incarceration of
    both parents for a domestic violence incident in the family’s home. The CFSA
    immediately assumed custody of the children, and placed them in foster care with
    R.W. and A.W. A.L. was sixteen months old and Ta.L. was three months old at
    the time. The children were both underweight. A.L. was not current on her
    immunizations and suffered from significant medical problems, including sleep
    apnea and chronic pulmonary issues as well as an eye disorder and acid reflux.
    Ta.L. was diagnosed with failure to thrive syndrome and had not seen a doctor
    since birth. A.L.’s pediatrician later testified that she was concerned that A.L.
    might not regularly be receiving the proper treatment required for her ailments,
    which could be life-threatening without treatment.
    6
    Two days after the children’s removal from their biological parents’ care,
    CFSA conducted a Family Team Meeting2 to identify family members who might
    provide a temporary placement for the children while A.H. and T.L. worked
    toward reunification.    Two of T.L.’s sisters, K.A.-R. and E.A., attended the
    meeting. K.A.-R. indicated that she would be willing to become a kinship foster
    care provider for the children, and E.A. agreed to be a backup provider for K.A.-R.
    E.A. testified that it was her understanding that if K.A.-R.’s foster care license was
    denied, she would be second in line to get the children as a kinship foster care
    provider; however, E.A. did not take any steps to become a kinship foster parent at
    that time.
    Approximately two weeks later, K.A.-R. learned that her husband did not
    pass the requisite background check and, as a result, she could not be licensed to
    care for the children in her home. K.A.-R. told E.A. that she was unable to
    complete the licensing process, but reassured E.A. that the children’s permanency
    ____________________
    2
    Family Team Meetings are “family group decision-making meetings for
    children in the child welfare system[] that enable families to make decisions and
    develop plans that nurture children and protect them from abuse and neglect.” 42
    U.S.C. § 627 (a)(3)(A) (2010); D.C. Code § 16-2312 (a-1)(1) (2012 Repl.) (Family
    Team Meetings in the District “solicit the input of family members, relatives, and
    others concerned with the welfare of the child to develop a safety plan approved by
    the Agency.”).
    7
    goal was reunification, which T.L. confirmed to E.A. a short time later. E.A.
    testified that because she understood the children’s permanency goal to be
    reunification, she did nothing to attempt to become a placement for the children.
    CFSA also did not make any attempts to contact E.A. and qualify her as a kinship
    placement.
    A.L. and Ta.L. were adjudicated neglected children on May 1, 2008, because
    they lacked proper parental care and control and because T.L. and A.H. were
    unable to discharge their parental responsibilities due to their incarceration and
    substance abuse problems.3 The trial court committed the children to CFSA’s
    custody and care, with a permanency goal of reunification with the biological
    parents to be achieved by May 2009.
    On May 14, 2009, the trial court held a permanency hearing during which
    the government moved to change the permanency goal from reunification to
    adoption because the biological parents had not made sufficient progress towards
    reunification.   The trial court approved the change in permanency goal from
    ____________________
    3
    D.C. Code § 16-2301 (9)(A)(ii)–(iii) (2012 Repl.).
    8
    reunification to adoption, finding that T.L. and A.H. had not: 1) complied with the
    trial court’s order for drug testing or participated in drug treatment; 2) regularly
    attended couples’ counseling; 3) consistently visited the children; 4) secured stable
    housing; and 5) been involved with the children’s medical care and educational
    services.
    Less than a month later, on June 12, 2009, R.W. and A.W., who had been
    caring for Ta.L. and A.L. since March 2008, filed a petition to adopt Ta.L. and
    A.L. Shortly thereafter, E.A. was contacted by a social worker because T.L.
    mentioned E.A. as a placement option for the children during the May 14, 2009,
    change of permanency goal hearing.4 E.A. began visiting the children in June or
    July 2009. Visits were moved to E.A.’s home in August 2009 where the children
    would visit with E.A. and their biological parents for one to two hours per week.
    E.A. testified that she requested more visits with the children, but her requests
    were denied.
    ____________________
    4
    E.A. was also previously identified as a potential kinship care provider at
    the Family Team Meeting in March 2008.
    9
    On October 9, 2009, four months after the first adoption petition was filed,
    E.A. filed a petition to adopt A.L. and Ta.L.      At a review hearing held on
    November 6, 2009, A.H. and T.L. indicated they would consent to E.A.’s adoption
    petition because it was in the best interest of the children to be adopted by E.A.
    rather than be returned to their own care. E.A. began taking foster care classes in
    November 2009 and became a licensed therapeutic foster care provider in
    December 2009. An adoption social worker deemed E.A.’s home appropriate for
    children. CFSA, however, supported R.W. and A.W.’s petition, citing the foster
    parents’ ability to provide a stable home and meet all of the children’s daily and
    medical needs, the children’s strong bond with the W.s, E.A.’s limited involvement
    in the lives of the children, and concern for the safety of the children while in
    E.A.’s care in terms of her ability to protect the children when their biological
    parents are around.
    The adoption trial was held in May 2011.5 At the time of the adoption trial,
    the children had been in R.W. and A.W.’s care for three uninterrupted years. A.H.
    and T.L. explained to the court that they consented to adoption by E.A. because
    ____________________
    5
    No effort was made to terminate A.H. and T.L.’s parental rights before
    this time, which would have provided the biological parents with an appealable
    order prior to adoption.
    10
    they wanted A.L. and Ta.L. to remain in their family. At trial, E.A. claimed that
    CFSA had a duty to contact her so that she could become a kinship care provider,
    and that she would have had a stronger bond with the children had she been timely
    informed. The W.s argued that it was in the children’s best interest to be adopted
    by their foster family. Three experts also offered testimony during the adoption
    proceeding: Dr. James Venza, who conducted an attachment study between the
    children and the W.s; Dr. Sheryl Frank, who conducted a court-ordered bonding
    study of all the parties; and Dr. Charles David Missar, who offered a critique of the
    aforementioned studies on behalf of A.H., T.L., and E.A.
    The W.s called psychologist Dr. Venza as an expert witness. Dr. Venza
    conducted a study of the attachment between the W.s and the children in March
    2010, when A.L. was three and Ta.L. was two. The children had been with the
    W.s for two years at that point, and had been visiting E.A. weekly for
    approximately a year. Dr. Venza concluded that A.L. had a secure attachment to
    A.W., which is the optimal level of development, and that Ta.L. had an anxious
    avoidant attachment to A.W., due in part to his age.6 Dr. Venza noted substantial
    ____________________
    6
    In his amicus brief, Dr. Robert Marvin explains that a secure attachment
    “is the [healthiest and] most trusting pattern of attachment, in which a child sees
    (. . . continued)
    11
    growth in the children’s cognitive abilities while in the W.s’ care and predicted the
    children would regress cognitively if separated from the W.s.            Dr. Venza
    concluded that the impact of removing the children from the W.s’ care would be
    potentially “devastating” to their long-term development, particularly given their
    early history of neglect, medical challenges, and developmental delays, and that
    the risk of permanent or irreparable harm was “clear” and “unmistakable.” Dr.
    Venza also concluded that the impact of the children’s separation from the W.s
    would not differ based on where they were subsequently placed. Dr. Venza did
    not, however, study A.L. and Ta.L.’s attachment to E.A.
    Dr. Frank, a consulting psychologist with the Department of Mental Health’s
    Assessment Center and court-appointed neutral expert, also testified about a court-
    ordered bonding study she performed in July 2010 between the children, the
    biological parents, and all the petitioners. Dr. Frank largely echoed Dr. Venza’s
    testimony. Dr. Frank testified that the children’s relationship with their biological
    (….continued)
    the attachment figure as both a secure base and a safe haven.” An anxious-
    avoidant attachment, the next-healthiest type of attachment, “represents a
    relationship in which a child is strongly attached to the caregiver. However, the
    child may anxiously avoid some of the more-intimate types of parent-child
    interactions that are typical of children with secure attachments.”
    12
    family was positive and that E.A. ably directed the children’s play, set appropriate
    limits, had a nice manner with the children, and was attuned to their needs.
    However, Dr. Frank concluded that A.L. and Ta.L. were “most attached” to the
    W.s and would suffer the greatest harm, in both the short- and long-term, if that
    bond were broken, and that the children’s “emotional and behavioral development”
    were at a “high risk of derailment.” Accordingly, Dr. Frank agreed with Dr.
    Venza’s assessment and recommended that the court grant the W.s’ petition.
    E.A. called clinical psychologist Dr. Missar as her expert witness to offer a
    critique of Dr. Venza’s and Dr. Frank’s assessments.        Although he generally
    agreed with their opinions, Dr. Missar opined that Dr. Frank was not in a position
    to offer an opinion about the children’s attachment to any party because she had
    only conducted an assessment of their bonding. As for Dr. Venza’s evaluation, Dr.
    Missar found the primary limitation to be that he did not assess the children’s
    attachment to their biological family, including E.A. However, Dr. Missar agreed
    with Dr. Venza’s testimony concerning the importance of attachments in child
    development and agreed that “severing a child’s strong primary attachment to a
    caretaker poses significant risks of short- and long-term harm to the child—risks
    that are more severe than the loss of a sense of family identity occasionally
    13
    experienced by an adopted child.” Dr. Missar testified that these short-term risks
    include “behavioral regression,” “signs of withdrawal, signs of anxiety, [and] signs
    of depression,” while long-term risks include “a lack of trust in others . . . as well
    as some on-going problems with depression and anxiety.”
    On August 31, 2011, the trial court granted R.W. and A.W.’s adoption
    petition over E.A.’s adoption petition. The trial court stated that it gave “weighty
    consideration” to the biological parents’ preference for E.A. to adopt A.L. and
    Ta.L., but that evidence presented at trial clearly established that the children’s
    primary attachments were to the W.s, not E.A. The trial court concluded that given
    the limited time the children had spent with E.A. and their birth parents in the past
    three years, it was “inconceivable that the children [had] meaningful attachments
    to any of them.” On the basis of the three experts’ testimony—which the trial
    court regarded as “very persuasive”—the trial court found that a disruption of the
    attachments would pose a significant risk that all or most of the progress of the past
    three-plus years would be lost and that the children would regress to their pre-
    removal developmental trajectories. Although the trial court found E.A. to be a
    “forceful, healthy, and competent person” and stated that it “[did] not doubt her
    fitness as a caretaker for Ta.L. and A.L.,” the trial court found the risk to the
    14
    children’s progress too great if the continuity of care provided by the W.s and the
    children’s attachment to the W.s was not maintained. In its analysis, the trial court
    assessed the relevant statutory termination of parental rights factors set out in D.C.
    Code § 16-2353 (b) and concluded that A.H. and T.L. were withholding their
    consent to adoption by the W.s contrary to the children’s best interests and that
    placement of the children with E.A. was not in the children’s best interests.
    II. Legal Standards
    The Supreme Court has long recognized the fundamental right of parents to
    raise their children.7 Even when parents have not been “model parents” or the state
    has temporary custody of their child, parents retain their “fundamental liberty
    interest . . . in the care, custody, and management of their child” and have a
    “critical need for procedural protections[.]”8 This court has held that because the
    Constitution protects a biological parent’s liberty interest in preserving a
    ____________________
    7
    See, e.g., Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753 (1982) (acknowledging
    the “[Supreme] Court’s historical recognition that freedom of personal choice in
    matters of family life is a fundamental liberty interest”); Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    , 651-52 (1972); Prince v. Massachusetts, 
    321 U.S. 158
    , 166 (1944);
    Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 
    268 U.S. 510
    , 534-35 (1925).
    8
    
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 753
    .
    15
    relationship with his or her child, any “state intervention [into that] relationship is
    subject to constitutional oversight.” In re T.J., 
    666 A.2d 1
    , 12 (D.C. 1995) (citing
    In re Baby Boy C., 
    630 A.2d 670
    , 673 (D.C. 1993)). The state “must provide the
    parents with fundamentally fair procedures.”9
    “Absent termination of parental rights or some other finding that the parents
    should no longer be permitted to influence the child’s future, the parents’ rights
    necessarily include the right to consent, or withhold consent, to the child’s
    adoption.”     In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 12
    .     However, under our current adoption
    statute, a court may grant a petition for adoption without the consent of the natural
    parent if it finds by clear and convincing evidence that the consent is being
    withheld contrary to the best interest of the child. See D.C. Code § 16-304 (e)
    (2012 Repl.). Because granting an adoption without the natural parent’s consent
    necessarily terminates the parent’s rights, the court must weigh the same statutory
    factors listed in D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b) that are considered in a termination of
    parental rights (“TPR”) proceeding10 to decide whether termination is in the child’s
    best interest. See In re S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    , 1285 (D.C. 2015).
    ____________________
    9
    
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 754
    .
    10
    The factors, among those relevant to the present circumstances, are:
    (. . . continued)
    16
    Where there are competing adoption petitions and the biological parents
    have consented to adoption by one of the petitioners, “before rejecting the
    designated custodian’s petition and severing the child’s relation with his parent . . .
    and other relatives . . . the trial court must find by clear and convincing evidence
    both that the custody arrangement chosen by the [parents] would clearly not be in
    the best interest of the child and that the parent[s’] consent to adoption is withheld
    contrary to the child’s best interest.” In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 11
    (citing In re J.S.R.,
    (….continued)
    (1) the child’s need for continuity of care and
    caretakers and for timely integration into a stable and
    permanent home, taking into account the differences
    in the development and the concept of time of
    children of different ages;
    (2) the physical, mental and emotional health of all
    individuals involved to the degree that such affects the
    welfare of the child, the decisive consideration being
    the physical, mental and emotional needs of the child;
    (3) the quality of the interaction and interrelationship
    of the child with his or her parent, siblings, relative,
    and/or caretakers, including the foster parent; . . .
    D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b) (2012 Repl.). Other factors set out in the statute,
    not at issue in the present case, are whether the child was abandoned at the hospital
    following his or her birth; the child’s opinion of his or her own best interests in the
    matter; and evidence of ongoing drug-related activity in the child’s home
    environment. See 
    id. § 16-2353
    (b)(3A), (b)(4), (b)(5).
    17
    
    374 A.2d 860
    , 864 (D.C. 1977)). Thus, the clear and convincing evidence standard
    applies both when determining whether the parents’ consent to adoption can be
    waived under § 16-304, and when considering whether granting custody to the
    parent’s preferred caregiver is contrary to the best interest of the child. See In re
    C.A.B., 
    4 A.3d 890
    , 901 (D.C. 2010).
    “We review the trial court’s order granting an adoption for abuse of
    discretion, and determine whether the trial court ‘exercised its discretion within the
    range of permissible alternatives, based on all the relevant factors and no improper
    factors.’” In re T.W.M., 
    964 A.2d 595
    , 601 (D.C. 2009) (quoting In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 10
    ). We then assess whether the trial court applied the correct standard of
    proof, and “evaluate whether the [trial court’s] decision is supported by
    ‘substantial’ reasoning, . . . ‘drawn from a firm factual foundation’ in the record.”
    In re D.I.S., 
    494 A.2d 1316
    , 1323 (D.C. 1985) (quoting In re R.M.G., 
    454 A.2d 776
    , 790 (D.C. 1982)).
    18
    III. Appellate Review of Permanency Goal Changes From
    Reunification to Adoption
    Before we turn to the merits of this appeal, we must first address whether the
    constitutional rights of biological parents to raise their children are effectively
    protected under the statutory scheme currently utilized in neglect cases, and
    whether our decision to preclude review of permanency goal changes in In re
    K.M.T. undermines those rights.       Our dissenting colleagues disagree with our
    decision to address the appealability of decisions which change the permanency
    goal in neglect cases from reunification to adoption in this appeal. Post at 62-63.
    They contend that the issue is not properly before us because the natural parents
    failed to preserve the issue in the trial court. While we agree that this issue was not
    raised below we believe that the issue is ripe for consideration. In re K.M.T.
    effectively precluded a timely challenge to the permanency goal change and,
    therefore, no party will be unfairly prejudiced by our review. We have repeatedly
    affirmed our discretion, in the interests of justice, to consider an argument that is
    raised for the first time on appeal if the issue is purely one of law, . . . the factual
    record is complete, and a remand for further factual development would serve no
    purpose.   See Pajic v. Foote Prop., LLC, 
    72 A.3d 140
    , 145-46 (D.C. 2013)
    (quoting District of Columbia v. Helen Dwight Reid Educ. Found., 
    766 A.2d 28
    , 33
    19
    n.3 (D.C. 2001).11 Thus, we are satisfied that addressing this issue at this time is
    not inconsistent with our case law that provides a narrow exception to our general
    error preservation rule because the question before us is purely one of law and no
    further factual record is necessary.
    In seeking to protect the rights of biological parents to raise their children,
    give full weight to the District of Columbia’s policy preference that children be
    placed with family members,12 ensure that all decisions are guided by the best
    interest of the children over whom this court exercises parens patriae authority,
    and move the children to permanency within timeframes set forth in the Adoption
    ____________________
    11
    This court only applies the exception for reviewing unpreserved issues
    under Pajic and Helen Dwight Reid to civil cases; the exception does not extend to
    criminal cases, where we apply the more rigorous plain error test under Puckett v.
    United States, 
    556 U.S. 129
    (2009) and United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    (1993). See, e.g., Fortune v. United States, 
    59 A.3d 949
    , 954-55 (D.C. 2013)
    (finding plain error under Olano where the trial court failed to obtain a valid
    waiver of appellant’s jury trial right in a criminal case); In re Robertson, 
    19 A.3d 751
    , 760 (D.C. 2009) (applying the test from Puckett and Olano in a criminal
    contempt case); Otts v. United States, 
    952 A.2d 156
    , 161-62 (D.C. 2008) (applying
    the plain error test under Olano in a criminal, unlawful-drug-possession case).
    12
    See 42 U.S.C. § 671 (a)(19) (2012); see also 62 Fed. Reg. 36610, 36617
    (July 8, 1997).
    20
    and Safe Families Act (“ASFA”),13 we have endorsed a process that appellants
    here, as well as several amici, contend significantly undermines the constitutional
    rights of parents to raise their children as well as their ability to effectively
    challenge a trial court’s determination that they were not making sufficient
    progress towards reunification to warrant CFSA’s continued efforts to achieve that
    goal. In fact, appellants, A.H. and T.L., as well as several amici,14 argue that our
    efforts to balance the respective rights of the biological parents, the children, and
    the prospective adoptive parents have led the court to endorse a process that
    actually denies the biological parents their due process rights and undermines any
    meaningful opportunity they may have had to challenge permanency goal change
    decisions that often preordain the termination of the parent-child relationship.
    They argue that we must first require the government to meet its burden of
    proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that reasonable efforts were made to
    assist the parents in achieving reunification with their children, that reunification
    ____________________
    13
    Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, Pub. L. No. 105-89, 111 Stat.
    2115, 2128 (1997) (amending section 475 (5)(c) of the Social Security Act,
    codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(c) (Supp. 1999)).
    14
    Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia, National Association of
    Counsel for Children, Center for Family Representation, Inc., Family Defense
    Center, and Family Law Professors Vivek S. Sankaran, Christine Gottlieb, and
    Martin Guggenheim.
    21
    efforts failed despite the agency’s reasonable efforts, and that changing the goal
    from reunification to adoption is in the best interest of the children.
    Specifically, appellants A.H. and T.L., as well as the amici, contend that
    when a trial court changes the goal of a neglect proceeding from reunification to
    adoption, it informally terminates the pending neglect case and effectively puts the
    case on an almost unalterable path to adoption without a full evidentiary hearing or
    recourse to an appeal. This contention is not without support in the record of this
    case and many others. In fact, it only makes sense that when a child’s permanency
    goal is shifted from reunification to adoption, government resources and services
    are also shifted away from facilitating reunification, and instead, focus on finding
    and supporting potential new and permanent placements for the child.15
    While it is ostensibly possible for the biological parents to attain
    reunification notwithstanding a decision by the trial court to grant a permanency
    ____________________
    15
    42 U.S.C. § 671 (a)(15)(C) (if reasonable efforts are inconsistent with the
    permanency plan for the child, that is, the goal has been changed to adoption rather
    than reunification, reasonable efforts “shall be made to place the child in a timely
    manner in accordance with the permanency plan”); D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (c)
    (2012 Repl.).
    22
    goal change, this very rarely occurs in practice. See, e.g., In re G.A.P., 
    133 A.3d 994
    (D.C. 2016); In re W.D., 
    988 A.2d 456
    , 458-59 (D.C. 2010) (goal change from
    reunification to adoption led to grant of foster parent adoption); In re F.W., 
    870 A.2d 82
    , 87-88 (D.C. 2005) (affirming trial court’s decision to grant petition for
    adoption).   More often, the parents’ efforts to build or maintain a positive
    relationship with their child is severely hampered by the trial court’s permanency
    decision and by the time a parent is given the ability to challenge that decision, the
    passage of time and the child’s resulting attachment to the custodial adoption
    petitioner tends to make the granting of the adoption petition and the consequent
    termination of parental rights a fait accompli. See, e.g., In re R.E.S., 
    19 A.3d 785
    ,
    791 (D.C. 2011); In re An.C., 
    722 A.2d 36
    , 40 (D.C. 1998); In re D.R.M., 
    570 A.2d 796
    , 806 (D.C. 1990).
    It is quite possible that this court’s distaste for terminating parental rights
    without a viable alternative permanent living situation for the children is what led
    us to endorse this TPR by adoption practice in the first instance. However, we now
    recognize that the parents’ right to timely challenge the effective severing of their
    relationships with their children is too important a right to sacrifice to achieve
    some marginally greater efficiency in moving children to permanency. In sum, we
    23
    hold that a trial court’s grant of a permanency goal change from reunification to
    adoption over the parents’ objection, without an adjudicatory hearing to determine
    whether the District has fulfilled its duty to expend reasonable efforts to reunify the
    family, violates a parent’s procedural due process rights and, therefore, is
    appealable by the parents as a matter of right.
    The District of Columbia is among the few remaining jurisdictions that do
    not permit appeals of permanency goal changes from reunification to adoption in
    neglect proceedings.    Indeed, a vast majority of jurisdictions allow appellate
    review of goal changes either as appeals as of right or interlocutory appeals.16 In
    In re K.M.T., this court departed from the norm in our sister jurisdictions, holding
    ____________________
    16
    Sixteen states allow parents to immediately appeal permanency goal
    changes as of right (Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland,
    Massachusetts, Montana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South
    Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and Wyoming). Twenty-six states allow for
    interlocutory review of permanency goal changes, either at the discretion of the
    appellate court or by certification of the family court (Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado,
    California, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
    Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
    Mexico, New York, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, Washington, West
    Virginia, and Wisconsin). See also Md. Code, Courts & Jud. Proc. Art. § 12-303
    (3)(x); In re Damon, 
    765 A.2d 624
    , 628-29 (Md. 2001) (“[A]n order amending a
    permanency plan calling for reunification to foster care or adoption is immediately
    appealable.”).
    24
    that permanency goal changes are not among the orders and judgments with the
    “finality” necessary to warrant the right of appeal. In re 
    K.M.T., 795 A.2d at 690
    .
    This court has jurisdiction over all “final orders and judgments” of the
    Superior Court. D.C. Code § 11-721 (a)(1) (2012 Repl.). An order is not usually
    final unless it completely resolves the case on its merits; 17 but, to be final, an order
    need not necessarily be the last one in a proceeding. See District of Columbia v.
    Tschudin, 
    390 A.2d 986
    , 988 n.1 (D.C. 1978).               In the context of neglect
    proceedings, we have held that orders modifying visitation, and restoring physical
    custody, are “final orders” for purposes of appealability; however, we have held
    that a change of permanency goal is merely a step towards the termination of
    parental rights or an adoption and is not final, and thus not appealable. See In re
    
    K.M.T., 795 A.2d at 690
    (citing In re D.M., 
    771 A.2d 360
    , 365 (D.C. 2001)).
    In holding that a permanency goal change is not appealable, this court in In
    re K.M.T. reasoned that such an order “merely sets goals for the children,” and
    therefore, “does not affect the parents’ substantive rights in any way.” 
    Id. at 690-
    ____________________
    17
    See In re 
    C.A.B., 4 A.3d at 897
    (citing In re 
    K.M.T., 795 A.2d at 688
    ).
    25
    91. At least with respect to goal changes from reunification to adoption, we now
    disagree.   The decision to change the goal for a child from reunification to
    adoption is more than just a step in the neglect process. It is a critical point in the
    proceedings, one that often irreversibly dictates the result of a child’s ultimate
    custody disposition at a subsequent adoption proceeding. Such an order is at least
    as critical a change in a neglect proceeding as an order modifying visitation or
    restoring physical custody to one parent, for which we already recognize the right
    of a parent to appeal. Given that a goal change to adoption cannot be appealed
    under our current neglect process and, recognizing that the decision has the
    potential to strongly influence the outcome of a subsequent adoption proceeding,
    we are now of the opinion that a trial court’s decision to change the goal from
    reunification to adoption must be appealable to adequately protect the
    constitutional rights of parents involved in neglect proceedings. Therefore, we
    overrule our prior decision, In re K.M.T., and hold that a change in the permanency
    goal of a neglect case from reunification to adoption is an order subject to
    immediate appellate review.18
    ____________________
    18
    An order changing the permanency goal from reunification to adoption,
    which as we have said is effectively a final order as it is unlikely that it will be
    changed back to reunification, cannot be compared, as the dissent attempts, to an
    order removing a child and placing him or her in shelter care, see In re S.J., 
    632 A.2d 112
    (D.C. 1993), or to an order suspending visitation until a parent’s criminal
    (. . . continued)
    26
    We do not overrule In re K.M.T. lightly and recognize that such a decision
    will have a significant impact on the process currently used by trial courts in
    making permanency goal decisions. Because trial court decisions that change
    goals from reunification to adoption will now be appealable, the permanency goal
    hearing must be conducted in a way that affords parents their due process rights.
    Our review of the record here, as in many other neglect cases, indicates that trial
    courts are routinely presented with information contained in the government’s
    permanency report without any testimony from those who provided the
    information on which that the government’s recommendations are based or any
    other evidence that undergirds the findings and/or conclusions found in those
    reports. While a report of this kind may be sufficient for a typical neglect review
    hearing, it does not pass due process muster when the rights at stake are as great as
    a parent’s constitutional right to raise his or her child.
    (….continued)
    charges are resolved, see In re M.F., 
    55 A.3d 373
    (D.C. 2012), which are both
    temporary situations limited in time.
    27
    It is also important to recognize that permanency goal hearings are required
    by ASFA. Concerned that too many children were languishing in foster care,
    Congress sought to increase the number of adoptions so children could be moved
    more quickly into permanent homes.19 However, in so doing, Congress recognized
    the need to strike a balance between pursuing this goal and preserving the right of
    families to remain intact. In fact, as a condition for obtaining federal funds to
    support their foster care programs, ASFA requires participating states to expend
    reasonable efforts to “preserve and reunify” families “to make it possible for a
    child to safely return to the child’s home.” 42 U.S.C. § 671 (15)(B)(ii) (2012); see
    also D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (b) (2012 Repl.). In this vein, the Act requires that
    within a child’s first twelve months in foster care, and at least every six months
    thereafter, state courts must hold a permanency hearing. 42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(B),
    (C) (2012); see also D.C. Code § 16-2323 (a)(4) (2012 Repl.). At these periodic
    review points, courts must consider whether the child can be returned to the parent,
    42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(C), and must assess whether the state has expended reasonable
    efforts to achieve reunification and whether those efforts should continue, 42
    U.S.C. § 671 (15)(C); see also D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (c); D.C. Super. Ct.
    ____________________
    19
    H.R. Rep. No. 105-77, pt. 1, at 8 (1997) (“There seems to be almost
    universal agreement that adoption is preferable to [indefinite] foster care and that
    the nation’s children would be well served by a policy that increases adoption
    rates.”).
    28
    Neglect Rule 34 (c).20 However, ASFA also establishes a time frame within which
    parents have to ameliorate the conditions that led to the finding of neglect or face
    the prospect of having their parental rights terminated. Under ASFA, if a child has
    been in foster care for fifteen out of the preceding twenty-two months, the state is
    required to seek termination of the parents’ rights unless certain exceptions apply.
    42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(E) (2012). One of these exceptions is a safety valve to protect
    families who have not received sufficient assistance from the state: termination
    need not be sought if “the State has not provided to the family of the child,
    consistent with the time period in the State case plan, such services as the State
    deems necessary for the safe return of the child to the child’s home, if reasonable
    efforts of the type described in section 671(a)(15)(B)(ii) of this title are required to
    be made with respect to the child.” Id.21
    ____________________
    20
    In the District, CFSA is required “[a]t least 10 days prior to each review
    or permanency hearing . . . to submit a report . . . which shall include,” inter alia,
    “[t]he services provided or offered to the child and his parent, guardian, or other
    custodian.” D.C. Code § 16-2323 (d).
    21
    Termination also need not be sought if “the child is being cared for by a
    relative.” 42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(E). A third exception to a forced goal change
    allows the state to avoid the obligation of filing a termination petition if the “State
    agency has documented in the case plan (which shall be available for court review)
    a compelling reason for determining that filing such a petition would not be in the
    best interests of the child.” 
    Id. 29 Similarly,
    under our neglect statute, when a child has been adjudicated
    neglected and remains in an out-of-home placement, a review hearing must be held
    every six months unless a permanency hearing was held during the preceding six
    months. D.C. Code § 16-2323 (a)(1). Review hearings are conducted by the court
    to determine whether the child is safe, and whether appropriate steps are being
    taken to address the needs of the child and to ameliorate the problems that led to
    the child being brought into the system.      See 
    id. § 16-2323
    (b)(1)-(5).     A
    permanency hearing not only concerns itself with the issues typically addressed at
    a review hearing but also requires the court to determine the permanency plan for
    the child, including whether, and if so when, the child will be returned to the
    parent(s), placed pursuant to an award of legal custody or guardianship, placed in
    another permanent living situation, or placed for adoption. See 
    id. § 16-2323
    (c)(2). Section 16-2323 (d) of the neglect statute sets out the obligations of the
    government preceding a permanency hearing in which the government
    recommends a goal change. See D.C. Code § 16-2323 (d). Under this provision,
    the government is required to submit a report to the court and the parties that
    addresses the services offered to the child and the parents; any evidence that the
    issues that led to the neglect disposition have been ameliorated or have worsened;
    30
    and when, if at all, the child can be returned to the parent’s home. 22 Given the
    importance of the permanency hearing, we conclude that unless the parents are
    ____________________
    22
    Section 16-2323 (d) provides, in full:
    (d) At least 10 days prior to each review or permanency
    hearing the Division or the department, agency, or
    institution responsible for the supervision of the services
    to the child and his parent, guardian, or custodian shall
    submit a report to the Division which shall include, but
    not be limited to, the following information:
    (1) The services provided or offered to the child
    and his parent, guardian, or other custodian;
    (2) Any evidence of the amelioration of the
    condition which resulted in the finding of
    neglect and any evidence of new problems
    which would adversely affect the child;
    (3) An evaluation of the cooperation of the parent,
    guardian, or custodian with the Division or the
    applicable department, agency, or institution;
    (4) In those cases in which the custody of the child
    has been vested in a department, agency
    institution, or person other than the parent:
    (A) The extent to which visitation has
    occurred and any reasons why
    visitation has not occurred or has
    been infrequent;
    (B) The estimated time in which the
    child can be returned to the home;
    and
    (. . . continued)
    31
    prepared to stipulate that reasonable efforts were made by the government to help
    the parents ameliorate the problems that led to the Neglect adjudication, due
    process requires a more formal hearing than has been afforded to parents in the
    past when no such right of appeal existed. At such a hearing, the government must
    produce sufficient evidence from which a trial court can find by a preponderance
    of the evidence that the presumption in favor of reunification has been rebutted
    before the goal can be changed from reunification to adoption. In other words, the
    government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it has provided the
    parents with a reasonable plan for achieving reunification, that it expended
    reasonable efforts to help the parents ameliorate the conditions that led to the child
    being adjudicated neglected, and that the parents have failed to make adequate
    progress towards satisfying the requirements of that plan.          If the government
    (….continued)
    (C) Whether the agency has initiated
    or intends to initiate the filing by
    the Corporation Counsel of a
    motion requesting the termination
    of the parent and child relationship
    and any reasons why it does not
    intend to;
    (5) Any other information as may be required by
    the rules of the Superior Court of the District of
    Columbia.
    32
    satisfies its burden, a change of permanency goal from reunification to adoption
    would be presumptively consistent with the requirement that we act in the best
    interest of the child.
    Given AFSA’s delicate balancing of interests, it only makes sense that the
    primary focus of the permanency planning hearing should be on the parents’
    efforts to ameliorate the conditions that led to the neglect and the District’s efforts
    to assist them in achieving those goals. Acting on a determination of past neglect,
    the District maintains custody of this child with the understanding that such
    custody is temporary and that it will expend all reasonable efforts to help the
    troubled family and to reunify the child with her parents.23 However, once it is
    determined that the goal should be changed to adoption, the District is obligated to
    put forth its best effort to make that goal a reality.24 To put a finer point on it, such
    ____________________
    23
    Pursuant to ASFA, the presumptive goal is reunification, and states have
    an obligation to expend “reasonable efforts” to help families reunify. See 42
    U.S.C. § 671 (a)(15)(B)(ii); H.R. Rep. No. 105-77, pt. 2, at 12 (1997).
    (“[T]ermination of parental rights is such a serious intervention that it should not
    be undertaken without some effort to offer services to the family.”); see also D.C.
    Code § 4-1301.09a (b); 45 C.F.R. 1356.21 (b)(2) (2001).
    24
    Once a goal change from reunification to adoption has been endorsed, the
    state assumes the obligation to expend reasonable efforts to achieve that goal. See
    42 U.S.C. § 671 (a)(15)(C); D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (c).
    33
    goal change orders modify the fundamental terms of the custody order in the
    neglect proceeding and mark a critical point in time when the role of CFSA
    changes from a supporter of family reunification to an advocate for breaking up
    that same family. And, even though we recognize that nothing in the statute
    prohibits a court from establishing concurrent goals of reunification and adoption,
    the presumption in favor of reunification remains the primary goal of neglect
    proceedings with adoption as a favored alternative placement for children when
    efforts to reunify the family fail. Thus, a permanency goal decision that might lead
    to a situation that destroys family bonds must not be given short shrift when it
    comes to protecting the rights of parents to raise their own children. 25
    To ensure that the government has made reasonable efforts to reunify the
    family, parents must have an opportunity to challenge any statements,
    observations, and evaluations that form the basis of CFSA’s recommendation to
    the court to change the permanency goal. An appropriate hearing will provide a
    ____________________
    25
    It is immaterial that a permanency goal of adoption can theoretically be
    changed back to reunification. When a court orders a new permanency goal, this
    goal, as its name indicates, is intended to set out the District’s final plan for a
    child’s permanent placement. As such, it is akin to an indefinite visitation order,
    which we have held to be appealable because it is final unless and until it is
    changed. In re 
    D.M., 771 A.2d at 365
    .
    34
    forum where the parents can testify, under oath concerning any alleged failure on
    the District’s part to provide the requisite services and resources as well as their
    own efforts to meet the goals set forth in the plan that was developed to promote
    reunification. The hearing will also enable parents to present any other evidence
    that they believe supports a decision to continue with reunification efforts. Based
    on the evidence presented at the hearing, the trial court will be able to make
    findings of fact and conclusions of law that will allow this court to conduct a
    meaningful review of the trial court’s permanency decision and determine
    “whether the trial court ‘exercised its discretion within the range of permissible
    alternatives, based on all relevant factors and no improper factor.’” In re D.S., 
    88 A.3d 678
    , 691 n.21 (D.C. 2012) (quoting In re Baby Boy 
    C., 630 A.2d at 673
    ).
    More specifically, before approving a permanency goal change that allows
    the District to divert its limited resources from reunification to adoption, the trial
    court (absent waiver by the parent) must        ensure   that a goal change is the
    appropriate course of action by, at a minimum, making findings that: (1) the
    District has in fact expended reasonable efforts to reunify the family as it is
    statutorily obligated to do, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 675 (5)(E)(iii); (2) the
    goals set for the parents were appropriate and reasonable; and (3) other vehicles for
    35
    avoiding the pursuit of termination, e.g., kinship placements, 42 U.S.C. § 675
    (5)(E)(i), have been adequately explored.26      This court will review on appeal
    whether the trial court has made the requisite findings to justify a goal change and
    whether those findings were adequately supported by the record.27
    ____________________
    26
    In the District, placement with relatives is recognized as a preferred
    alternative to placement with foster parents. In this case, the District’s failure to
    follow up with E.A. at the beginning of the case led to the issue of kinship
    placement being unresolved at the time of the permanency goal change. We agree
    with the dissent that pursuant to D.C. Code § 16-2323 (c)(4) (2012 Repl.), a
    permanency hearing, generally, is not the appropriate time to consider kinship
    placements; however, that assumes other options were explored at the beginning of
    the removal process as required by law. See also, e.g., 29 DCMR § 6028.2 (k)
    (referring to the District’s “hierarchy of permanency plan options,” in the order of
    “[r]eturn home to parents” and “placement with relatives”); 29 DCMR § 1642.1
    (“The first priority of the foster care system shall be to maintain a child in his or
    her home or that of a relative.”); 42 U.S.C. § 671 (a)(19); CFSA, Permanency
    Planning        Policy      9-11      (May      25,      2011),     available      at
    http://cfsa.dc.gov/DC/CFSA/Publication%20Files/Policy%20Manual/Policies/Prog
    ram%20- %20Permanency%20Planning%20(final)(H).pdf (CFSA’s policy that
    “[w]hen reunification is not in a child’s best interest, adoption by kin shall be
    considered as a permanency goal” and “[a]doption by non-kin is an alternative
    permanency option when permanency with kin not in the child’s best interests.”).
    27
    During the permanency proceeding in this case, the magistrate judge
    seemed more intent on resolving the goal change issue “right quick” than in
    making the requisite findings to support it. It is possible that the magistrate judge
    was prepared to rule based on information gleaned during some of the prior review
    hearings and was thus deciding this matter on the basis of information that is not
    evident in the record of this appeal. However, there appears to be a dispute of fact
    regarding the accuracy of the visitation records in this case, which the magistrate
    (. . . continued)
    36
    Adversarial litigation of these issues followed by appellate review is further
    compelled where the District’s shift in support and allegiance can harm the
    constitutionally protected parent-child relationship, if not preordain its ultimate
    termination. The services and support the District provides to fragile families in
    the neglect system are essential to achieving their reunification goals. Presumably,
    the District’s intervention would not have been necessary had the parents not been
    facing serious challenges and lacking robust support systems; the removal of a
    child from her parent’s home may be an additional destabilizing force. Courts may
    restrict visitation, lessen parental involvement in the child’s life, and even order
    information about the child to be withheld from the parents. D.C. Super. Ct. Neg.
    R. 34 (g)(6). These changes can devastate parent-child relationships.28 Time is of
    (….continued)
    judge does not seem to have recognized was her obligation to resolve, observing
    “[n]othing’s been done that proves either way . . . so the goal is changed.” She
    also appears to not have questioned the District about its efforts, if any, to assist the
    children’s father with visitation after he apparently reported that he was unable to
    make his scheduled visitation because he was out of work and had lost his housing.
    28
    This is so even if the permanency goal change is only to make adoption a
    concurrent goal with reunification. Familial relationships may be undermined
    when the District shifts from total support for the parent-child relationship and
    throws even partial support behind a competing parental candidate.
    37
    the essence, and if the District’s support for reunification was improperly
    withdrawn, it must be restored as soon as possible.29
    We are well aware that this decision places an additional burden on the
    Superior Court and, while we are confident that these permanency goal hearings
    can be conducted efficiently, we recognize that associate judge review of the
    magistrate judge order may result in some delay in moving children who have been
    adjudicated as neglected into permanent living situations. We are equally mindful
    of the potential additional delay that may occur if parents avail themselves of the
    right to appeal permanency goal decisions. Because of the limited scope of this
    court’s review, and the broad discretion enjoyed by trial courts in making
    permanency goal decisions, we are confident that in the vast majority of cases our
    review can be adequately addressed using our summary appeals process. To that
    end, parties involved in an appeal from a decision by the trial court to change a
    ____________________
    29
    Subsequent review at the termination stage is too late. But in any event
    this court’s prior decisions make clear that the District’s shortcomings in
    expending reasonable efforts to achieve reunification of the natural family are not a
    proper consideration at termination proceedings. This precedent essentially treats
    as harmless any failure by the District to meet its obligations under ASFA. Our
    conception of permanency hearings addresses this deficiency by squarely focusing
    the trial court’s attention (and, on appeal, this court’s attention) on the adequacy of
    the District’s efforts to reunify the family.
    38
    permanency goal from reunification to adoption are encouraged to file cross-
    motions for summary disposition within the time frames provided for in Rule 4 (c)
    of the Rules of the Court of Appeals relating to appeals from Family Court cases.
    In the event that this court is unable to resolve the appeal through the summary
    disposition process, the appeal still will be expedited consistent with our existing
    rules.
    IV.    Unfitness Requirement and the Termination of Parental Rights
    In this case, neither the parents nor E.A. challenged the adoption on the basis
    that the trial court failed to first find that the parents, themselves, were unfit to
    raise their children. However, we take this opportunity to remind our colleagues
    on the trial court that the presumption in favor of a fit parent’s right to raise his or
    her children must be rebutted by a finding of parental unfitness before the trial
    court can make the ultimate determination to terminate a biological parent’s rights
    to raise his or her children.30       The Supreme Court has recognized that the
    fundamental right of an individual to parent his or her child, see Stanley, 405 U.S.
    ____________________
    30
    Substantive due process requires “a presumption that fit parents act in the
    best interests of their children,” Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 68 (2000), and
    recognition that the state may not “inject itself into the private realm of the family”
    absent a finding of unfitness. 
    Id. at 68-69.
                                              39
    at 651,31 may not be terminated without a predicate determination, by clear and
    convincing evidence that the individual is unfit to parent.32 Thus, while we have
    recognized the “best interest of the child” as the decisive factor in determining
    whether to ultimately terminate parental rights in a neglect proceeding, it is critical
    that the trial court make a parental unfitness determination before undertaking a
    “best interests of the child” analysis.33      Here, the trial court failed to make a
    ____________________
    31
    See also Lehr v. Robinson, 
    463 U.S. 248
    , 261 (1983) (“[A parent’s]
    interest in personal contact with his [or her] child acquires substantial protection
    under the due process clause); In re Ko.W., 
    774 A.2d 296
    , 304-05 (D.C. 2001).
    32
    See 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 760
    , 768-71 (holding that proof of unfitness
    must rise to the level of clear and convincing evidence before a parent’s rights
    could be terminated, and observing that “until the state proves parental unfitness,
    the child and his parents share a vital interest in preventing erroneous termination
    of their relationship”).
    33
    The focus on parental fitness is also reflected in the termination
    procedures of other states. See, e.g., In re Ann S., 
    202 P.3d 1089
    , 1102 (Cal. 2009)
    (noting that as a matter of constitutional law, “some showing of unfitness is called
    for when a custodial parent faces termination of his or her rights. . . . In that
    circumstance, there is no dispute that the best interest of the child would not be a
    constitutionally sufficient standard for terminating parental rights” (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted)); In re Five Minor Children, 
    407 A.2d 198
    ,
    199 (Del. 1979) (citing 
    Quilloin, 434 U.S. at 255
    ) (“The State cannot terminate
    parental rights by showing it is in the best interests of the children without showing
    the parents were unfit”) (overruled on other grounds); In re D.T., 
    818 N.E.2d 1214
    ,
    1225-27 (Ill. 2004) (explaining that Santosky requires clear and convincing
    evidence of parental unfitness, and that best interests is a separate inquiry); In re
    Scott S., 
    775 A.2d 1144
    , 1151 (Me. 2001) (holding that a court seeking to
    terminate parental rights must consider parental unfitness before it separately
    considers the best interests of the child and noting that this holding “springs from
    (. . . continued)
    40
    finding of parental unfitness and even though the parents have not raised this
    failure as an issue on appeal, we would be remiss in not reminding our colleagues
    on the trial bench of this obligation to make an independent determination of the
    (….continued)
    the mandates of the federal . . . constitution[]” which has made clear that “the State
    may not remove children from a parent’s care solely on the basis of the best
    interests of the children”); In re Rashawn H., 
    937 A.2d 177
    , 188 (Md. 2007)
    (explaining that in terminating parental rights, the Constitution requires the state to
    show “that the parent is ‘unfit’ or that ‘exceptional circumstances’ exist” before
    considering best interests of the child); Kenneth C. v. Lacie H., 
    839 N.W.2d 305
    ,
    314 (Neb. 2013) (discussing constitutional constraints and noting that “there is no
    clear and convincing evidence that [appellant father] is presently unfit as a
    parent”); In re J.J.B., 
    894 P.2d 994
    , 1003-04 (N.M. 1995) (holding that statute
    establishing “abandonment” as a criterion for TPR was constitutional only because
    “abandonment of one’s child establishes parental unfitness”); In re Kristina L., 
    520 A.2d 574
    , 579-80 (R.I. 1987) (explaining that the Constitution requires a finding of
    unfitness and that “[t]he best interest of the child outweighs all other
    considerations once the parents have been adjudged unfit. In essence, a finding of
    parental unfitness is the first necessary step”); In re J.P., 
    648 P.2d 1364
    , 1376
    (Utah 1982) (determining that statute providing for termination of parental rights
    based on the best interests of the child alone was “unconstitutional on its face” and
    explaining that “[u]nlike the standard of ‘parental fitness,’ which imposes a high
    burden on the state in an adversary proceeding, the standard of ‘best interest’ of the
    child provides an open invitation to trample on individual rights through trendy
    redefinitions and administrative or judicial abuse”); Copeland v. Todd, 
    715 S.E.2d 11
    , 20 (Va. 2011) (for a TPR statute “to pass constitutional due process scrutiny,
    [it] must provide for consideration of parental fitness and detriment to the child”
    because “the Constitution requires more than a mere showing of the child’s best
    interests to terminate parental rights”); In re A.B., 
    232 P.3d 1104
    , 1109 (Wash.
    2010) (en banc) (“The first question here is whether a parent has a due process
    right not to have the State terminate his or her relationship with a natural child in
    the absence of an express or implied finding that he or she, at the time of trial, is
    currently unfit to parent the child. According to the United States Supreme Court,
    this court, and our Court of Appeals, the answer is yes”).
    41
    fitness of birth parents. . . . In In re S.L.G., we recognized that “[p]arental
    ‘fitness’ is not a statutorily defined term in this jurisdiction” but we said that
    “fitness refers to the parent’s intention and ability over time to provide for a child’s
    wellbeing and meet the child’s 
    needs.” 110 A.3d at 1286
    . We further explained
    that the basic inquiry is “whether the parent is, or within a reasonable time will be,
    able to care for the child in a way that does not endanger the child’s welfare.” 
    Id. This approach
    to fitness is consistent with Supreme Court precedent. As the Court
    stated in Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 68-69 (2000), “so long as a parent
    adequately cares for his or her children (i.e. is fit), there will normally be no reason
    for the State to interject itself into the private realm of the family to further
    question the ability of that parent to make the best decisions concerning the rearing
    of that parent’s children.” See also Part I of the separate opinion of Associate
    Judges Beckwith and Easterly in this case, concurring in part and dissenting, in
    part. In our opinion in In re Petition of G.A.P., we reiterated our view as to the
    distinction between parental fitness and the best interest of the child. “[P]arental
    ‘fitness’ is not merely a restatement of the ‘best interests of the child,’ as
    determined by a TPR or contested adoption proceeding. ‘Fitness,’ rather, is an
    independent determination of parental ‘intention and ability over time,’ . . . to
    resolve the natural parent’s capacity to ‘care for the child’ and protect the child
    42
    against ‘undue risk of 
    harm.’” 133 A.3d at 998
    (quoting S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    ,
    1287 (D.C. 2015)).
    Because a child’s best interests are presumably served by being placed with
    his or her fit natural parent, see 
    Troxel, supra
    , a finding of parental fitness will in
    most cases preclude a trial court from terminating a natural parent’s parental rights,
    except for those truly “exceptional circumstance[s]” where the trial court is
    convinced that “a continuation of the parental relationship [between a fit parent
    and child is nonetheless] detrimental to the best interest of the child.’” 
    Id. No finding
    was made in this case that the parents were unfit ostensibly because once
    they chose to support the adoption petition of E.A., as opposed to contesting the
    W.’s petition and seeking reunification, the trial court may have felt that such a
    finding was unnecessary. However, since the adoption proceeding resulted in the
    termination of their parental rights, had the failure of the trial court to make a
    fitness determination been challenged on appeal by the parents, it is likely that a
    remand would have been necessary.
    To require less than an independent determination of parental fitness would
    run counter to the Supreme Court’s pronouncements in Troxel and Santosky, the
    43
    express policy of the ASFA, and the underlying purpose of the neglect process,
    which is not to punish parents for past wrongs, but rather to rehabilitate parents and
    reunite children with their families. See In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    n.24
    (“While the [parental] presumption ‘is not absolute’ and ‘must necessarily give
    way in the face of clear and convincing evidence that requires the court, in the best
    interest of the child, to deny custody to the natural parent in favor of an adoptive
    parent,’ the question of parental fitness is almost always at the heart of any
    proceeding to terminate parental rights or waive a natural parent’s consent to
    adoption.” In re S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    , 1286 (D.C. 2015) (emphasis added). We
    acknowledge that there may be “circumstances in which clear and convincing
    evidence will show that an award of custody to a fit natural parent would be
    detrimental to the best interests of the child.” 
    Id. (quoting Appeal
    of H.R. (In re
    Baby Boy C.), 
    581 A.2d 1141
    , 1176-79 (D.C. 1990) (Ferren, J. concurring)); but
    see 
    id. at 1291
    (citing the inability “to postulate a realistic factual situation where a
    ‘fit’ parent can be properly deprived of parental rights based on the ‘best interest of
    the child.’”) (Newman, J., concurring). Therefore, while the fitness of the parents
    must first be determined in any proceeding that may terminate their parental rights,
    if the trial court is satisfied by clear and convincing evidence that reunification of
    the child with the family would grievously harm the child, the presumption in
    favor of a fit parent raising his or her child gives way to what is in the child’s best
    44
    interest. It may be the case that trial judges are considering future harm in their
    assessment of parental fitness consistent with the way this court articulated the
    fitness test in In re S.L.G. However, without an express fitness determination it is
    difficult to assess whether that is in fact the case and so the call by Judges Easterly
    and Beckwith for the D.C. Council to review and update our neglect and adoption
    statutes may prove to be helpful in this regard. Post at 141.
    V. “Weighty Consideration” to the Biological Parents’
    Preferred Caregiver
    In this case, the children’s biological parents and their aunt, E.A., whom the
    parents wanted to adopt their children, argue that the trial court, in granting the
    adoption petition of the W.s, failed to give weighty consideration to E.A.’s
    competing adoption petition as required by our case law. Under current law,
    biological parents who are unable or unwilling to raise their own children may
    choose to consent to an adoption by a preferred caregiver so that their children can
    be raised by someone with whom they have close familial ties.               We have
    consistently held that when parents whose parental rights are still intact choose a
    custodian for their children, that choice is to be given great weight when there are
    competing adoption petitions before the court. See In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 11
    .
    45
    Under such a scenario, the trial court must find by “clear and convincing” evidence
    that the custody arrangement preferred by the parents would clearly be contrary to
    the best interests of the child. 
    Id. The court’s
    rationale underlying this parental
    preference is the recognition that biological parents have a right to raise their
    children and, therefore, when biological parents consent to an adoption by one of
    the petitioners in a contested adoption proceeding, “the trial court cannot merely
    weigh the competing adoption petitions against one another, as if they began in
    equipoise.” In re K.D., 
    26 A.3d 772
    , 778 (D.C. 2011).34 In order to recognize this
    parental right in a manner that is consistent with applicable presumptions and the
    best interest of the child standard, our case law requires the non-favored petitioner
    to prove by clear and convincing evidence that placement of the children with
    those petitioners would be detrimental to the children’s best interest. If the non-
    favored petitioners meet that burden, they must subsequently prove by a
    preponderance of the evidence that granting their adoption petition is in the
    children’s best interest before the court can waive the parents’ consent and grant
    ____________________
    34
    We need not address here whether the court must give weighty
    consideration to the preference of a biological parent who has demonstrated utter
    lack of regard for, or even hostility to, the best interest of the child. In such a case,
    at least arguably, “the parent is not competent to make . . . a decision” about a
    caregiver for the child. See In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 11
    , 16. And, in any event, it
    may be that, in any such cases, the burden of demonstrating that it would be clearly
    contrary to the child’s best interest to place the child with the parents’ preferred
    caregiver would not be a difficult one.
    46
    the adoption. “Clear and convincing evidence is evidence ‘which will produce in
    the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the facts sought to be
    established. . . .’” In re W.E.T., 
    793 A.2d 471
    , 478 n.15 (D.C. 2002) (quoting In re
    Estate of Soeder, 
    220 N.E.2d 547
    , 574 (Ohio Ct. App. 1966)). The non-favored
    petitioner bears the burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that
    placing the children with the parents’ preferred caregiver would be contrary to the
    children’s best interest.35 “If the trial court has not given sufficient consideration
    to the [biological] parent[s’] choice . . . we have generally reversed the trial court’s
    decision.” In re A.T.A., 
    910 A.2d 293
    , 297 (D.C. 2006).
    Turning to the merits of this case, we must determine whether the trial court
    gave weighty consideration to E.A. as the preferred adoption petitioner for the
    children.   Thus, we have to determine whether the competing non-preferred
    adoption petitioners, the W.s, met their burden of proving by clear and convincing
    evidence that the placement of Ta.L. and A.L. with E.A. would be contrary to their
    best interests. This is not an easy burden to prove and at the outset, we “recognize,
    as we always do in such cases, that it is no small matter for a court to permit the
    adoption of a child over the objection of a mother [or father] who loves [her].” In
    ____________________
    35
    In re 
    T.W.M., 964 A.2d at 604
    (citing In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 16
    ).
    47
    re 
    W.D., 988 A.2d at 457
    (internal quotations marks and citation omitted).
    However, this is not a situation where the parents, themselves, are seeking
    reunification so the concerns raised above about protecting the rights of parents to
    raise their own children and the presumptions involved in that situation are not
    implicated here.
    Here, appellants claim that Dr. Venza’s attachment study involving the
    children and the W.s, and upon which the trial court primarily relied, did nothing to
    undermine the presumption favoring the choice of a caregiver by the biological
    parents because the attachment study did not also evaluate the children’s
    attachment to E.A.36 As a result, they contend that there is no evidence that
    placement of the children with E.A. would be detrimental to the best interests of
    ____________________
    36
    Appellant E.A. also contends that the trial court erred in not considering
    the District of Columbia’s failure to pursue a family placement with E.A. after it
    was determined that T.L.’s sister, K.A.-R. could not be certified as a family
    placement for A.L. and Ta.L. We have repeatedly held that a “child cannot be
    punished for the alleged wrongs of the bureaucracy.” In re L.L., 
    653 A.2d 873
    ,
    882 (D.C. 1995) (quoting In re L.W., 
    613 A.2d 350
    , 355 n.11 (D.C. 1992)). At this
    stage, which is past the permanency goal change, “the overriding consideration is
    the best interest of the child . . . regardless of the defaults of public agencies in
    seeking reunification of the family.” In re A.C., 
    597 A.2d 920
    , 925 (D.C. 1991).
    48
    the children,37 that E.A. would not be a fit caretaker for the children, or that E.A.
    would not be able to help the children transition to her home and care. Instead,
    they argue that the trial court should have “focus[ed] its inquiry on the aunt’s
    fitness” rather than the potential harm the children would experience in being
    separated from their foster parents of three years. We disagree.
    In granting the W.s’ adoption petition and denying the petition of E.A., the
    trial court issued findings of fact concerning the development of the children and
    relied on expert testimony concerning the closeness of the relationship the children
    had with the W.s and with E.A. In its July 7, 2011 order, the trial court gave
    appropriate consideration to the relevant statutory factors set out in § 16-2353 (b)
    in determining that the parents were withholding consent to adoption contrary to
    the best interest of the child, and acknowledged in its analysis the “weighty
    consideration” that it gave to the parents’ preference between the competing
    adoption petitions.
    ____________________
    37
    As Dr. Venza testified, attachment is a dynamic process, and children can
    have attachments to several people at once. However, the trial court concluded
    that it was “inconceivable that the children had meaningful attachments to [E.A.]”
    given the limited time the children had spent with E.A. in the past three years.
    49
    While the trial court did not find that E.A. would be an unsuitable
    caregiver,38 the trial court did find that placement of the children with E.A. would
    be contrary to their best interests before granting the W.s’ adoption petition. The
    trial court’s finding was based primarily on expert testimony that the children
    risked short- and long-term psychological harm if their attachments to their pre-
    adoptive foster parents, R.W. and A.W., were broken. While the qualities of the
    particular person the biological parents favor is always critical to the court’s
    inquiry, the primary issue the court must grapple with, as discussed infra, is
    whether there is clear and convincing evidence that the favored custodial
    arrangement, including continuation of the relationship between the natural parents
    and the children, would be clearly contrary to the best interests of the children. In
    re 
    T.W.M., 964 A.2d at 604
    (citing In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 16
    ).
    ____________________
    38
    We emphasize again that in neglect and adoption proceedings,
    preservation of natural parents’ constitutionally-protected right to the care,
    custody, and management of their child demands a strong presumption in favor of
    placing the child in the care of the natural parent unless the parent is first proven to
    be “unfit.” See In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1285-86
    . The court “cannot
    constitutionally use the ‘best interests’ standard to terminate the parental rights of a
    ‘fit’ natural parent, and instead, grant an adoption in favor of prospective adoption
    petitioners simply because they are ‘fitter.’” 
    Id. at 1287-88
    (internal quotation and
    citation omitted). This presumption, however, does not apply in favor of a
    designated caregiver herself. E.A. asserts that the trial court erred in not focusing
    its analysis on her own fitness, but this assertion is unavailing because she is not
    entitled to the same presumption favoring “fit” natural parents. Instead, her
    designation by the natural mother as the preferred caregiver is entitled to “weighty
    consideration” as articulated herein.
    50
    In answering that inquiry, and in addition to the attachment study prepared
    by Dr. Venza, the trial court appeared to rely in part on the testimony of Dr. Frank
    who conducted a bonding study but testified that breaking the children’s
    “attachment” to the W.s would harm the children. Dr. Frank’s testimony appears
    to have conflated or, at a minimum, blurred the lines between the bonding and
    attachment studies and it is not clear whether the trial court fully recognized the
    misstatement. Thus, to the extent the trial court relied on Dr. Frank’s bonding
    study to make findings focused on attachment, that reliance was misplaced. While
    a bonding study carries some weight in an analysis of the best interest of the
    children, it does not carry the same weight as an attachment study, which
    according to the evidence presented at trial, has a stronger correlation to emotional
    attachment and which, if broken, could cause significant harm to the children.
    Therefore, while it is possible that an attachment study might adequately support a
    finding by clear and convincing evidence that placement of the children with
    someone other than the person to whom they are attached would be detrimental to
    their best interests, the same cannot be said for a bonding study because children
    can bond with more than one individual. When this case was originally before a
    division of this court, the panel was not convinced of the significance of the
    distinction being drawn between a bonding study and an attachment study and,
    51
    therefore, was reluctant to rely on either one or both as adequate support for the
    trial court’s decision in this case to grant the adoption petition of the W.s over E.A.
    who, by all accounts, also enjoyed a positive relationship with the children.
    Further, the panel was concerned that a “one-sided attachment study” prepared by
    the W.’s expert without a corresponding study measuring the attachment the
    children had to E.A. was not an appropriate or balanced way of measuring the
    harm to the children caused by removing them from the care and custody of the
    W.s. On en banc review, however, those concerns are no longer shared by those
    on the panel or our colleagues who join this part of the opinion. We are satisfied
    that the record supports the trial court’s finding that breaking the children’s
    attachment to the W.s would significantly harm them, 39 and that is especially the
    case now that the children have been in the W.’s care for an exceedingly long
    period of time.
    ____________________
    39
    While attachment studies are a significant consideration in the weighty
    consideration analysis, we caution that there are also other important
    considerations for the trial court when weighing a preferred caregiver’s petition for
    adoption with that of a non-preferred caregiver, such as the appropriateness of the
    preferred caregiver; preservation of extended family ties (a policy reflected in
    District of Columbia law); and issues pertaining to racial, cultural, and family
    identity, among others. See In re 
    T.J., 666 A.2d at 5
    , 14.
    52
    Here, the trial court, in relying primarily on Dr. Venza’s attachment study
    found that A.L. had a secure attachment, and Ta.L. had an anxious avoidant
    attachment, to A.W.     The court also credited Dr. Venza’s testimony that the
    children had a primary attachment to A.W. and that they viewed the W.s as their
    primary caregivers. Most importantly, Dr. Venza testified that severance of this
    type of attachment will necessarily cause significant harm to the children,
    regardless of the qualities of the person who serves as their subsequent caregiver.
    In addition to the testimony by Dr. Venza and Dr. Frank, Dr. Missar,
    appellants’ expert at trial, also acknowledged the value of attachment studies and
    conceded that “moving children who are securely attached does carry with it some
    psychological risk.” Based on this evidence, the trial court concluded that there
    was clear and convincing evidence in the record that the custodial relationship
    preferred by the biological parents with an otherwise fit and suitable caregiver
    would clearly be contrary to the children’s best interest. Because the trial court’s
    conclusion is supported by our prior decisions in a line of similar cases, we have
    no basis to disagree here. See, e.g., In re T.W.M., 
    18 A.3d 815
    , 821 (D.C. 2011)
    (holding that based on undisputed evidence that the prospective adoptee had a
    secure attachment to the foster parent, there was clear and convincing evidence that
    53
    removing the child from the foster parents’ care would be contrary to the child’s
    best interests even though the parents’ preferred caregiver, a relative, was fit to
    care for the child); In re 
    R.E.S., 19 A.3d at 791
    (approving the trial court’s reliance
    on the child’s lack of relationship with the preferred relatives, and the child’s clear
    attachment to the foster parent, in concluding that the child’s best interests were
    served by granting the foster parent’s adoption over the biological parent’s
    objection). Thus, we are satisfied that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    this case. We reiterate the great importance of stability and continuity this court
    has recognized in evaluating the best interest of child. See Rutledge v. Harris, 
    263 A.2d 256
    , 257-58 (D.C. 1970) (“[A] stable and desired environment of long
    standing should not lightly be set aside.”).
    While the expert testimony offered by both the appellant and appellee also
    recognized the fact that a positive environment in E.A.’s home could have a
    mitigating effect on the risk of harm to the children, the attachment study and the
    compelling testimony of the W.s and their experts—credited by the trial court and
    undisputed by E.A.’s expert—convinces us that disruption of the children’s
    attachments with the W.s would pose “unacceptably grave” risks to the children’s
    short- and long-term psychological, intellectual, and social development. We are
    54
    satisfied that the W.s have produced clear and convincing evidence that granting
    E.A.’s adoption petition would have been contrary to the best interest of the
    children and therefore, the W.s successfully met their burden. Thus, the trial
    court’s decision to grant the W.’s adoption petition over the petition filed by E.A.
    is supported by the evidence in the record.
    VI. Conclusion
    For the above reasons, we hold that: (1) permanency goal review hearings
    must be conducted in a manner that protects the due process rights of parents; (2)
    the trial court must find by a preponderance of the evidence that the government
    has made reasonable efforts to help the parents achieve reunification with their
    children consistent with the neglect plan that was developed for that purpose
    before the trial court can change the goal of a neglect proceeding from
    reunification to adoption; (3) a change of the presumptive goal of a neglect
    proceeding from reunification to adoption is an appealable final order; and (4)
    prior to the termination of parental rights, either through a TPR or through an
    adoption proceeding, a finding of parental unfitness must first be made by the trial
    court unless truly exceptional circumstances exist or the parents have otherwise
    stipulated to their continued unfitness.
    55
    Having reviewed the permanency goal review hearing in this case, we are
    satisfied that even had the rights discussed herein been afforded to the parents in
    that proceeding, including the right to appeal the trial court’s decision to change
    the goal to adoption, the outcome would not have been different. The
    government’s evidence supports a finding that it made reasonable efforts to assist
    the parents in meeting the requirements contained in their reunification plan.
    Further, there was clear and convincing evidence in the record to support the trial
    court’s findings that: (1) adoption by E.A. was detrimental to the children’s best
    interest; (2) the biological parents were withholding consent to the W.s’ petition to
    adopt contrary to the best interests of the children; and (3) adoption by the W.s was
    in the children’s best interest.
    Thus, the judgment of the trial court is
    Affirmed.
    GLICKMAN, Associate Judge, with whom FISHER and MCLEESE, Associate
    Judges, join in full, and THOMPSON, Associate Judge, joins in Parts III and IV,
    56
    concurring and dissenting: This contested adoption case concerns the fate of two
    grievously neglected children. The sole question actually presented on appeal is a
    narrow one: whether the trial court properly considered psychological attachment
    evidence regarding how these children would be harmed if removed from their
    foster parents. Somehow, though, in the course of prolonged appellate gestation,
    the case has been transformed into a judicial battleground over settled law and a
    vehicle for the majority to effect far-reaching changes in our law – changes that we
    think will be detrimental to abused and neglected children in the District of
    Columbia. At stake is the fundamental proposition embodied in our statutes and
    enshrined in our cases, that the paramount consideration when determining
    parental rights and child placements is the best interest of the child.
    This court did not set out to overhaul our law. It granted rehearing en banc
    simply to reconsider a new rule announced in the division’s opinion severely
    limiting the use of psychological attachment studies to determine the child’s best
    interest in contested adoption proceedings. The division held that a trial court may
    rely on an attachment study to find that the weighty consideration due the
    biological parents’ preference for a competing caregiver has been overcome “only
    if the preferred caregiver has also been given the opportunity to have a meaningful
    57
    attachment or bonding study conducted between him or herself and the children,
    and the study concludes that an appropriate attachment or bond with the preferred
    caregiver has not or is not likely to occur.”1 In seeking en banc rehearing, the
    guardian ad litem and the foster parents challenged this rule as unprecedented,
    unsound, and incompatible with the best-interest-of-the-child standard.
    Having now had the opportunity to consider the matter en banc, the court
    has decided to abandon the rationale on which the division based its ruling.
    Suffice it to say that the court’s sub silentio rejection of the rule fashioned by the
    division reflects the fact that no judge on this court is in favor of it. We recognize
    that the restriction on the trial court’s consideration of attachment studies in
    contested adoption proceedings is unsound because severing a child’s strong
    attachment to her foster parents may be traumatic and harmful to the child
    regardless of whether she is attached to an alternative caregiver, whoever that
    might be. The en banc majority therefore is entirely right, in our view, to uphold
    the trial court’s reliance on Dr. Venza’s study of the children’s attachment to their
    foster parents even though Dr. Venza did not evaluate the possibility that the
    ____________________
    1
    In re Ta.L., 
    75 A.3d 122
    , 133 (D.C. 2013), vacated, 
    91 A.3d 1020
    (D.C.
    2014).
    58
    children could develop an attachment to their aunt. Ante at 51-53. Accordingly,
    we are pleased to join with the majority of our colleagues (all of them except
    Judges Beckwith and Easterly) in affirming the trial court’s decision to grant the
    foster parents’ adoption petition in this case. We believe the evidence in its
    totality, including but not limited to the testimony of the child psychologists,
    overwhelmingly supports the court’s determinations that the biological parents
    withheld their consent to the foster parents’ adoption petition contrary to the
    children’s best interests, and that placement of the children with their aunt would
    not be in their best interests.2
    ____________________
    2
    We base our conclusion that the evidence supported the trial court’s
    decision on the evidence introduced at the hearing in the trial court rather than on
    factual assertions contained in the briefs on appeal. The trial court relied, in part,
    on the results of Dr. Venza’s study of the children’s attachment to their foster
    family and the unrebutted testimony of all three child psychologist witnesses
    describing why and how the children would be harmed if they were removed from
    their foster parents. (We do not agree with the suggestion that the trial court erred
    by relying on Dr. Frank’s bonding study, or with the view that bonding studies in
    general have little probative value in this context. See ante at 50.)
    The expert psychological testimony was not the only evidence undergirding
    the trial court’s determinations, however. The foster parents’ petition was
    supported as well by the children’s pediatrician and the social workers who had
    worked with the children and their families. In addition, the court received
    powerful evidence of the children’s sickly, emaciated, and developmentally
    arrested condition at the time they were removed from their parents’ custody, and
    of how the children had thrived in response to the loving care and attention to their
    special needs provided by the foster parents. There was evidence, too, of the
    aunt’s inability or unwillingness to appreciate and address the children’s medical
    (. . . continued)
    59
    We write separately to express our disagreement with the unwarranted
    transmutation of this case into an instrument for rewriting our law in other areas.
    No one asked us to grant rehearing en banc in order to overturn this court’s holding
    in In re K.M.T. that “an order changing a permanency planning goal is not final or
    appealable” as of right.3 Our colleagues’ discussion and resolution of this issue has
    absolutely no bearing on the outcome of the present appeals. See ante at 54-55.
    The same holds true for the majority’s sua sponte declaration that parental rights
    may not be terminated without a predicate finding of parental unfitness. With this
    dictum, a bare majority of the court unnecessarily reaches out to disavow this
    jurisdiction’s settled constitutional precedent on a matter of fundamental
    importance, and it does so without the benefit of notice to, or briefing by, the
    parties or their amici. In our view, which we explain in Part I of this opinion, the
    foregoing issues (as well as the issues broached for the first time in the separate
    opinion of Judges Beckwith and Easterly) are not properly before us.
    (….continued)
    and developmental problems and to protect them from their biological parents’
    mistreatment.
    3
    
    795 A.2d 688
    , 690 (D.C. 2002).
    60
    Nonetheless, because our colleagues have chosen to decide these issues, we
    are compelled to respond on the merits. And on the merits, we respectfully dissent.
    In Part II, we explain why orders changing a child’s permanency goal are not
    appealable final orders, and why allowing immediate interlocutory appeals of those
    orders as of right is contrary to governing law and detrimental to at-risk children in
    foster care.
    In Part III, we argue that our colleagues’ elevation of parental rights over the
    best interests of the child in termination of parental rights (TPR) and contested
    adoption proceedings is contrary to decades of prior decisions of this court and not
    required by the Supreme Court decisions on which the majority relies.             Our
    colleagues fail to appreciate how the vital interests of children may conflict with
    and outweigh their biological parents’ interests and preferences. We believe it to
    be well-settled that the Constitution and our governing statutes permit even fit
    parents’ rights to be terminated when necessary to protect a child from harm
    because the child’s best interest is paramount.
    Lastly, in Part IV, we rebut the contention, advanced only by Judges
    Beckwith and Easterly, that fit parents have a presumptive constitutional right to
    61
    “control” who will adopt their children even where (as in the present case) their
    choice would be detrimental to the children’s best interests. Post at 156-157. For
    different reasons, we agree that our judge-made doctrine requiring a court to give
    “weighty consideration” to whichever adoption petition the biological parents
    prefer is problematic and should be re-examined.            But we think such re-
    examination should await a case in which jettisoning the requirement of special
    deference would affect the outcome.
    In their separate opinion, Judges Beckwith and Easterly go on to address the
    Council of the District of Columbia directly and call for legislation to replace our
    supposedly “inadequate” statutes governing adoption and termination of parental
    rights. Post at 140-41, 151-155. Our colleagues object to our current statutes
    because they establish the best interest of the child, and not parental fitness, as the
    primary test governing adoption and TPR decisions. Although we see no need to
    further discuss our colleagues’ legislative suggestions, we do note that we strongly
    disagree both with our colleagues’ view that our current statutes are
    constitutionally inadequate and with many of their specific suggestions for
    revision.
    62
    I. The Court Errs By Undertaking to Decide Issues Not Properly
    Presented in These Appeals.
    “The premise of our adversarial system is that appellate courts do not sit as
    self-directed boards of legal inquiry and research, but essentially as arbiters of
    legal questions presented and argued by the parties before them.” 4 Thus, even
    when it sits en banc, this court has no “roving commission[]” to pass judgment at
    whim on the interpretation and validity of our laws.5 Rather, “[c]ourts should not
    decide more than the occasion demands.”6 The principles of forfeiture, waiver,
    and materiality to the controversy at hand are meant to restrain courts from
    overreaching and deciding questions when it is unnecessary, unwise, and
    inappropriate to do so. Moreover, fairness to parties who have a stake in the
    resolution of an issue and the desirability of receiving their informed input require
    that they be given notice and an opportunity to be heard before the court
    undertakes to reach a decision. Regrettably, our colleagues ignore these well-
    established principles.
    ____________________
    4
    Ford v. United States, 
    533 A.2d 617
    , 624 (D.C. 1987) (en banc) (quoting
    Carducci v. Regan, 
    714 F.2d 171
    , 177 (D.C. Cir. 1983)); accord Rose v. United
    States, 
    629 A.2d 526
    , 536-37 (D.C. 1993).
    5
    See Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 610-11 (1973).
    6
    District of Columbia v. WICAL Ltd. P’ship, 
    630 A.2d 174
    , 182 (D.C.
    1993) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    63
    To begin with, because the biological parents did not seek to be reunified
    with their children or oppose the change of permanency plan to adoption, we think
    the majority is incorrect in stating that these appeals raise “serious concerns” about
    In re K.M.T.’s holding. Ante at 3. In fact, while the biological parents complain
    on appeal about the effects of permanency goal changes and urge us to permit
    interlocutory appeals from them as of right, they did not present these complaints
    in the trial court despite multiple opportunities to do so.7 They did not seek an
    evidentiary hearing on the change in goal or claim they were prejudiced by the
    supposed deprivation of such a hearing.        They did not dispute the material
    accuracy or the sufficiency of the magistrate judge’s factual findings underlying
    the change in goal, and they did not request additional findings. 8 They conceded in
    the trial court proceedings that they had not complied with the conditions for
    ____________________
    7
    The children’s aunt has not raised any challenges to the permanency goal
    changes.
    8
    The magistrate judge changed the children’s permanency goals at a
    permanency review hearing after the children had been in foster care for
    approximately fourteen months because, in that time, the biological parents had not
    (1) complied with court-ordered drug testing and drug treatment, (2) regularly
    attended couples’ counseling (despite their history of domestic violence that had
    led to their own arrests and their children’s removal), (3) secured stable housing or
    employment, (4) consistently visited their children, or (5) involved themselves in
    their children’s medical care and National Children’s Center Services.
    64
    reunification.   They did not maintain that they were fit to care for their children or
    advocate for the children to remain in foster care (rather than be adopted) while
    they continued to work toward reunification. The biological parents did not claim
    that the Child and Family Services Agency (CFSA) had failed to make reasonable
    efforts to help them achieve reunification, and they did not object to any supposed
    discontinuation or curtailment of those efforts attendant on the goal change.9
    Furthermore, the biological parents did not challenge or appeal the goal change.
    Even now, on appeal from the final adjudication, they have not claimed that the
    magistrate judge abused her discretion in deciding that the children’s permanency
    goal should be changed to adoption. The division acknowledged this when it
    concluded that “this case is not the appropriate vehicle for reconsidering” In re
    K.M.T., and that “had an appeal been taken from the order changing the
    ____________________
    9
    In fact, even after the goal change, the CFSA continued to facilitate the
    services ordered for the biological parents and their visitation with their children.
    The biological parents did not demonstrate improvement, however.
    Of particular note, the biological mother gave birth to another son a year
    after the permanency goal was changed. When he was four months old, this child
    had to be removed from the biological parents’ care after another incident of
    domestic violence, in which he sustained a severe head injury that resulted in
    hemorrhaging in his brain. In the ensuing neglect case, the biological mother was
    ordered to drug test, attend parenting classes, undergo a mental health assessment,
    and participate in individual therapy and visitation. She was not compliant.
    65
    permanency goal from reunification to adoption there would not have been a
    different outcome.”10
    Following the goal change, the biological parents chose not to pursue
    reunification with their children and not to oppose adoption as the goal. At a
    subsequent permanency hearing in November 2009, they supported the adoption
    petition of the aunt. They never contended that the goal change prevented or
    impeded them from opposing the termination of their parental rights or the
    competing adoption petition filed by the foster parents.
    In addition, the biological parents told the trial court that a finding of their
    own unfitness to parent the children was unnecessary because they were not
    seeking to preserve their parental rights. Even on appeal they have not argued that
    the trial court erred in terminating their rights without a finding of unfitness.
    ____________________
    10
    In re 
    Ta.L., 75 A.3d at 130
    & n.4 (“There is nothing in the record to
    suggest that [the biological parents] were in substantial compliance with the trial
    court’s order or that they were moving towards reunification in a timely fashion.
    Moreover, appellants are not challenging on appeal the trial court’s decision that
    the permanency goal be changed from reunification to adoption[.]”).
    66
    In short, the biological parents waived or forfeited any claim of error in
    connection with the goal change, including any claim that they should have been
    able to appeal it,11 and any claim of error in connection with the lack of an express
    finding of their unfitness. For that reason alone, this court should not undertake to
    address any of these issues in this case.12 There is no necessity for the en banc
    court to depart from settled principles constraining judicial review – especially
    with respect to a constitutional claim not even raised on appeal.13
    ____________________
    11
    In re Antj.P., 
    812 A.2d 965
    , 968 (D.C. 2002) (holding that biological
    mother forfeited her claim that the agency “failed to provide adequate services
    geared to her special needs so that she could be reunited with her children” when
    she raised it for the first time in her appeal from the termination of her parental
    rights) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    12
    D.D. v. M.T., 
    550 A.2d 37
    , 48 (D.C. 1988) (“Questions not properly
    raised and preserved during the proceedings under examination, and points not
    asserted with sufficient precision to indicate distinctly the party’s thesis, will
    normally be spurned on appeal.”) (quoting Miller v. Avirom, 
    384 F.2d 319
    , 321-22
    (D.C. Cir. 1967)); see also, e.g., Williams v. Gerstenfeld, 
    514 A.2d 1172
    , 1177
    (D.C. 1986) (“As a general rule, matters not properly presented to a trial court will
    not be resolved on appeal. . . . A court deviates from this principle only in
    exceptional situations and when necessary to prevent a clear miscarriage of justice
    apparent from the record.”).
    13
    See Rose v. United States, 
    629 A.2d 526
    , 536-37 (D.C. 1993) (“Where
    counsel has made no attempt to address the issue, we will not remedy the defect,
    especially where important questions of far-reaching significance are involved. . . .
    This is not to say an appellate court is absolutely precluded from reaching an issue
    sua sponte; it is not. . . . But even when the courts have elected to do so, as in a
    sua sponte analysis of harmless error, . . . they have done so only when a statute
    required it or when the record was not complex and resolution of the issue was
    (. . . continued)
    67
    One result of the biological parents’ forfeiture and waiver is the absence of a
    record showing that they were prejudiced by the unavailability of an immediate
    appeal of the permanency goal change or by any of the alleged evidentiary
    deficiencies in the permanency hearing our colleagues identify on their own. In
    fact, as the division recognized, the goal change was advantageous to the
    biological parents because “[t]he trial court, by changing the permanency goal to
    adoption, provided the impetus for CFSA to become involved in providing services
    to [the aunt] and thus effectively helped facilitate [the biological parents’] goal of
    placing the children with [her].”14 We shall see that the lack of record support also
    undermines key factual assertions made in the majority opinion to justify its legal
    conclusions regarding goal changes.15
    (….continued)
    easy, beyond serious debate.”) (internal punctuation, brackets, citations and
    footnotes omitted).
    14
    In re 
    Ta.L., 75 A.3d at 130
    .
    15
    In response to our objections, the majority argues that we have discretion
    to consider the appealability of permanency goal changes because the question is
    purely one of law, the factual record is complete, and a remand for further factual
    development would serve no purpose. Ante at 18-19 (citing Pajic v. Foote Prop.,
    LLC, 
    72 A.3d 140
    , 145-46 (D.C. 2013), and District of Columbia v. Helen Dwight
    Reid Educ. Found., 
    766 A.2d 28
    , 33 n.3 (D.C. 2001)). But those conditions are not
    (. . . continued)
    68
    As the government aptly says in its brief, because the issues regarding
    permanency goal changes have no bearing on the parties’ rights and no effect on
    the outcome of these appeals, what the biological parents (and the amici supporting
    them) have requested (and now, in the majority opinion, received) from this court
    is nothing more than an advisory opinion on those issues. The same is true of the
    majority’s sua sponte discussion of the need for a finding of unfitness to support a
    termination of parental rights.
    “An issue is ripe for adjudication only when the parties’ rights may be
    immediately affected by it.”16 Our judicial duty “is to decide actual controversies
    by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot
    (….continued)
    met here, for the absence of any meaningful factual record and the consequent
    dubiousness of the majority’s key factual assertions impair this court’s ability to
    give an informed answer to the legal question presented. Furthermore, of course,
    we normally exercise our discretion to address a question raised for the first time
    on appeal only when we find it necessary to do so because the answer would affect
    the outcome of the appeal and prevent a clear miscarriage of justice – not when, as
    here, the answer concededly is irrelevant to the outcome and does not correct any
    injustice in the matter.
    
    16 Allen v
    . United States, 
    603 A.2d 1219
    , 1228 n.20 (D.C. 1992) (en banc).
    69
    questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law which
    cannot affect the matter in issue in the case before it.”17 Accordingly, “as a general
    rule, this court will decide only such questions as are necessary for a determination
    of the case presented for consideration, and will not render decisions in advance of
    such necessity, particularly when the question is a constitutional one, or involves
    the construction of a statute.”18 Except in extraordinary circumstances not present
    here, we do not issue advisory opinions. Our colleagues ignore this “basic
    limitation upon the duty and function of the [c]ourt.”19
    Finally, in elevating the rights of putatively fit parents over the welfare and
    rights of their children, our colleagues render an unrequested and potentially
    transformative constitutional ruling without having afforded the parties and their
    amici the opportunity to brief the issues. We suspect this will come as a particular
    ____________________
    17
    Local No. 8-6, Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Int’l Union v. Missouri, 
    361 U.S. 363
    , 367 (1960) (quoting Mills v. Green, 
    159 U.S. 651
    , 653 (1895)); accord,
    In re D.T., 
    977 A.2d 346
    , 352 (D.C. 2009).
    18
    District of Columbia v. WICAL Ltd. P’ship, 
    630 A.2d 174
    , 182 (D.C.
    1993) (quoting Johnson v. Morris, 
    557 P.2d 1299
    , 1305 (Wash. 1976) (en banc))
    (emphasis added; brackets omitted).
    19
    Local No. 8-6, Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Int’l 
    Union, 361 U.S. at 368
    .
    70
    shock to the institutional litigants in this case that will continue to be involved with
    regularity in TPR and contested adoption cases – the District and the Children’s
    Law Center. It is ill-advised, unfair to the parties, and contrary to this court’s
    norms to proceed in this manner. In the past, when this court has considered
    deciding an appeal on a basis “the parties fail[ed] to identify and brief,” we have
    taken pains to “ensure procedural fairness . . . by providing each party with the
    opportunity to brief” the issue.20 The court has no justification for deviating from
    that rule of basic fairness here.
    Our disagreement goes beyond the inappropriateness of deciding important
    constitutional and statutory issues that are not properly before us in these appeals.
    We disagree with our colleagues’ resolution of those issues on their merits as well.
    ____________________
    20
    Randolph v. United States, 
    882 A.2d 210
    , 226-27 (D.C. 2005); see also
    
    id. at 226
    (“[N]o matter whose ox is gored, this court has frequently requested
    post-argument briefing of issues not adequately raised by counsel, to the end that,
    after both parties have been fully heard, the court is in the best position to render a
    sound decision.”).
    71
    II. A Change in a Child’s Permanency Goal From Reunification to Adoption
    Is Not a Final Order
    With exceptions not relevant here, this court’s jurisdiction over appeals from
    the Superior Court is confined by statute to the review of “final” orders and
    judgments.21 “Normally, an order or judgment is deemed final ‘only if it disposes
    of the whole case on its merits so that the court has nothing remaining to do but to
    execute the judgment or decree already rendered.’”22 This court held in In re
    K.M.T. that “an order changing a permanency planning goal is not final or
    appealable” because “it is only a step toward the final act of adoption and does not
    yet affect or alter the parent’s legal rights with respect to the children.” 23 In our
    view, this holding was and remains correct.
    ____________________
    21
    D.C. Code § 11-721 (a)(1) (2012 Repl.); Rolinski v. Lewis, 
    828 A.2d 739
    ,
    745 (D.C. 2003) (en banc). Review of a magistrate judge’s decision by an
    associate judge of the Superior Court (which is a prerequisite to any review of that
    decision by the Court of Appeals) similarly is limited to “final” orders and
    judgments. See D.C. Fam. Ct. R. D (e)(1)(a) & cmt.
    22
    
    Rolinski, 828 A.2d at 745-46
    (quoting In re Estate of Chuong, 
    623 A.2d 1154
    , 1157 (D.C. 1993) (en banc)).
    23
    In re K.M.T., 
    795 A.2d 688
    , 691 (D.C. 2002).
    72
    Yet the majority overrules In re K.M.T. It reasons that a change in the
    permanency goal from reunification to adoption is “effectively a final order” even
    though more remains to be done, ante at 25-26 n.18, and that “an order need not
    necessarily be the last one in a proceeding” to be final. Ante at 24 (citing District
    of Columbia v. Tschudin24). In our view, however, the majority errs both factually
    and legally in its characterization of the effects of a goal change from reunification
    to adoption. The goal change does not satisfy the finality requirement of our
    jurisdictional statute because it is not conclusive in itself and does not satisfy the
    strict requirements of the collateral order doctrine.
    Preliminarily, it should be noted that the question of our appellate
    jurisdiction is only statutory, not constitutional. Although the majority opinion
    might be read to suggest otherwise, see ante at 22, 24-25, for over a century the
    Supreme Court has reiterated that the availability of appellate review is not a
    component of due process of law.25             The Supreme Court has specifically
    ____________________
    24
    
    390 A.2d 986
    , 988 n.1 (D.C. 1978).
    25
    See Evitts v. Lucey, 
    469 U.S. 387
    , 393 (1985); Chaffin v. Stynchcombe,
    
    412 U.S. 17
    , 24 n.11 (1973); Griffin v. Illinois, 
    351 U.S. 12
    , 18 (1956); McKane v.
    Durston, 
    153 U.S. 684
    , 687 (1894); see also Howell v. United States, 
    455 A.2d 1371
    , 1372 (D.C. 1983) (en banc).
    73
    recognized that the Due Process Clause does not guarantee a right to appeal
    decisions terminating parental rights.26 Consistent with this precedent, our court
    has held that a parent has no due process right to appeal an order placing her child
    in shelter care, even though such an order deprives the parent of physical custody
    of the child indefinitely pending the outcome of neglect proceedings.27 If there is
    no due process right to appeal decisions terminating parental rights or indefinitely
    depriving a parent of physical custody of her child, there surely is no due process
    right to appeal mere goal changes.
    A. Changing the Permanency Goal From Reunification to Adoption Is
    Not Tantamount to a Termination of Parental Rights
    The majority asserts repeatedly that a change in the permanency goal from
    reunification to adoption is effectively equivalent to a final termination of parental
    rights. It is, the majority declares, “a critical point in the proceedings, one that
    ____________________
    26
    See M.L.B. v. S.L.J., 
    519 U.S. 102
    , 110-11, 120, 124 (1996) (holding that
    while the Fourteenth Amendment does not guarantee a right to appellate review of
    a TPR decision, once a state affords that right, it may not effectively deny review
    to indigent parents by conditioning appeals on their ability to pay record
    preparation fees).
    27
    See In re. S.J., 
    632 A.2d 112
    , 112 (D.C. 1993) (dismissing appeal for lack
    of jurisdiction).
    74
    often irreversibly dictates the result of a child’s ultimate custody disposition at a
    subsequent adoption proceeding.” Ante at 25. Elaborating, the majority asserts
    that goal change orders “modify the fundamental terms of the custody order in the
    neglect proceeding and mark a critical point in time when the role of CFSA
    changes from a supporter of family reunification to an advocate for breaking up
    that same family.” Ante at 3328 Relatedly, the majority repeatedly asserts that the
    government must rebut a “presumption in favor of reunification” before the goal
    can be changed to adoption, ante at 31, 33, implying that the change in goal effects
    a change of some kind in the parent’s legal rights or status.
    These and similar assertions by the majority are incorrect and unsupported
    by the record before this court. First, a goal change from reunification to adoption
    does not constitute a termination of the biological parents’ rights, preclude familial
    reunification, or otherwise alter the parents’ legal relationship with their children.
    Moreover, it is misleading at best to speak in the permanency planning context of a
    “presumption in favor of reunification” with biological parents found to have
    abused or neglected their child. The child is in foster care because the presumption
    “that it is generally preferable to leave a child in his or her own home” already was
    ____________________
    28
    See also ante at 21; 
    id. at 25-26
    n.18.
    75
    rebutted at the disposition hearing following the adjudication of neglect, when the
    court determined that the child would not be safe (“cannot be protected”) in the
    home of the biological parents.29 This determination was immediately appealable
    as of right.30 That reunification thereafter may be a goal that the parents may attain
    by making “progress . . . toward alleviating or mitigating the causes necessitating
    [the child’s] placement in foster care”31 does not make reunification a
    presumption.32
    ____________________
    29
    D.C. Code § 16-2320 (a)(3), (a)(3)(C) (2012 Repl.).
    30
    See In re Na.H., 
    65 A.3d 111
    , 114 (D.C. 2013) (“In neglect cases, the
    disposition is the final order.”).
    31
    D.C. Code § 16-2323 (b)(4) (2012 Repl.).
    32
    Furthermore, under ASFA and our implementing legislation, any
    presumption in favor of pursuing reunification evaporates after the child has
    remained in foster care for a protracted period of time. Specifically, after a
    neglected child has been in foster care for fifteen of the most recent twenty-two
    months, the government “shall” file a TPR motion unless the court finds a
    “compelling reason” that it would be contrary to the child’s best interest to do so
    D.C. Code § 16-2354 (b)(3)(A), (g)(2) (2012 Repl.); see also 
    id. § 16-2355
    (2012
    Repl.) (requiring court to “determine why a motion to terminate the parent and
    child relationship has not been filed” after specified periods of time have elapsed
    following the neglected child’s commitment to the custody of a department,
    agency, or institution). These provisions are not compatible with a broad
    presumption in favor of reunification even after a prolonged period of foster care.
    76
    Second, a goal change does not alter the terms of the disposition order
    entered following the adjudication of the child as neglected.33       Third, as the
    majority concedes, the change in goal is not “irreversible.”34
    Fourth, a change in the permanency plan to adoption does not “preordain” or
    “dictate” the outcome of any subsequent TPR or adoption proceeding. Ante at 20,
    25. It does not constitute a determination that the biological parents are unfit; it
    has no collateral estoppel or res judicata consequences; it does not relax or reduce
    the evidentiary burdens on the government and the adoption petitioners in the TPR
    ____________________
    33
    The disposition orders in the present case committed the two neglected
    children to the care and custody of CFSA pursuant to D.C. Code § 16-2320 (a)(3).
    This disposition remained unchanged until the final decrees of adoption were
    entered. The goal change order did not change the children’s placement or their
    caregivers. We therefore believe it incorrect to say that goal change orders
    “modify the fundamental terms of the custody order in the neglect proceeding.”
    Ante at 33.
    34
    The majority asserts that “[w]hile it is ostensibly possible for the
    biological parents to attain reunification notwithstanding a decision by the trial
    court to grant a permanency goal change, this very rarely occurs in practice.” Ante
    at 21-22 (emphasis added). The cases cited by the majority do not support this
    factual claim, and we are aware of nothing in the record or elsewhere that
    substantiates it. But even if it were accurate, it would not establish that changing
    the permanency goal to adoption is ever the reason for the biological parents’
    subsequent failure to attain reunification, let alone that there is a robust causal
    relationship. It is equally possible that trial courts are correctly changing the
    permanency goal to adoption because there is no reasonable prospect that the
    biological parents will be capable of attaining reunification.
    77
    and adoption proceedings; it does not limit the parents’ participation in those
    proceedings; and it is not a factor in the trial judge’s findings and conclusions
    therein. At one point, the majority opinion states that the biological parents are
    “forced” by the goal change “to make a Hobson’s choice” between contesting the
    adoption petition of a “stranger” and consenting to adoption by a family member.
    Ante at 4. That too is incorrect. The goal change leaves the biological parents
    entirely free to oppose the termination of their parental rights and to argue in the
    alternative that, if their rights are to be terminated, it is in their child’s best interest
    for the court to grant whichever competing petition they favor.35
    Fifth, the change in goal does not mandate or cause the curtailment of
    reasonable efforts by the CFSA to reunify the family. The law is otherwise. In
    many (though not all) cases of parental abuse and neglect, the CFSA is obligated to
    undertake “reasonable efforts . . . to preserve and reunify the family . . . [and] make
    it possible for the child to return safely to the child’s home.” 36 There is no
    ____________________
    35
    See, e.g., In re F.N.B., 
    706 A.2d 28
    , 30 (D.C. 1998).
    36
    D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (b)(1), (3) (2012 Repl). The statute provides that
    “[i]n determining and making reasonable efforts under this section, the child’s
    safety and health shall be the paramount concern.” 
    Id. § 4-1301.09a
    (a).
    Reasonable efforts to preserve the child-parent relationship “shall not be required”
    (. . . continued)
    78
    statutory requirement or presumption that these efforts shall be terminated when a
    child’s permanency plan changes to adoption. Rather, the statute specifically
    allows “[r]easonable efforts to place a child for adoption [to be] made concurrently
    with the reasonable efforts required [to preserve and reunify the family].” 37 Such
    concurrent efforts do not require court approval.
    Even so, the majority insists that if not as a legal matter, then in actual
    practice and effect, “[w]hen a child’s permanency goal is shifted from reunification
    to adoption, government resources and services are also shifted away from
    facilitating reunification, and instead, focus on finding and supporting potential
    new and permanent placements for the child.” Ante at 21. In this way, the
    majority asserts, goal changes deprive “fragile families” of services “essential to
    achieving their reunification goals,” ante at 36, and “severely hamper[]” biological
    parents’ “efforts to build or maintain a positive relationship with their child.” Ante
    at 22.     “These changes,” the majority declares, “can devastate parent-child
    (….continued)
    if there has been a judicial determination that the parent subjected any child to
    cruelty or engaged in other specified wrongdoing, if the parent’s parental rights
    have been terminated involuntarily with respect to a sibling, or if the parent is
    required to register with a sex offender registry. 
    Id. § 4-1301.09a
    (d).
    37
    
    Id. § 4-1301.09a
    (f).
    79
    relationships” even if reunification remains a concurrent goal with adoption. Ante
    at 36. It is on the purported truth of these serious charges that the majority bases
    its conclusion that immediate appellate review is necessary because goal changes
    “tend[]” to make the granting of an adoption petition and the termination of
    parental rights a “fait accompli.” Ante at 22.
    But are these and similar broad generalizations made by our colleagues
    actually true? Are they grounded in fact? Or, as one might suspect given the
    dearth of specifics and hard evidence, does the majority’s conclusion rest on a
    weak foundation contrary to the typical realities of child neglect, foster care, and
    CFSA’s efforts to reunify families? These questions beg to be asked because the
    majority cites nothing to substantiate its allegations. It offers nothing beyond its
    vague assurance that they are “not without support in the record of this case and
    many others.” Ante at 21.
    We have found no support “in the record of this case” for the claim that a
    goal change from reunification to adoption results as a practical matter in the
    withdrawal of assistance to the biological parents and interference with their efforts
    to rehabilitate themselves and recover their neglected children. On the contrary,
    80
    the record before us actually shows that even after the goal change, the CFSA
    continued without interruption to furnish the court-ordered reunification services to
    the biological parents and facilitate their visitation with the children.        The
    biological parents make unsupported assertions in their brief that they and their
    children “lost assistance in being reunified” and had “to fend for themselves,” 38 but
    those assertions appear to be false. Not only that, the goal change paved the way
    for the CFSA to provide services to the children’s aunt when she emerged as the
    biological parents’ preferred caregiver.
    The majority cites nothing for the proposition that “many other” cases
    support its claim, and we are unaware of such supporting authority.              The
    government represents that it actually is the CFSA’s general “practice [to] afford[]
    biological parents the opportunity even after a goal of adoption has been set to
    maintain a relationship with the child and show that the goal should be changed
    back to reunification.”39    We have no reason to disbelieve this representation
    absent evidence to the contrary; the neglect statute permits such concurrent efforts,
    which are meant to foster the important public policy of avoiding unnecessarily
    ____________________
    38
    Br. for Appellants T.L. & A.H. at 24.
    39
    Br. for Appellee District of Columbia at 68-69.
    81
    prolonged stays in foster care while still keeping alive the potential for
    reunification.
    It is argued that reunification efforts may be discontinued if it is determined
    that they would be “inconsistent with the child’s permanency plan.”40 Perhaps this
    occurs in some cases, though not surprisingly (given the irrelevance of the
    appealability issue to these appeals) the record before this court is uninformative as
    to when, why, how often, or to what extent. But as the present case vividly
    illustrates, a goal change to adoption need not entail the discontinuation of
    reasonable efforts in furtherance of family reunification. Ordinarily, assisting the
    biological parents with visitation and a range of rehabilitative services (anger
    management and domestic violence assistance, parent training, counseling, mental
    health services, substance abuse treatment, and so forth41) is compatible with the
    CFSA’s simultaneous support for an adoptive placement.
    ____________________
    40
    D.C. Code § 4-1301.09a (c).
    41
    See D.C. Code § 4-1301.02 (20).
    82
    In any event, as we explain below, the appealability of a denial of critical
    reunification services to which the biological parents might claim a legal
    entitlement is a different question from the appealability of a change in a child’s
    permanency plan, and it may have a different answer.
    B. A Permanency Goal Change From Reunification to Adoption Is Not
    a “Final Order” Under the Collateral Order Doctrine
    Even if it were shown that, as a practical matter, changing a child’s
    permanency plan from reunification to adoption adversely affects the biological
    parents’ efforts to regain custody, that would not mean such decisions have the
    requisite finality to be appealable as of right. It is true that “[s]ome trial court
    rulings that do not conclude the litigation nonetheless are sufficiently conclusive in
    other respects that they satisfy the finality requirement of our jurisdictional
    statute.”42 This proposition implicates the “collateral order doctrine” enunciated
    by the Supreme Court in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corporation43 and its
    judicial progeny. But the requirements of the collateral order doctrine are meant to
    ____________________
    42
    
    Rolinski, 828 A.2d at 746
    .
    43
    
    337 U.S. 541
    , 546 (1949).
    83
    be quite “stringent,”44 and no party or amicus in this case has even tried to argue
    that goal change orders meet them. The majority opinion does not make that
    argument either, though it implicitly relies on Cohen.45
    The collateral order doctrine applies only to a “small class” of orders: those
    that “finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights
    asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the
    cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case
    is adjudicated.”46 To come within the doctrine, an order therefore must satisfy
    three conditions: It “must (1) conclusively determine the disputed question, (2)
    resolve an important issue completely separate from the merits of the action, and
    ____________________
    44
    Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 
    511 U.S. 863
    , 868 (1994).
    45
    District of Columbia v. Tschudin, the case cited by the majority, ante at
    24, applied Cohen’s rationale to hold that an order may be regarded as final and
    appealable if nothing more than a ministerial act (e.g., execution of the judgment)
    remains to be done to terminate the proceedings in the trial court. 
    390 A.2d 986
    ,
    988-89 (D.C. 1978). This holding is inapplicable to the present case; far more than
    a mere ministerial act must occur in the aftermath of a change in the permanency
    goal before the neglect, TPR, and adoption proceedings are concluded.
    46
    
    Cohen, 337 U.S. at 546
    ; see also, e.g., Will v. Hallock, 
    546 U.S. 345
    , 349-
    50 (2006); 
    Rolinski, 828 A.2d at 746
    .
    84
    (3) be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.”47            These
    conditions are strictly construed to prevent the collateral order doctrine from
    subverting the important policies promoted by the final judgment rule.48 The
    Supreme Court thus has explained that a “further characteristic that merits
    appealability under Cohen” also must be present, and “that something further boils
    down to ‘a judgment about the value of the interests that would be lost through
    rigorous application of a final judgment requirement.’” 49 Accordingly, the
    “effective unreviewability” requirement is met only when “some particular value
    of a high order,” typically “a substantial public interest,” will be imperiled by the
    denial of an immediate, interlocutory appeal.50
    Orders changing a neglected child’s permanency goal from reunification to
    adoption do not satisfy any of the three preconditions for invocation of the
    ____________________
    47
    
    Rolinski, 828 A.2d at 747
    (quoting Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 
    437 U.S. 463
    , 468 (1978)) (brackets omitted).
    48
    See 
    Will, 546 U.S. at 349-50
    . We discuss these policies in the next
    section of this Part.
    49
    
    Id. at 351-52
    (citations omitted).
    50
    
    Id. at 352-53.
    “Otherwise, almost every pretrial or trial order might be
    called ‘effectively unreviewable’ in the sense that relief from error can never
    extend to rewriting history.” 
    Id. at 351
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    85
    collateral order doctrine. First, such orders do not “conclusively determine” the
    “disputed questions” of reunification and adoption (or any other contested issues,
    for that matter). Second, the principal issue the orders tentatively “resolve” is
    merely whether the government should move to terminate parental rights and
    pursue an adoptive placement. This “resolution” resolves nothing – it is only a
    prelude to further litigation of the TPR and adoption issues – and it is intertwined
    with, not “completely separate from,” the merits of the action. As for the third
    condition, we have seen that permanency goal changes to adoption do not
    jeopardize sufficiently substantial interests of the biological parents. If further
    proceedings do eventuate in TPR and adoption orders, “effective” review is
    available on appeal from the final judgment; in the past, this court has granted
    meaningful relief in cases where the record showed that a biological parent was
    denied a fair opportunity to achieve reunification.51
    Orders that merely change the permanency goal to adoption are not
    equivalent to, and should not be confused with, other interim orders that actually
    do conclusively deny important legal rights of biological parents for reasons
    ____________________
    51
    See, e.g., In re C.T., 
    724 A.2d 590
    , 599 (D.C. 1999) (reversing TPR
    determination where there was evidence that father “might be on the road to
    becoming a fit parent”).
    86
    separate from the merits of any future TPR and adoption determinations. This
    court has held that an order permanently or indefinitely prohibiting a biological
    parent from visiting his or her neglected child may fall within that category and be
    appealable as a final order.52 Conceivably, an order denying a biological parent’s
    claim of statutory entitlement to reasonable reunification services similarly might
    be conclusive, important, and separate enough in a particular case to satisfy the
    collateral order doctrine. But orders such as these should not be confused with
    orders that merely approve a change in the permanency plan for a neglected child
    and direct the District to either file a TPR motion or seek to be joined as a party to
    a filed adoption petition.53   It is instructive to compare goal changes with other
    interim orders in neglect proceedings that we have held not to be appealable by the
    biological parents even though the orders can have prolonged and dramatic adverse
    consequences for the likelihood of reunification:     (1) an order removing a child
    from her parent’s physical custody and placing the child in shelter care pending the
    adjudication of the government’s allegations of neglect,54 and (2) an order
    prohibiting a parent facing criminal charges from even seeing his children until the
    ____________________
    52
    In re D.M., 
    771 A.2d 360
    , 365 (D.C. 2001).
    53
    See D.C. Code § 16-2323 (c)(2).
    54
    In re S.J., 
    632 A.2d 112
    (D.C. 1993).
    87
    criminal charges are finally resolved.55 If orders such as these do not satisfy the
    requirements of finality for purposes of our appellate jurisdiction, it is difficult to
    see how orders merely changing a child’s permanency goal could be thought to do
    so.
    In support of its holding, the majority states that “[t]he District of Columbia
    is among the few remaining jurisdictions that do not permit appeals of permanency
    goal changes from reunification to adoption in neglect proceedings,” and that In re
    K.M.T. “departed from the norm,” inasmuch as “a vast majority of jurisdictions
    allow appellate review of goal changes either as appeals as of right or
    [discretionary] interlocutory appeals.” Ante at 23. These statements are materially
    inaccurate.
    First, In re K.M.T. did not even consider the availability of discretionary
    interlocutory appeals of goal changes – an entirely different question from whether
    goal changes are final and hence immediately appealable as of right. But our
    ____________________
    55
    In re M.F., 
    55 A.3d 373
    , 379 (D.C. 2012).
    88
    decision in another case, In re J.A.P.,56 indicates that discretionary interlocutory
    appeals from goal change decisions are permitted in this jurisdiction pursuant to
    D.C. Code § 11-721 (d).57 Thus, if the majority’s count is accurate, see ante at 23
    n.16, the District appears to join at least twenty-six states that allow for
    discretionary interlocutory review of changes in the permanency goal from
    reunification to adoption – hardly a “departure from the norm.”
    Second, far from being an outlier, In re K.M.T.’s holding that a goal change
    from reunification to adoption is not a final order appealable as of right is solidly in
    the mainstream. A substantial majority of jurisdictions – two-thirds of the states,
    according to the survey on which the majority relies – do not permit appeals of
    ____________________
    56
    
    749 A.2d 715
    (D.C. 2000).
    57
    See 
    id. at 716,
    719 (considering application for allowance of interlocutory
    appeal by the birth mother in a contested adoption proceeding). D.C. Code § 11-
    721 (d) provides for the availability of discretionary appeals of certain non-final
    rulings and orders in civil cases “other than a case in which a child, as defined in
    section 16-2301, is alleged to be delinquent, neglected, or in need of supervision.”
    This exclusion does not extend to cases in which the child is no longer merely
    “alleged” to be neglected because neglect already has been adjudicated. The
    neglect statute draws that distinction—when it speaks of proceedings prior to the
    adjudication, it refers to a “child alleged to be neglected” and “allegations” of
    neglect, but when it speaks of subsequent proceedings (including permanency
    hearings), it refers to “a child [who] is found to be neglected” or “a child [who] has
    been adjudicated neglected.” See, e.g., D.C. Code §§ 16-2316.01, -2317, -2320,
    -2323 (2012 Repl.).
    89
    goal changes as of right.58 Moreover, because of differences in the statutory
    language from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, the fact that a handful of states do permit
    appeals of goal changes as of right holds little significance for us. For example,
    the reason the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that changes in the permanency
    plan from reunification to adoption are appealable was not because such changes
    are final orders, but because Maryland has a specific statutory exception to the
    ____________________
    58
    See, e.g., R.N. v. Dep’t of Children & Families, 
    113 So. 3d 1034
    , 1034
    (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2013) (holding that an order changing the permanency goal to
    adoption is not an appealable final order); In re Curtis B., 
    784 N.E.2d 219
    , 223 (Ill.
    2002) (stating that because “all of the rights and obligations set forth in the
    permanency order must remain open for reexamination and possible revision until
    the permanency goal is achieved[,] . . . there is no reasonable basis upon which we
    can determine that a permanency order is [appealable as] a final order”); In re T.R.,
    
    705 N.W.2d 6
    , 9-11 (Iowa 2005) (holding that a permanency order changing
    custody and directing the filing of a TPR petition is not “a final appealable order”);
    In re Chubb, 
    773 P.2d 851
    , 854 (Wash. 1989) (en banc) (holding that “dependency
    review orders are not final” and hence are not appealable as of right); In re H.R.,
    
    883 P.2d 619
    , 621 (Colo. App. 1994) (“[T]he permanency plan adopted here did
    not constitute a final and appealable order because it did not effectuate any change
    in permanent custody or guardianship or terminate parental rights.”); In re K.F.,
    
    797 N.E.2d 310
    , 314-15 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (holding that a permanency plan
    order is not final, and hence not appealable, because “[t]he only way in which the
    permanency plan affects the [parents] is that it approves the initiation of
    proceedings which could result in the termination of their parental rights. Such
    proceedings will not prejudice the [parents] unless and until termination occurs.”)
    (emphasis omitted); In re L.E.C., 
    94 S.W.3d 420
    , 425 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003) (“It is
    clear that a change in the ‘permanency plan’ [from reunification to adoption] is not
    in itself a final adjudication. It is, as the name implies, a ‘plan,’ not a result,
    although certain changes are implemented in connection with the plan. The
    jurisdiction of the Circuit Court continues, however, and is one of ongoing
    management. Accordingly, we do not consider the ruling a final judgment[.]”).
    90
    final judgment rule permitting such appeals.59 Similarly, goal change orders are
    appealable as of right in Massachusetts, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Oregon not
    because the orders are deemed final, but because specific statutory provisions in
    those states allow them to be appealed anyway. 60 The statutory exceptions in these
    states have no counterpart in the law of the District of Columbia.
    C. Permitting Interlocutory Appeals of Permanency Plan Orders Will
    Disserve the Policies of the Final Judgment Rule By Threatening to
    Prolong the Retention of Children in Foster Care.
    The requirement that a trial court proceeding be concluded in its entirety
    before an appeal may be taken serves several important public policies. Most
    pertinently, those policies include preventing “the unnecessary delays resultant
    from piecemeal appeals” and “the harassment and cost of a succession of separate
    appeals from the various rulings to which a litigation may give rise.”61 These
    ____________________
    59
    See In re Damon M., 
    765 A.2d 624
    , 626-28 (Md. 2001) (relying on Md.
    Code, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 12-303 (3)(x) (1998 Repl.)).
    60
    See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 119, § 29B (e) (2012); La. Child. Code art. 710
    (D) (2015); Okla. Stat. tit. 10A, § 1-5-101 (2009); Or. Rev. Stat. § 419B.476 (8)
    (2015).
    61
    
    Rolinski, 828 A.2d at 745
    & n.8 (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted). Other policies served by the final judgment rule include refraining from
    the unnecessary decision of issues that may be mooted by the final judgment,
    respecting the role and independence of the trial judge, and fostering efficient
    (. . . continued)
    91
    policies are of utmost importance in proceedings intended to end prolonged stays
    in foster care and achieve permanent, stable homes for abused and neglected
    children. As amicus curiae Children’s Law Center warns, permitting interlocutory
    appeals as of right from permanency plan orders will cause substantial delays in
    the overall permanency process – delays that the neglect statute was specifically
    written to prevent, and that will cause real harm not only to the very children the
    process is designed to protect, but also to biological parents and to prospective
    adoptive parents.
    (….continued)
    judicial administration. 
    Id. These policies
    too will be disserved by the allowance
    of interlocutory appeals of goal changes. For example, issues regarding the
    permanency goal change may be rendered moot by a change in the goal back to
    reunification or by a final adjudication of a TPR motion and any adoption petition.
    See In re Karl H., 
    906 A.2d 898
    , 902-03 (Md. 2006); accord, In re Jayden G., 
    70 A.3d 276
    , 288, 292 (Md. 2013) (rejecting argument that proceedings to terminate a
    parent’s rights must be stayed when the parent appeals a change in the permanency
    plan, even though “without a stay of TPR proceedings, the outcome of the parent’s
    appeal of a change in the permanency plan may be rendered moot”); see also
    Settlemire v. District of Columbia Office of Employee Appeals, 
    898 A.2d 902
    , 904-
    05 (D.C. 2006) (“In general, when the issues presented are no longer live or the
    parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome, a case is moot.
    Accordingly, it is well-settled that, while an appeal is pending, an event that
    renders relief impossible or unnecessary also renders that appeal moot.”) (internal
    citations and quotation marks omitted).
    92
    Permitting interlocutory appeals of goal changes is sure to add substantial
    delay to an already protracted process. These appeals will have to go from the
    magistrate judge to an associate judge of the Superior Court for a ruling before the
    order then can be appealed to this court.62 It is wishful thinking to suppose that all
    these appeals will be disposed of quickly. Consider the following:
    In the experience of amicus curiae Children’s Law
    Center, which handles approximately one third of all
    abuse and neglect cases in D.C., over the past two years
    the average time from the date of a magistrate judge
    order to an associate judge order is 103 days—ranging
    from 54 days to 226 days. During the same two-year
    period (April 1, 2012 to April 1, 2014), the average time
    from the date of filing a notice of appeal from the
    associate judge order to obtaining a decision from [the
    Court of Appeals] is 511 days—ranging from 356 days to
    741 days. In other words, the total time for the appeal
    process from the initial trial court decision to [the Court
    of Appeals] ruling in our cases over the past two years
    has averaged 614 days. While those neglect, termination
    of parental rights, adoption, and custody appeals may
    involve more issues than the average permanency goal
    ____________________
    62
    See D.C. Fam. Ct. R. D (f) (“An appeal to the District of Columbia Court
    of Appeals may be made only after an associate judge of the Superior Court has
    reviewed the magistrate judge’s order or judgment pursuant to paragraph (e) of this
    rule.”); D.C. Code § 11-1732 (k) (2012 Repl.) (“An appeal to the District of
    Columbia Court of Appeals may be made only after a judge of the Superior Court
    has reviewed the order or judgment.”); 
    id. at §
    11-1732A (d) (2012 Repl.).
    93
    change appeal, these are all matters that the courts are
    currently handling on an expedited timeline.[63]
    -+
    This court knows all too well how accurate this portrayal is.
    Rather than engage with such informative data, the majority opinion
    minimizes the concern that overruling In re K.M.T. will mean lengthy interlocutory
    appeals in a large number of neglect cases. The opinion hopefully states that
    “[b]ecause of the limited scope of this court’s review, and the broad discretion
    enjoyed by trial courts in making permanency goal decisions, we are confident that
    in the vast majority of cases our review can be adequately addressed using our
    summary appeals process.” Ante at 37. Of course, in predicting that our review
    will be so limited and deferential to the trial court that the vast majority of appeals
    from permanency goal changes will be resolved summarily, the majority implicitly
    admits what it has taken pains to deny – that such appeals will provide few if any
    benefits to parents (unless they view disruption and delay of the permanency
    process as benefits, which is hardly to be encouraged). But while we too expect
    ____________________
    63
    Br. of Amicus Curiae Children’s Law Center at 3-4 (footnote omitted).
    94
    that the costs of the decision to permit interlocutory appeals of permanency goal
    changes will greatly outweigh the minimal potential benefits, we think the
    majority’s optimism regarding the speed of appellate review is unconvincing for
    several reasons.
    First, as even two members of the majority are compelled to acknowledge,
    before an appeal even reaches this court, it must complete the time-consuming
    intermediate appeal within the Superior Court, from magistrate judge to associate
    judge.64 Second, the necessary steps of appellate litigation, such as obtaining and
    reviewing the record and transcript, briefing, judicial consideration, and opinion-
    writing, are time-consuming, and even if our summary appeals process is
    completed in months rather than years, that is still an undesirable prolongation of
    the time a fragile child remains in foster care.
    Third, the majority disregards the potentially transformative consequences of
    its holding that the government must “produce sufficient evidence” at a “formal
    ____________________
    64
    See post at 138 n.1 (“Streamlining review procedures in this court will
    not, however, minimize the time it takes to litigate these matters in Superior Court.
    . . . [I]t may take years before a notice of appeal is filed transferring jurisdiction
    to this court.”) (emphasis added).
    95
    hearing” to rebut a “presumption in favor of reunification” by a preponderance of
    the evidence in order to secure a change in the permanency plan from reunification
    to adoption. Ante at 30-31. This holding will narrow considerably the “broad
    discretion enjoyed by trial courts in making permanency goal decisions” that the
    majority counts on to ensure swift appellate review.65 Ante at 37.
    Fourth, the majority also overlooks the range of issues that can and
    predictably will arise in contested goal change hearings. Potential appellate issues
    include challenges for abuse of discretion and insufficiency of the evidence (which
    the majority’s burden of proof holding will encourage), questions regarding the
    admission or exclusion of expert medical and psychiatric testimony and other
    ____________________
    65
    In principle, we do not quarrel with the proposition that parents have a
    right to an evidentiary hearing at which they may cross-examine adverse witnesses
    and present their own evidence if they wish to contest the material factual
    allegations supporting the CFSA’s decision to seek a goal change. Parents have
    that right. See Super. Ct. Neg. R. 28 (a), (d); see also Super. Ct. Neg. R. 30 (a), 32
    (e). Nor do we quarrel with putting the burden on the government to establish that
    a change in the permanency plan from reunification to adoption is in the child’s
    best interests. This is the general rule. See, e.g., In re Nazier B., 
    947 N.Y.S.2d 157
    , 158 (App. Div. 2012). On the other hand, courts in other jurisdictions have
    held that the rules of evidence are relaxed at permanency hearings. See, e.g., In re
    Ashley E., 
    874 A.2d 998
    , 1018 & 1018 n.19 (Md. 2005). The majority’s insistence
    on a “formal” adjudicatory hearing strikes us as excessive, and as imposing an
    unnecessary burden on the trial court and the other parties in cases in which the
    biological parents do not dispute the material facts.
    96
    evidence pertaining to the parents and their children, and substantive issues of all
    kinds (limited only by the ingenuity of counsel) relating to the reasonableness of
    plans and efforts to preserve and reunite the family, the parents’ compliance and
    progress, the best interests of the children, and other pertinent matters.
    Fifth, the majority disregards the complications and delay that will ensue
    simply from the fact that there will be multiple parties in these appeals – at a
    minimum, the neglected child and the District – who undoubtedly will participate
    in the briefing and argument at every stage.
    Interlocutory appeals do “not operate to stay” the order appealed from. 66 We
    presume this means that the Superior Court will have concurrent jurisdiction over
    the case during the pendency of an appeal of an order changing the permanency
    goal from reunification to adoption. Perhaps the disruption and delay caused by
    these appeals can be mitigated by the exercise of such concurrent jurisdiction.
    Nonetheless, we cannot put too much faith in that possibility, for the reality is that
    trial judges and litigants eyeing the possible reversal of goal change orders on
    ____________________
    66
    D.C. Code § 16-2329 (d) (2012 Repl.).
    97
    appeal may be understandably reluctant to move forward with the challenged goal
    changes or with hearings on TPR and adoption petitions until the appeals are
    concluded. The Children’s Law Center advises that, in its experience, “judges
    have declined to hold further hearings that are allowed under concurrent
    jurisdiction, due to the pendency of appeals.”67
    The alarming prospect of adding years of interlocutory appellate delay to the
    process of providing permanent homes for neglected and abused children in the
    District of Columbia should dissuade this court from relaxing the requirements of
    the collateral order doctrine to permit appeals of permanency goal changes. Such
    additional delay will frustrate the “strong public policy, enhanced by federal
    legislation, disfavoring the protracted retention of children in foster care”68 and
    will threaten dire harm to the children who are most at risk.
    The District’s neglect statute provides for permanency planning and
    permanency hearings to fulfill the requirements set forth by Congress in the
    ____________________
    67
    Br. of Amicus Curiae Children’s Law Center at 11.
    68
    In re J.G., 
    831 A.2d 992
    , 1001 (D.C. 2003) (footnote omitted).
    98
    Adoption and Safe Families Act (“ASFA”).69             The stated aim of those
    requirements is to prevent “unnecessarily prolonged stays in foster care” and
    achieve “early permanent placements” of neglected and abused children in stable
    homes.70 As the Supreme Court has said, “protracted stays in [foster] care . . . may
    deprive [neglected] children of positive, nurturing family relationships and have
    deleterious effects on their development into responsible, productive citizens.’”71
    “Legislatures and courts alike have recognized that, in the words of one
    commentary, ‘no child can grow emotionally while in limbo. He cannot invest
    except in a minimal way . . . if tomorrow the relationship may be severed.”72 The
    goal of permanency planning is to “end the uncertainty of foster care and allow the
    dependent child to form a long-lasting emotional attachment to a permanent
    ____________________
    69
    Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997, Pub. L. No. 105-89, 111 Stat.
    2115 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 42 U.S.C.).
    70
    H.R. REP. NO. 105-77, at 13 (1997), reprinted in 1997 U.S.C.C.A.N.
    2739, 2745-46.
    71
    Smith v. Org. of Foster Families for Equal. & Reform, 
    431 U.S. 816
    , 835
    n.37 (1977).
    72
    In re L.L., 
    653 A.2d 873
    , 887 (D.C. 1995) (quoting Michael Wald, State
    Intervention on Behalf of “Neglected” Children: A Search for Realistic Standards,
    27 Stan. L. Rev. 985, 995 (1975)); In re An.C., 
    722 A.2d 36
    , 41 (D.C. 1998)
    (quoting same).
    99
    caretaker.”73 Time is of the essence, for the years in foster care constitute “an
    enormous span in the lifetime of a child”74—a critical, uniquely sensitive period in
    the child’s growth.75 Thus, “[t]here comes a time, sooner for younger children than
    for older children, when a permanent decision is more important than waiting for a
    potentially better option to be in place. Permanency planning is recognizing the
    need for a final decision to be made consistently with the child’s developmental
    needs and sense of time.”76 Until now, this court has appreciated that “[t]imely
    integration into a stable and permanent home is arguably the most important factor
    when considering the best interests of the child.”77
    ____________________
    73
    In re 
    L.L., 653 A.2d at 888
    (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted).
    74
    In re A.B.E., 
    564 A.2d 751
    , 758 (D.C. 1989); see also In re C.T., 
    724 A.2d 590
    , 599 (D.C. 1999) (observing that “two and a half years [is] . . . an
    enormous span in the life of a young child”).
    75
    See 2 Ann M. Haralambie, Handling Child Custody, Abuse and Adoption
    Cases § 12:36 at 403 (3d ed. 2009) (“The child’s sense of time is very different
    than an adult’s, and there is a great deal which must be accomplished during the
    few short years of childhood. Lost time and lost opportunities can never be
    regained. Children who do not experience a secure bonded relationship during
    childhood may have difficulty in forming relationships for the rest of their lives.
    Every change of placement makes it more difficult for the child to form another
    attachment.”) (footnote omitted).
    76
    
    Id. 77 In
    re D.H., 
    917 A.2d 112
    , 118 (D.C. 2007) (emphasis added); see D.C.
    (. . . continued)
    100
    The majority discounts the concern about appellate delay as merely one
    about “marginally greater efficiency in moving children to permanency.” Ante at
    22. We think this statement gravely underestimates the stakes for these children
    and fails to respect the public policy determinations made by Congress when it
    enacted ASFA and the Council in enacting our neglect statute.
    The majority is concerned that deferring appellate review of a change in the
    permanency goal to adoption is prejudicial to biological parents because it allows
    the children time to develop attachments to their foster parents while proceedings
    continue. See ante at 22. But the way to address this concern is to require prompt
    TPR and adoption hearings following the goal change, as the statute contemplates,
    not to permit interlocutory appeals. The delays caused by interlocutory appeals of
    goal change decisions will only exacerbate the problem that the majority perceives
    by lengthening the time children remain in foster care before permanency is
    achieved. This is so even when the biological parents succeed in reversing the goal
    (….continued)
    Code § 16-2353 (b)(1) (2012 Repl.).
    101
    change on appeal, because that merely will return the goal to reunification; it will
    not be a determination that the biological parents have met that goal and are
    entitled to regain custody of their children from the foster parents.78
    In sum, for the preceding reasons, we would hold that permanency goal
    changes from reunification to adoption are not final orders appealable as of right.
    We respectfully dissent from the decision to overrule In re K.M.T.79
    ____________________
    78
    Cf. Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 765-66 (1982) (“For the child, the
    likely consequence of an erroneous failure to terminate is preservation of an
    uneasy status quo.”). What does serve to alleviate the majority’s concern is that
    the neglect statute already provides a remedy for biological parents who believe
    foster care is no longer necessary and are seeking a final order reunifying them
    with their children and terminating the neglect case: they may petition the court to
    modify the dispositional order accordingly. See D.C. Code § 16-2323 (h)(1). If
    the court finds that the child’s commitment to foster care or other protective
    custody is no longer necessary or appropriate to safeguard the child’s welfare, it
    may order the child returned to the home. D.C. Code § 16-2323 (f)(1). We
    assume that the denial of a petition for such conclusive relief would constitute a
    final, appealable order. Cf. In re 
    L.L., 653 A.2d at 875
    (permitting appeal from the
    denial of a TPR motion). Thus, parents who believe they are fit and entitled to
    reunification have every incentive to move for a hearing if they think they are
    being prejudiced by delay, and to do so as soon as feasible.
    79
    Before we leave this topic, we should call attention to the uncertain scope
    of the majority’s overruling of In re K.M.T. The majority’s explicit holding is that
    “a change of the presumptive goal of a neglect proceeding from reunification to
    adoption is an appealable final order.” Ante at 54. This leaves some related
    questions yet to be resolved. Notably, at times the majority implicitly suggests that
    (. . . continued)
    102
    III.   The Constitution Does Not Require Proof of Parental Unfitness Before a
    Court May Terminate Parental Rights When Necessary to Protect a
    Child From Serious Harm.
    Our colleagues assert that the substantive due process right of an individual
    to continue or resume parenting her abused or neglected child may not be
    terminated without a predicate finding by clear and convincing evidence that the
    individual is unfit to parent.    We agree that this is ordinarily true, but our
    agreement comes with the critical caveat that the best interest of the child is the
    paramount and overriding consideration in the decision. As we held in In re
    S.L.G., there is a “presumption in favor of the natural parent in a TPR or contested
    (….continued)
    an appeal also may be permissible if there is a shift to concurrent goals, where
    planning for adoption will be concurrent with, but will not supplant, planning for
    reunification. See ante at 33, 36 n.28. This implication is puzzling, though,
    because the reasons on which the majority relies to support its holding – the
    CFSA’s supposed withdrawal of support for, and abandonment of, the biological
    parents – do not apply when the CFSA chooses to pursue concurrent goals.
    Moreover, the CFSA is permitted at all times to pursue simultaneous efforts to
    reunify and to place the child for adoption, and it does not need court approval to
    do so.
    Beyond this, it also is unclear whether a parent could later appeal from a
    refusal to change a goal of adoption back to a goal of reunification. It is similarly
    unclear whether a neglected child or any other party (the District? an adoption
    petitioner?) could appeal a permanency goal order – including, for example, an
    order refusing to change a goal from reunification to adoption (or another
    placement), or one setting reunification as the goal. And the majority likewise
    does not address the appealability of an initial order setting adoption as the goal.
    103
    adoption proceeding” that is “rebutted only by a showing [either] that the parent is
    . . . unfit or that exceptional circumstances exist that would make the continued
    relationship detrimental to the child’s best interest.”80 Our colleagues, however,
    insist that a finding of unfitness is a virtually absolute, “essential” constitutional
    requirement that must always be made before the child’s best interest may be taken
    into account. Ante at 38, 54; post at 138-39, 142, 149-151, 156-158. In effect, the
    opinions of our colleagues treat the interest of the parent rather than that of the
    child as the paramount concern, and would substitute the criterion of parental
    fitness for the best interest of the child; indeed, one of the opinions declares that
    the en banc decision in this case “overrule[s] prior pronouncements that proof of
    unfitness is not constitutionally required to permanently sever an existing parent-
    child relationship—that all that is needed is a showing that termination is in the
    best interests of the child.” Post at 142. To be sure, our colleagues “acknowledge
    that there may be circumstances in which clear and convincing evidence will show
    that an award of custody to a fit natural parent would be detrimental to the best
    interests of the child,” and hence that “there might be truly exceptional
    ____________________
    80
    In re S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    , 1286 (D.C. 2015) (internal quotation marks
    and footnote omitted); see also Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 68-69 (2000)
    (plurality opinion) (“[S]o long as a parent adequately cares for his or her children
    (i.e., is fit), there will normally be no reason for the State to inject itself into the
    private realm of the family to further question the ability of that parent to make the
    best decisions concerning the rearing of that parent’s children”) (emphasis added).
    104
    circumstances where termination is permissible notwithstanding a parent’s fitness.”
    Ante at 43, post at 142-43 n.6 (emphases added, internal quotation marks omitted).
    Thus our colleagues ultimately do adhere to what we said on the subject in In re
    S.L.G.81 Yet they proceed to dismiss this qualification as unrealistic and merely
    theoretical. See ante at 43, post at 142-43 n.6. At least three judges in the majority
    appear ready to jettison entirely the principle enshrined in our jurisprudence that
    the child’s health and welfare is the decisive consideration in parental termination
    cases. See, e.g., post at 139-40 n.4, 146 n.7, 147 n.12.
    We fundamentally disagree with our colleagues’ constitutional analysis and
    resulting elevation of parental rights over the best interest of the child in TPR and
    contested adoption proceedings. The right to parent one’s child is not a right to
    harm one’s child. Decades of precedent from this court, the dictates of logic, and
    guidance from the Supreme Court, Congress, and other courts all weigh against the
    position our colleagues espouse. Their constitutional pronouncement is based on a
    misreading of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Stanley v. Illinois82 and Santosky v.
    ____________________
    81
    For this reason, we consider it inaccurate to say that prior cases are
    overruled. Post at 142. In re S.L.G. remains binding precedent in this jurisdiction.
    82
    
    405 U.S. 645
    (1972).
    105
    Kramer83 that this court long ago considered and rejected and that the Supreme
    Court itself has made clear was not what those cases held.          Our colleagues’
    position also is based on their reluctance to face an oft-demonstrated fact – that in
    some infrequent but recurring circumstances, termination of the biological parents’
    rights is indeed necessary to protect the child they neglected or abused from
    serious and irreparable harm even though the parents belatedly may have
    rehabilitated themselves and become otherwise “fit.”84
    ____________________
    83
    
    455 U.S. 745
    (1982).
    84
    It might be thought that our colleagues’ fitness criterion could be
    reconciled with our traditional best-interest-of-the-child jurisprudence if they
    would agree that even a fully rehabilitated parent should not be deemed “fit” to
    parent a particular child when returning that particular child to the parent would be
    detrimental to the child’s welfare, whatever the reason. This would be to say that
    parental “fitness” should be defined as coextensive with the child’s best interests.
    As a practical matter, such a definitional fix might meet our principal objection to
    the elevation of parental entitlements over the well-being of children. But at least
    some of our colleagues appear to resist this approach, see post at 139-40 n.4, even
    though we all agree that, broadly speaking, “fitness refers to the parent’s intention
    and ability over time to provide for a child’s wellbeing and meet the child’s
    needs.” In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    . See ante at 41, post at 152. The lack of a
    more specific definition of parental fitness is unfortunate. In any event, however
    the presently somewhat nebulous term “fitness” is defined, our position is that in
    child neglect, TPR and adoption proceedings, “as in all proceedings affecting the
    future of a minor, the decisive consideration is [and should be] the best interests of
    the child.” In re S.C.M., 
    653 A.2d 398
    , 405 (D.C. 1995).
    106
    Preliminarily, to reemphasize a point made earlier, whether a court
    constitutionally may terminate a parent’s rights without finding the parent “unfit”
    is not a question we should be addressing in this case. Because the parents here
    waived the issue, it has no impact on the court’s resolution of the present appeals.
    Moreover, the issue has long been settled by a generation of this court’s past
    decisions, and the parties and amici in this case (including the institutional litigants
    who have a strong interest in the matter) have not been afforded an opportunity to
    be heard on the question. For all these reasons, it strikes us as highly inappropriate
    for the majority to reach out sua sponte and, as some members of the majority
    would have it, “overrule” those decisions in this case. Post at 142. Our main
    objection, however, is a substantive one.
    Our colleagues undermine, if they do not actually reject, what we take to be
    a principle of overriding importance, namely, that the child’s best interest is the
    paramount consideration in parental termination and contested adoption
    proceedings.    It is a corollary of this principle that a court may and should
    terminate parental rights without a predicate finding of parental unfitness if the
    court finds by clear and convincing evidence that it is necessary to do so to protect
    the child’s wellbeing. As we shall discuss, there indeed are “realistic factual
    107
    situation[s],” ante at 42, in which a neglected child would be harmed if returned to
    her fit biological parents. In case after case, this and other courts have been
    confronted with such situations and resolved them in favor of protecting the child
    from actual harm.
    To contextualize the question, let us think of children like those before us in
    the present appeals – at-risk children who would be psychologically devastated if
    they were permanently removed from the only safe and loving home they have
    ever known, that of the foster parents who have cared for them, restored them to
    health, and seek to adopt them. In affirming the trial court’s decision in this case,
    most of our colleagues recognize that the danger of irreparable psychological harm
    to the children outweighs the biological parents’ preference that they be placed
    with an otherwise fit alternative caregiver. That being so, it is hard for us to
    understand why our colleagues refuse to acknowledge that the same grave danger
    of irreparable harm would exist if the question were whether to return these or
    similar at-risk children to the custody of their (hypothetically) fit biological
    parents.
    108
    A.    The Child’s Best Interest Is the Paramount Consideration in
    Termination Proceedings.
    For decades, and until now, this court’s considered answer to the question
    we face has been this:
    [A] termination proceeding involves more than a parent’s
    fundamental liberty interest in the care, custody, and
    control of his child. The child’s interests in stability,
    safety, security, and a normal family home are also at
    stake, as well as the prompt finality that protects those
    interests. So, even though we are evaluating whether a
    parent’s rights were violated, in matters affecting the
    future of a minor child, the best interest of the child is the
    decisive consideration. Parental rights are not absolute,
    and must give way before the child’s best interests. The
    legal touchstone in any proceeding to terminate parental
    rights is the best interest of the child, and that interest is
    controlling.[85]
    Accordingly, this court has “repeatedly emphasized that it is the child’s best
    interest, not the fundamental right to parent, that is paramount in [TPR and]
    ____________________
    85
    In re R.E.S., 
    19 A.3d 785
    , 789 (D.C. 2011) (emphasis added; internal
    citations and punctuation omitted).
    109
    adoption cases,”86 and therefore that “a finding of parental unfitness is not a
    constitutional prerequisite” to the termination of parental rights when the child’s
    welfare is at stake.87 Courts in other jurisdictions have been of the same mind.88
    This position aligns with Congress’s declaration that ASFA “establishe[d]
    explicitly for the first time in Federal law that a child’s health and safety must be
    the paramount consideration when any decision is made regarding a child in the
    ____________________
    86
    In re C.A.B., 
    4 A.3d 890
    , 899 (D.C. 2010).
    87
    In re Baby Boy C., 
    630 A.2d 670
    , 682 (D.C. 1993); see, e.g., In re S.M.,
    
    985 A.2d 413
    , 416-17 (D.C. 2009) (“[T]he paramount consideration is the best
    interest of the child. . . . The presumption [in favor of a fit natural parent] must
    necessarily give way in the face of clear and convincing evidence that requires the
    court, in the best interest of the child, to deny custody to the natural parent in favor
    of an adoptive parent.”); In re J.G., 
    831 A.2d 992
    , 1001 (D.C. 2003)
    (“Notwithstanding the presumption in favor of the birth parent, . . . we have
    repeatedly held that the parent’s rights may and must be overridden when such a
    drastic measure is necessary in order to protect the best interests of the child.”).
    88
    E.g., In re J.C., 
    608 A.2d 1312
    , 1316 (N.J. 1992) (“[T]he cornerstone of
    the inquiry is not whether the biological parents are fit but whether they can cease
    causing their child harm.”); In re Colby E., 
    669 A.2d 151
    , 152 (Me. 1995) (“The
    State is not required to prove that the parent is the cause of the child’s jeopardy, or
    that the parent is generally unfit. The inquiry is whether the parent can protect the
    child from those circumstances that either will cause or threaten serious harm.”);
    see also, e.g., In re Ann S., 
    202 P.3d 1089
    , 1101-03 (Cal. 2009); A.D.B.H. v.
    Houston Cty. Dep’t of Human Res., 
    1 So. 3d 53
    , 61 (Ala. Civ. App. 2008); In re
    Rashawn H., 
    937 A.2d 177
    , 189-90 (Md. 2007); Opinion of the Justices to the
    Senate, 
    691 N.E.2d 911
    , 914 (Mass. 1998).
    110
    Nation’s child welfare system.”89 Congress took much the same position in the
    Indian Child Welfare Act of 197890 in establishing “minimum federal standards for
    the removal of Indian children from their families and the placement of such
    children in foster or adoptive homes.”91 The Act provides for the termination of
    parental rights based not on a showing of parental unfitness, but rather on
    “evidence . . . that the continued custody of the child by the parent . . . is likely to
    result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child.”92 This is a best-
    interest-of-the-child standard.93 In 2013, when the Supreme Court examined this
    provision in Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl,94 there was no indication that any
    Justice thought it vulnerable to a substantive due process challenge for its failure to
    require a finding of parental unfitness. Contrariwise, Justice Sotomayor’s dissent,
    which three other Justices joined, evinced agreement with our understanding that a
    ____________________
    89
    Strengthening Abuse and Neglect Courts Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-
    314, § 2 (2), 114 Stat. 1266 (2000), 42 U.S.C. § 670 note (2015).
    90
    25 U.S.C. §§ 1901-1963 (2012).
    91
    
    Id. § 1902.
          92
    
    Id. § 1912
    (f).
    93
    See In re Mahaney v. Mahaney, 
    51 P.3d 776
    , 784-85 (Wash. 2002);
    A.B.M. v. M.H., 
    651 P.2d 1170
    , 1175-76 (Alaska 1982).
    94
    
    133 S. Ct. 2552
    (2013).
    111
    finding of unfitness is not always required to terminate parental rights because the
    child’s best interest is paramount. “Of course,” Justice Sotomayor wrote, “it will
    often be the case that custody is subsequently granted to a child’s fit parent,
    consistent with the presumption that a natural parent will act in the best interests of
    his child.”95
    The Supreme Court likewise has “emphasized the paramount interest in the
    welfare of children and has noted that the rights of the parents are a counterpart of
    the responsibilities they have assumed.”96 In Quilloin v. Walcott, its only case
    directly on point, the Court expressly held that the best interest of the child is, at
    least in some circumstances, a constitutionally permissible basis for terminating a
    biological parent’s rights without a finding of unfitness and for approving an
    ____________________
    95
    
    Id. at 2583
    n.14 (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (emphasis added). Our
    dissenting colleagues appear to misunderstand our point in citing Adoptive Couple
    v. Baby Girl and the Indian Child Welfare Act. See post at 159-50 n.15. It is true
    that the Act requires termination orders to be supported by “evidence beyond a
    reasonable doubt,” 25 U.S.C. § 1912 (f), a more demanding standard than clear and
    convincing evidence. Our point is that even under a statute incorporating this
    heightened standard, the Justices joining Justice Sotomayor’s dissent understood
    that a fit biological parent’s rights may be terminated for the child’s welfare.
    96
    Lehr v. Robertson, 
    463 U.S. 248
    , 257 (1983).
    112
    adoption by an existing non-relative caregiver whom the parent opposed.97 As in
    this case and other cases we now are discussing, the child’s interest at stake in
    Quilloin was in maintaining his existing familial relationship with the non-relative
    caregiver.98
    It may well be, as the Court said in dictum, that “some showing of unfitness”
    would be required before the state could “force the breakup” of a natural family
    unit “over the objections of the parents and their children . . . for the sole reason
    that to do so was thought to be in the children’s best interest.”99 But that normative
    proposition did not apply to Quilloin and it is a non sequitur here. The present
    case and the other cases we are talking about are ones in which (1) the natural
    parents do not have an unbroken custodial relationship with the child – the child
    ____________________
    97
    
    434 U.S. 246
    , 255 (1978).
    98
    See In re P.G., 
    452 A.2d 1183
    , 1184-85 (D.C. 1982) (explaining that in
    Quilloin, the Supreme Court “found that a best interest [of the child] standard
    satisfied the due process rights of the nonconsenting parent . . . where the effect is
    simply to recognize an existing family unit,” but “declined to address whether the
    best interest standard would always suffice, i.e., even where the child has not
    already been integrated into the adoptive family for some time”).
    99
    
    Quilloin, 434 U.S. at 255
    (quoting Smith v. Org. of Foster Families for
    Equal. & Reform, 
    431 U.S. 816
    , 862-63 (1977) (Stewart, J., concurring)).
    113
    had to be removed from their home and placed in foster care100; (2) the child’s
    removal and placement in foster care was based on “some showing of unfitness”
    (namely, the showing of abuse or neglect and a demonstrated risk to the child’s
    safety); (3) the reason for terminating parental rights is not “solely” the child’s best
    interest, but rather and more specifically the compelling need to protect the child
    from demonstrated harm of great magnitude; and (4) the abused or neglected child
    typically does not “object” to the “breakup of the family” – rather, the child or her
    guardian ad litem typically favors the proposed TPR and adoption.
    Contrary to our colleagues’ contentions, see ante at 38-39, post at 145-50,
    neither Stanley v. Illinois101 nor Santosky v. Kramer102 established that the
    Constitution demands a finding of parental unfitness before a court may terminate
    a biological parent’s rights in the best interest of the child. Those two cases
    concerned the requirements of procedural due process, not substantive due process.
    Accordingly, in In re P.G., this court squarely rejected the contention that “to
    permit adoption, with the concurrent termination of preexisting parental rights,
    ____________________
    100
    See id.; see also In re Ann S., 
    202 P.3d 1089
    , 1101 (Cal. 2009).
    101
    
    405 U.S. 645
    (1972).
    102
    
    455 U.S. 745
    (1982).
    114
    without requiring a finding of parental unfitness, violates the parent’s right to due
    process.”103 Chief Judge Newman, who authored the court’s opinion, explained:
    The Supreme Court cases invoked by appellant are either
    inapposite or consistent with the constitutionality of the
    D.C. statute. Stanley v. Illinois . . . established that a
    natural father, even of an illegitimate child, has the right
    to a due process hearing (applying the substantive state
    law) before his rights are terminated.            However,
    appellant’s claim is not founded on procedural, but
    substantive due process – a challenge to the best interest
    standard. Contrary to appellant’s suggestion, Stanley
    does not stand for the proposition that the father of an
    illegitimate child has a constitutional right to block
    adoption unless he is unfit. Lack of fitness was an
    essential finding in that case only because under state
    law, that was the only basis for granting an adoption
    without parental consent even when the parents were
    married.
    * * *
    Finally, in Santosky v. Kramer, . . . the Court held
    that procedural due process requires findings based on
    clear and convincing evidence before parental rights are
    terminated. In that case, under applicable state law,
    parental fitness was the test. However, the Court
    carefully refrained from any constitutional holding
    regarding the substantive criteria, limiting its attention to
    the standard of proof.[104]
    ____________________
    103
    In re 
    P.G., 452 A.2d at 1184
    .
    104
    
    Id. at 1184-85
    (footnotes omitted).
    115
    This court has adhered to Chief Judge Newman’s analysis in a myriad of
    decisions in the ensuing three-and-a-half decades, and no party or amicus in the
    present case has questioned it. Our colleagues in the majority have not refuted it.
    And the Supreme Court itself has confirmed our understanding that Stanley and
    Santosky were not substantive due process cases and did not hold that the
    Constitution requires a finding of parental unfitness in TPR cases. First, when
    presented with this precise substantive due process claim in Caban v.
    Mohammed,105 the Supreme Court declined to reach it and signaled that Stanley did
    not settle the question.106     Thereafter, in Santosky itself, the Court expressly
    ____________________
    105
    
    441 U.S. 380
    (1979).
    106
    The Supreme Court stated:
    Finally, appellant argues that he was denied substantive
    due process when the New York courts terminated his
    parental rights without first finding him to be unfit to be a
    parent. See Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    [] (1972)
    (semble). Because we have ruled that the New York
    statute is unconstitutional under the Equal Protection
    Clause, we similarly express no view as to whether a
    State is constitutionally barred from ordering adoption in
    the absence of a determination that the parent whose
    rights are being terminated is unfit.
    
    Id. at 394
    n.16. “Semble” is a term “used chiefly to indicate an obiter dictum in a
    court opinion or to introduce an uncertain thought or interpretation.” Semble,
    BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014).
    116
    acknowledged that it still was not “clear” whether a State constitutionally could
    terminate a parent’s rights without showing parental unfitness.107 It would be quite
    surprising were it otherwise, for the Supreme Court normally refrains from
    deciding momentous constitutional issues when they are not presented or it is
    unnecessary to do so in the case before it. This court should exercise similar
    restraint.
    B. The Vital Interests of Neglected Children, Including Their Interests
    in Maintaining Intimate Familial Relationships With Their Foster
    Parents, Take Precedence Over Their Biological Parents’ Interests.
    Surely “the most obvious . . . basis for denying custody to a fit parent in the
    best interests of the child would be a finding based on clear and convincing
    evidence that parental custody would actually harm the child.”108 That is why we
    have held that parental rights may be terminated even without a showing of
    ____________________
    107
    
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 760
    n.10.
    108
    Appeal of H.R. (In re Baby Boy C.), 
    581 A.2d 1141
    , 1178-79 (D.C.
    1990) (Ferren, J., concurring).
    117
    unfitness where “exceptional circumstances exist that would make the continued
    relationship detrimental to the child’s best interest.”109
    We would adhere to this long-settled position. The reason parental “fitness”
    is important is precisely because the term “refers to the parent’s intention and
    ability over time to provide for a child’s wellbeing and meet the child’s needs,”110
    as “determined by reference to the specific child whose placement is in issue.”111
    Parental unfitness can be established by evidence that returning a particular
    neglected child to the parent’s care and custody would seriously harm that child,
    regardless of why that would be so.112 “The same statutory factors that guide the
    ____________________
    109
    In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    110
    
    Id. at 1286.
          111
    
    Id. at 1286
    n. 26 (citing In re L.W., 
    613 A.2d 350
    , 360 n.24 (D.C.
    1992)). This relationship between parental fitness and the child’s best interest is
    the reason why “the question of parental fitness is almost always at the heart of any
    proceeding to terminate parental rights or waive a natural parent’s consent to
    adoption,” and why the court must make a “threshold determination” as to whether
    the strong presumption in favor of the natural parent is rebutted by a showing of
    either unfitness or exceptional circumstances. 
    Id. at 1286
    , 1288.
    112
    See 
    id. at 1287
    (“[I]f the natural parent is unable . . . to meet the child’s
    critical needs . . . , or if placement of the child with the natural parent would
    endanger the child or be detrimental to the child’s wellbeing, that would mean the
    parent is unfit to care for that child.”).
    118
    court’s determination of a child’s best interest in a TPR or contested adoption
    proceeding therefore also guide the court’s assessment in that proceeding of the
    natural parent’s fitness vel non.”113 Clearly, the question of whether a parent is
    unfit overlaps substantially the question of whether regaining custody of her child
    is in the child’s best interest.114
    The possibility that termination of a putatively “fit” biological parent’s
    rights would be justified, indeed necessary, to protect a previously abused or
    neglected child from “actual harm” is emphatically not an unrealistic “scenario.”
    This court and other courts have confronted such “scenarios” repeatedly in real
    life. They have arisen most commonly, perhaps, in cases involving young children
    who, after having been removed from abusive or neglectful parents for their own
    ____________________
    113
    
    Id. 114 See
    also, e.g., In re Jayden 
    G., 70 A.3d at 303
    n.32 (“[P]arental fitness,
    exceptional circumstances, and the child’s best interests considerations are not
    different and separate analyses. The three concepts are fused together, culminating
    in the ultimate conclusion of whether terminating parental rights is in a given
    child’s best interests.”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); In re
    K.M.M., No. 91457-4, 2016 Wash. LEXIS 1003, at *37 (Wash. Sept. 8, 2016)
    (“[I]n order to determine whether a parent is a fit parent to a particular child, the
    court must determine that the parent is able to meet that child’s basic needs.”
    (emphasis in original)).
    119
    safety, remained in foster care for protracted periods while the biological parents
    slowly took the steps necessary to rehabilitate themselves and evidence their
    fitness to care for the children. By that time, in some of these cases, courts have
    found that preserving the biological parents’ rights would come at a high cost to
    the children, for it necessarily would entail disrupting strong attachments the
    children developed with foster caregivers who have become the only parents they
    have ever known. As child psychologists have testified in this and many other
    cases, severing those attachments would expose the children to serious and
    permanent behavioral, cognitive, and psychiatric damage.115       There is nothing
    controversial about this testimony; the importance to a child’s wellbeing of a
    healthy and undisrupted attachment to a primary caregiver has been well-studied
    and is widely accepted in the literature of child psychology.116 That common-sense
    ____________________
    115
    Often, moreover, the biological parent cannot parent the child properly
    because of the corresponding lack of attachment in their relationship. See, e.g., In
    re K.M.M., 2016 Wash. LEXIS 1003, at *38 (upholding TPR based on evidence
    that biological parent would be unable to parent the child due to child’s lack of
    attachment to him).
    116
    See Ross A. Thompson, The Development of the Person: Social
    Understanding, Relationships, Conscience, Self, in 3 HANDBOOK OF CHILD
    PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT 24, 42-70
    (William Damon et al. eds., 6th ed. 2006); Marsha B. Liss & Marcia J. McKinley-
    Pace, Best Interests of the Child: New Twists on an Old Theme, in PSYCHOLOGY
    AND LAW: THE STATE OF THE DISCIPLINE 341, 351-55 (Ronald Roesch et al. eds.,
    1999).
    120
    proposition is well-accepted in court decisions too, up to and including the present
    case. On numerous occasions, for example, this court has appreciated that “it
    would be ‘ruthless beyond description’ to take a child out of a loving home, when
    she had lived at that home for a substantial period of time as a result of her
    biological parents’ inability or unwillingness to care for her.”117
    When faced with these unfortunate but all-too-realistic situations, this court
    and other courts have adhered to the principle that the child’s best interest is the
    overriding consideration.      They consistently have approved or authorized
    ____________________
    117
    In re L.L., 
    653 A.2d 873
    , 883 (D.C. 1995) (citation omitted); see also,
    e.g., In re K.D., 
    26 A.3d 772
    , 779 (D.C. 2011); In re J.G., 
    831 A.2d 992
    , 1002
    (D.C. 2003).
    While these may be the most commonly encountered situations in which
    returning an abused or neglected child to a reformed biological parent would be
    contrary to the child’s wellbeing, we can envision others as well. Even when there
    is no showing of present parental unfitness, the child still may have unhealed
    emotional and psychological wounds and abiding anger and hostility due to the
    parent’s prior mistreatment. Such a child may be completely opposed to being
    returned to her parent and desperate to avoid it. In such circumstances, it is quite
    foreseeable that, however “fit” the parent, an attempt at reunification might prove
    not only futile, but disastrous for the child. See, e.g., In re K.M.M., 2016 Wash
    LEXIS 1003, at *8-9, *20-21 (reunification found to be futile in light of child’s
    fear and inability to “tolerate” interactions with her father and her adamant refusal
    to attend visitation sessions with him or engage in reunification efforts); cf.
    Elizabeth Bartholet, Nobody’s Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the
    Adoption Alternative 106-07 (1999) (hereinafter, Bartholet, Nobody’s Children).
    121
    termination of the biological parents’ rights when necessary to avoid causing the
    child severe emotional trauma and permanent psychological harm – despite or
    regardless of the biological parents’ fitness.118 As one court confronted with this
    painful choice empathically said:
    There can be no solution satisfactory to all in this
    kind of case. Justice to both mother and child, the
    desired objective, can only rarely be attained where,
    as here, the best interest of one is only achieved at
    the expense of the other. Where courts are forced to
    choose between a parent’s right and a child’s welfare,
    they choose the child by virtue of their responsibility
    as parens patriae of all minor children, to protect
    them from harm.[119]
    This may seem unfair to biological parents who eventually have
    rehabilitated themselves and might be said to meet criteria of “fitness” that would
    render them suitable parents for other children or under other circumstances.
    ____________________
    118
    See, e.g., In re C.L.O., 
    41 A.3d 502
    , 512-13 (D.C. 2012); In re Baby Boy
    C., 
    630 A.2d 670
    , 683 (D.C. 1993); see also, e.g., In re K.M.M., 2016 Wash.
    LEXIS 1003, at *3-4, *38; In re Alonza D., 
    987 A.2d 536
    , 547 n.9 (Md. 2010);
    Charleston Cty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. King, 
    631 S.E.2d 239
    , 243-44 (S.C. 2006);
    L.G. v. State, 
    14 P.3d 946
    , 950 (Alaska 2000); In re Baby Boy Smith, 
    602 So. 2d 144
    , 148-49 (La. Ct. App. 1992); In re Colby E., 
    669 A.2d 151
    , 152 (Me. 1995); In
    re Jasmon O., 
    878 P.2d 1297
    , 1311-12 (Cal. 1994); In re J.C., 
    608 A.2d 1312
    ,
    1323 (N.J. 1992).
    119
    In re R., 
    416 A.2d 62
    , 68 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1980).
    122
    However, such parents cannot expect to resume their relationship with their child
    as if the abuse and neglect had never happened. The child may suffer lasting
    psychological trauma from the previous mistreatment and have developed a
    primary attachment to the foster caregivers.         Severing that attachment and
    returning this child to the parents who harmed her may entail an unacceptable risk
    of psychological injury to the child despite the parents’ good faith efforts to
    overcome the past and achieve reunification. When that is so, a court may have no
    choice but to terminate the parents’ rights in order to safeguard the child’s
    welfare.120
    This is not to deny or minimize the “fundamental liberty interest” that
    biological parents have in “the care, custody, and management” of their children.121
    But the parents are not the only parties with vital interests at stake in these child
    placement decisions. The Supreme Court has long recognized that children too are
    ____________________
    120
    See In re Jasmon 
    O., 878 P.2d at 1313-14
    (rejecting the argument that
    because the government “caused the child to be placed in a foster home, created
    the child’s bonds to the foster parents, and disrupted the child’s potential bond with
    the father, it would be fundamentally unfair to terminate the father’s parental rights
    even if it would be detrimental to the child to be returned to his care.”).
    121
    
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 753
    .
    123
    protected by the Constitution and possess constitutional rights. 122 Just as adults
    have a well-established, fundamental liberty interest in preserving their intimate
    familial and caregiving relationships from harmful state interference and
    destruction,123 so too do children for whom such relationships are at least as
    important.124 Consequently,
    ____________________
    122
    E.g., Planned Parenthood of Cent. Mo. v. Danforth, 
    428 U.S. 52
    , 74
    (1976) (children’s substantive due process right of access to abortion)
    (“Constitutional rights do not mature and come into being magically only when
    one attains the state-defined age of majority. Minors, as well as adults, are
    protected by the Constitution and possess constitutional rights.”); In re Gault, 
    387 U.S. 1
    , 13 (1967) (“[N]either the Fourteenth Amendment nor the Bill of Rights is
    for adults alone.”); see also Parham v. J.R., 
    442 U.S. 584
    (1979) (“[A] child, in
    common with adults, has a substantial liberty interest in not being confined
    unnecessarily for medical treatment[.]”); Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch.
    Dist., 
    393 U.S. 503
    , 506-07 (1969) (First Amendment right to political speech).
    123
    See, e.g., Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    135 S. Ct. 2584
    , 2599 (2015)
    (“[C]hoices concerning . . . family relationships . . . are protected by the
    Constitution[.]”); 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 753
    (“[F]reedom of personal choice in
    matters of family life is a fundamental liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth
    Amendment.”); Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, 
    468 U.S. 609
    , 617-20 (1984) (discussing
    the constitutional protection accorded “choices to enter into and maintain certain
    intimate human relationships,” in particular “[f]amily relationships [that,] by their
    nature, involve deep attachments and commitments to the necessarily few other
    individuals with whom one shares not only a special community of thoughts,
    experiences, and beliefs but also distinctively personal aspects of one’s life.”).
    124
    See 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 754
    n.7 (recognizing that “important liberty
    interests of the child and its foster parents may also be affected” by a TPR
    proceeding); 
    Troxel, 530 U.S. at 88
    (Stevens, J., dissenting) (“While this Court has
    not yet had occasion to elucidate the nature of a child’s liberty interests in
    preserving established familial or family-like bonds, . . . it seems to me extremely
    (. . . continued)
    124
    [a] parent’s rights with respect to her child have . . . never
    been regarded as absolute, but rather are limited by the
    existence of an actual, developed relationship with a
    child, and are tied to the presence or absence of some
    embodiment of family. These limitations have arisen,
    not simply out of the definition of parenthood itself, but
    because of [the Supreme] Court’s assumption that a
    parent’s interests in a child must be balanced against the
    State’s long-recognized interests as parens patriae . . .
    and, critically, the child’s own complementary interest in
    preserving relationships that serve her welfare and
    protection.[125]
    In short, notwithstanding the troublingly scant recognition of the vital interests
    (and, arguably, constitutional rights) of children in our colleagues’ opinions, the
    Constitution obliges us to “reject any suggestion that when it comes to parental
    rights, children are so much chattel.”126
    (….continued)
    likely that, to the extent parents and families have fundamental liberty interests in
    preserving such intimate relationships, so, too, do children have these interests, and
    so, too, must their interests be balanced in the equation.”); see also, e.g., In re
    Jasmon 
    O., 878 P.2d at 1307
    (“Children, too, have fundamental rights – including
    the fundamental right to be protected from neglect and to have a placement that is
    stable and permanent. Children are not simply chattels belonging to the parent, but
    have fundamental interests of their own that may diverge from the interests of the
    parent.”) (internal punctuation and citations omitted).
    125
    
    Troxel, 530 U.S. at 88
    (Stevens, J., dissenting) (emphasis added, internal
    citations omitted).
    126
    
    Id. at 89.
                                             125
    To enlarge on a previous point, for a young child who was removed from
    parents who neglected or abused her and placed for a lengthy time in foster care, it
    may become “natural that the foster family should hold the same place in the
    emotional life of the foster child, and fulfill the same socializing functions, as a
    natural family.”127 When that happens, the child’s vital interest in preserving
    familial relationships that serve her welfare and protection is often in maintaining
    her relationship with the foster family rather than, and in preference to, reunifying
    with the biological parents who abused or neglected her. Ultimately it must be
    recognized that “[p]arental rights do not spring full-blown from the biological
    connection between parent and child.             They require relationships more
    enduring.”128    A genuine parent-child relationship deserves protection whether
    biological or not; more so, if push comes to shove, than a superficial parent-child
    relationship that happens to be biological in origin.
    ____________________
    127
    Smith v. Org. of Foster Families for Equal. & Reform, 
    431 U.S. 816
    , 844
    n.52 (1977).
    128
    Caban v. Mohammed, 
    441 U.S. 380
    , 397 (1979) (Stewart, J., dissenting).
    126
    Ordinarily, in the family law context, “the parameters of legal discourse
    have been based on parents’ rights to their children instead of on a child’s right to
    be parented.”129 This is because it usually is valid to “presum[e] that fit parents act
    in the best interests of their children.”130 But this is only a presumption, albeit a
    strong one. It is not always true, and it is rebuttable.131 Children’s separable
    interests come to the fore when it becomes clear, commonly in the wake of a
    finding of neglect and a disagreement over placement, that a parent’s liberty
    interests are not necessarily aligned with her child’s. This, after all, is why courts
    appoint guardians ad litem for the children and apply the “best interest of the
    child” standard in such cases.       Put differently, respecting biological parents’
    interests to the exclusion of the children’s is tantamount to assuming that their
    interests are always aligned. That assumption is both logically erroneous and
    ____________________
    129
    Matthew M. Kavanagh, Rewriting the Legal Family: Beyond Exclusivity
    to a Care-Based Standard, 16 Yale J.L. & Feminism 83, 124 (2004).
    130
    
    Troxel, 530 U.S. at 68
    (plurality opinion).
    131
    See Parham v. J.R., 
    442 U.S. 584
    , 602 (1979) (“The law’s concept of the
    family rests on a presumption that parents possess what a child lacks in maturity,
    experience, and capacity for judgment required for making life’s difficult
    decisions. More important, historically it has recognized that natural bonds of
    affection lead parents to act in the best interests of their children. As with so many
    other legal presumptions, experience and reality may rebut what the law accepts as
    a starting point; the incidence of child neglect and abuse cases attests to this.”)
    (citation omitted).
    127
    contrary to legislative policy determinations inherent in fashioning a “best interest
    of the child” standard in the first place.
    Consequently, where the interests of child and parent are in fundamental
    conflict, the rights of the parents must be understood in light of the duty of the
    state, in its role of parens patriae, to defend and vindicate the child’s rights – “to
    guard the general interest in youth’s well being.”132
    In our view, therefore, taking the vital interests of the child into
    consideration, the threat of harm to a child can take precedence over a biological
    parent’s interest in preserving the parent-child relationship, regardless of whether
    the parent is (otherwise) “fit” to regain custody of the child.       If any of our
    colleagues in the majority disagree, and are of the view that the Constitution
    ____________________
    132
    Prince v. Massachusetts, 
    321 U.S. 158
    , 166 (1944). See, e.g., Gomes v.
    Wood, 
    451 F.3d 1122
    , 1128 (10th Cir. 2006) (“[T]he parents’ liberty interest is not
    absolute. States have a parens patriae interest in preserving and promoting
    children’s welfare, 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 766
    , . . . including a traditional and
    transcendent interest in protecting children from abuse[.]” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)); Brokaw v. Mercer Cty., 
    235 F.3d 1000
    , 1019 (7th Cir. 2000)
    (“[The] liberty interest in familial integrity is limited by the compelling
    governmental interest in the protection of children particularly where the children
    need to be protected from their own parents.”) (quoting Croft v. Westmoreland Cty.
    Children & Youth Servs., 
    103 F.3d 1123
    , 1125 (3rd Cir. 1997)).
    128
    compels a court to preserve a parent-child relationship despite clear and convincing
    evidence that doing so will prove harmful to the child’s welfare, we think they
    need to say so and defend that position rather than dismiss the danger as only an
    unrealistic or theoretical possibility.
    IV. A Parental Preference for an Adoption Petitioner Must Be Rejected
    When It Is Contrary to the Child’s Best Interest.
    We agree with the majority of our colleagues that the trial court properly
    fulfilled its obligation under our existing case law to give “weighty consideration”
    to the biological parents’ choice of adoption petitioner, and that the court did not
    err in rejecting that choice as clearly contrary to the children’s best interests
    because it would pose “unacceptably grave” risks to the children’s psychological,
    intellectual, and social development. Ante at 53. Judges Beckwith and Easterly
    criticize this court’s “weighty consideration” doctrine and argue that if parents
    have not been found to be unfit, their preference for an adoptive placement of their
    child should not merely receive “weighty consideration,” but “should
    presumptively control,” subject only to the statutory requirements for the approval
    of all adoptions set forth in D.C. Code § 16-309 (b) (2012 Repl.). Post at 155-57.
    On that premise, our two dissenting colleagues would reverse the trial court
    because, “[i]n the absence of any concerns about [the aunt]’s competence as a
    129
    caregiver, [the parents’] choice should have been honored” despite the trial court’s
    finding of its injuriousness to the children. Post at 157. We disagree with that
    conclusion on both statutory and constitutional grounds.
    First, as a statutory matter, D.C. Code § 16-309 (b) requires a court to be
    “satisfied” not only that the petitioner is competent to be the prospective adoptee’s
    caregiver, but also that “the prospective adoptee is physically, mentally, and
    otherwise suitable for adoption by the petitioner,” and that “the adoption will be
    for the best interests of the prospective adoptee.”133 These requirements focus on
    whether the adoption would be good for the child. They are not satisfied where, as
    here, the trial court finds, by clear and convincing evidence, the very opposite –
    i.e., that the adoption would be harmful to the mental health of the prospective
    adoptees and therefore contrary to their best interests. The law of the District of
    Columbia does not permit a court to approve an adoption that it finds would be
    injurious to the child’s welfare.
    ____________________
    133
    D.C. Code § 16-309 (b)(1), (3).
    130
    Second, for many of the same reasons we have already discussed in Part III
    of this opinion, we are confident that nothing in the Constitution requires the court
    to order an adoption that it finds would be clearly harmful to a child merely
    because the parents who support the adoption have not been found unfit. A valid
    finding of injuriousness rebuts the presumption that ostensibly fit parents act in
    their children’s best interests; and the parens patriae powers of the state to limit
    and override “parental decisions [that] will jeopardize the health or safety of the
    child” are beyond dispute.134
    On a separate point, however, we do agree with Judges Beckwith and
    Easterly (though our reasons are not the same as theirs). We, too, think that our
    judge-made “weighty consideration” doctrine is problematic, at least as it is
    currently articulated and applied in contested adoption proceedings.          In an
    appropriate case – one in which “weighty consideration” leads the trial court to
    defer to the parent’s choice when, in the child’s best interest, it otherwise would
    not do so – we would favor re-examination of the doctrine.135
    ____________________
    134
    Wisconsin v. Yoder, 
    406 U.S. 205
    , 234 (1972).
    135
    The separate opinion of Judges Beckwith and Easterly refers to “this
    (. . . continued)
    131
    Our “weighty consideration” rule requires that when there are competing
    adoption petitions, the one favored by the child’s biological parent must prevail
    unless the court finds by clear and convincing evidence (rather than the usual
    preponderance-of-the-evidence standard) that the parent’s choice is “clearly
    contrary to the child’s best interest.”136 The parent is entitled to this heavy thumb
    on the scales as long as her parental rights are still intact when the adoption
    proceeding commences, unless the court finds that the parent is not “competent” to
    make a decision about the child’s caregiver.137 This remains so even though the
    court finds the parent in that proceeding to be unfit and enters an order terminating
    her parental rights in conjunction with the order granting an adoption.           This
    “weighty consideration” requirement seems to be unique to the District of
    (….continued)
    court’s implicit decision to retain (at least for now) the weighty consideration test.”
    Post at 141. To be clear, we think no decision has been made to retain the weighty
    consideration doctrine; rather, the concurring and dissenting opinions show that a
    majority of the court is skeptical of the doctrine.
    136
    In re K.D., 
    26 A.3d 772
    , 778 (D.C. 2011) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). This is a deviation from the usual rule that “[i]n the case of a contested
    adoption between two non-parents, the ultimate decision on whether granting a
    petition serves the adoptee’s best interests is made by the preponderance of the
    evidence.” In re T.J.L., 
    998 A.2d 853
    , 860 (D.C. 2010) (quoting In re J.D.W., 
    711 A.2d 826
    , 830 (D.C. 1998)).
    137
    In re T.J., 
    666 A.2d 1
    , 11 (D.C. 1995).
    132
    Columbia; no Supreme Court precedent requires it, and other jurisdictions do not
    appear to accord any special weight to the biological parent’s preference in
    determining which adoption petition is in the child’s best interest.138
    The “weighty consideration” rule requiring a court to approve an adoption
    petition unless clear and convincing evidence shows it to be clearly contrary to the
    child’s best interest, and regardless of better alternatives, is problematic in a
    number of respects. It conflicts not only with D.C. Code § 16-309, but also with
    the principle that the child’s best interest is the paramount consideration in
    adoption decisions, and it ignores the vital interests of the child. The rule is
    “premised on the notions that natural parents have a ‘fundamental liberty
    interest . . . in the care, custody, and management of their child[ren]’ and they do
    not lose their constitutionally protected interest in influencing their child’s future
    ‘simply because they have not been model parents or have lost temporary custody
    ____________________
    138
    See Adoption of Hugo, 
    700 N.E.2d 516
    , 521 & n.9 (Mass. 1998) (“[An
    adoption] plan proposed by a parent is not entitled to any artificial weight in
    determining the best interests of the child. . . . Presented with more than one
    potential adoption placement, the judge’s task is to determine which plan will serve
    the best interests of the child, not to afford any particular weight to either plan.”)
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see also In re David H., 
    39 Cal. Rptr. 2d 313
    ,
    323 (Ct. App. 1995) (“[W]e are aware of no authority which allows parents who
    face a probable termination of their rights to condition acquiescence in the
    termination upon a right to designate or influence the adoptive placement.”).
    133
    of their children.’”139 But biological parents do lose all these interests when their
    rights are formally terminated; the termination decree divests them of all legal
    rights, powers and privileges with respect to their child, including any right to
    object to the child’s adoption or participate in any way in the adoption
    proceedings.140 That being so, it is difficult to see why the court must give special
    weight to the preference of a parent whose rights are about to be terminated once
    and for all during the contested adoption proceeding (especially, one would think,
    when the termination is based on a finding of unfitness). It similarly is difficult to
    see why the parent’s preference regarding this most critical decision as to the
    child’s future should be entitled to special weight no matter how ill-informed,
    unconcerned, or prejudiced the parent is about the child’s needs and the adoption
    petitioners’ capabilities.
    A parental preference for adoption by a family member may raise particular
    concerns, especially when (as in the present case) there are indications that the
    ____________________
    139
    In re T.W.M., 
    964 A.2d 595
    , 602 (D.C. 2009) (quoting 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 753
    ).
    140
    D.C. Code § 16-2361 (2012 Repl.).
    134
    family member will be unable to protect the child from the parents.141 The law of
    the District of Columbia does not incorporate a kinship preference in contested
    adoption proceedings.142    Hence, the “weighty consideration” doctrine is not
    supported by any legal preference for relatives over non-relatives in those
    proceedings. Rather, in the absence of such a thumb on the scales, what governs in
    any choice between adoption by a relative or by a non-relative is simply the child’s
    best interest.
    ____________________
    141
    See Bartholet, Nobody’s Children 89-93 (discussing the risks and
    benefits of kinship care).
    142
    Maintaining a child in his or her home or that of a relative is a “first
    priority” when making decisions about foster care, see 29 DCMR § 1642.1
    (“Placement Considerations for Foster Care”), but there is no comparable
    prioritization favoring relatives in the counterpart regulation listing “Placement
    Consideration[s] for Adoption,” see 
    id. § 1633.
    As the majority notes, see ante at
    35 n.26, the CFSA’s Permanency Planning Policy prioritizes adoption by kin as a
    permanency goal over adoption by non-kin, but this is merely internal agency
    policy that does not have the force of law and, though it may be entitled to some
    deference and respect, is not entitled to the same sort of deference from the courts
    as formal agency adjudications and rule-making. See, e.g., Christensen v. Harris
    County, 
    529 U.S. 576
    , 587 (2000); Nunnally v. District of Columbia Metro. Police
    Dep’t, 
    80 A.3d 1004
    , 1012 & n.17 (D.C. 2013). Indeed, the Permanency Planning
    Policy explicitly recognizes that “[a]doption by kin may be established as the
    primary goal by the Court if it is determined to be in the child’s best interests.”
    CFSA, Permanency Planning Policy (May 25, 2011), Part VII, Procedure G:
    Adoption by Kin, ¶ 2 (emphasis added).
    135
    These and similar considerations, on which this court has not focused, are
    what lead us to think that the full court should re-examine our “weighty
    consideration” doctrine.     Doing so can and should await a case in which
    application of the doctrine makes a difference to the outcome and in which we
    have the benefit of full briefing by the litigants. For now, it suffices to say that the
    trial court in the present case certainly gave the parents’ preference the deference
    required by our current law, and that any error in so doing did not affect the
    outcome.
    V. Conclusion
    Together with other judges making up a majority, we hold that the trial court
    properly relied on the attachment study and the expert testimony regarding the
    harmfulness of severing the children’s attachments to their foster parents. We are
    satisfied that clear and convincing evidence supported the trial court’s findings that
    the foster parents’ adoption petition was in the children’s best interests and that
    their aunt’s petition, though preferred by the children’s biological parents, was
    clearly contrary to their best interests. The en banc court therefore affirms the trial
    court’s decision to grant the foster parents’ petition.
    136
    We would stop there.        Unfortunately, our colleagues do not.       Let us
    inventory their principal missteps, to all of which we object. First, in spite of the
    collateral order doctrine and on dubious factual premises unsupported by the
    record, they overrule In re K.M.T. to permit interlocutory appeals of permanency
    goal changes.    We fear that these appeals will prove to be disruptive, time-
    consuming, of scant legitimate benefit to the biological parents, and detrimental to
    the best interests of the children involved in them. Second, misreading Supreme
    Court precedent, disregarding decades of settled case law, and minimizing what is
    at stake for the abused and neglected children who will be affected, the majority
    declares that parental rights may not be terminated without a predicate finding of
    parental unfitness. Although our colleagues acknowledge that even a fit parent’s
    rights may be terminated in order to protect the child’s welfare in exceptional
    circumstances, they dismiss this possibility as hypothetical despite abundant
    evidence to the contrary. Third, and most ironically given our colleagues’ concern
    with procedural fairness, they raise and decide constitutional questions without
    giving notice to the litigants or affording them the opportunity for briefing. This is
    contrary to settled norms of appellate adjudication – norms that we follow, of
    course, for the express purpose of ensuring procedural fairness.         Fourth, our
    colleagues’ most basic error is in undertaking to decide the foregoing issues at all,
    137
    for they all have been waived or forfeited, they are not properly before us in this
    case, and they make no difference to its outcome. Regrettably, our colleagues
    disregard well-established limits on judicial authority.
    The full ramifications of our colleagues’ actions remain to be seen, and
    certainly many questions have been left unanswered. We fear, however, that the
    majority’s unnecessary, legally flawed holdings will prove detrimental to the
    welfare of abused and neglected children in the District of Columbia.
    We respectfully dissent.
    BECKWITH and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, with whom WASHINGTON,
    Chief Judge, joins in Parts I and II, concurring in part and dissenting in part: We
    join the court’s holding that permanency goal changes (1) must be supported by a
    sufficient record developed at an evidentiary hearing and (2) are immediately
    appealable. As a majority of this court explains, permanency goal changes from
    reunification to adoption must be adequately litigated and immediately appealable
    because the courts have a critical role to play to ensure that the District—having
    138
    been authorized to remove a child from her parents based on a determination of
    past neglect and with the presumptive understanding that removal is temporary and
    that the child should be returned—does not give up on parents too soon. Parents
    have a constitutionally protected right to have a relationship with their children,
    and before a court issues a final order authorizing the District to redirect its efforts
    to dissolve the parent-child relationship and cultivate a new, government-
    sanctioned parental substitute, the court must ensure that the District has met its
    statutory obligations to expend reasonable efforts under the circumstances to
    reunify a child in the neglect system with his or her family. 1
    We also join the court’s related holding that the District must show by clear
    and convincing evidence that a parent is unfit before her relationship with her child
    may be involuntarily terminated absent as-yet-undefined “truly exceptional
    ____________________
    1
    We express concern, however, about delay in the judicial review of
    permanency goal changes. The majority offers summary review procedures as a
    means of minimizing the delay in this court. Certainly we need to do what we can
    to accelerate review and resolution of these cases. Streamlining review procedures
    in this court will not, however, minimize the time it takes to litigate these matters
    in Superior Court. Currently, magistrate judges conduct evidentiary hearings
    pursuant to Family Court Rule D (c) and issue final orders of the court. These
    orders and judgments must then be reviewed by an associate judge of the Superior
    Court before they can be appealed to this court. D.C. Code § 11-1732 (k) (2012
    Repl.); see, e.g., In re S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    , 1285 (D.C. 2015) (noting the path to
    appellate review in that case). As a result, it may take years before a notice of
    appeal is filed transferring jurisdiction to this court.
    139
    circumstances,” ante, at 54, and that, as a constitutional matter, it is not enough to
    assess only the best interests of the child as our termination of parental rights
    (TPR)2 and adoption3 statutes (as the latter provision has been interpreted by this
    court) direct.4
    ____________________
    2
    D.C. Code § 16-2353 (2012 Repl.).
    3
    D.C. Code § 16-304 (e) (2012 Repl.).
    4
    In this regard, even our colleagues who dissent as to the need for a
    predicate unfitness determination concede that an assessment of parental fitness is
    critical and that a trial court “must make a ‘threshold determination’ as to whether
    the strong presumption in favor of the natural parent is rebutted by a showing of
    either unfitness or exceptional circumstances.” Ante, at 117 n.111 (emphasis
    added) (quoting In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    , 1288); see also ante, at 102
    (indicating that it is “ordinarily true” that “the substantive due process right of an
    individual” to parent her child “may not be terminated without a predicate finding
    by clear and convincing evidence that the individual is unfit to parent”). Given
    that the District’s termination and adoption-without-consent statutes are silent on
    the subject of fitness, the partial dissent appears to recognize that courts must
    evaluate parental fitness in order to protect the “fundamental liberty interest” that
    parents have “‘in the care, custody, and management’ of their children”—a liberty
    interest the partial dissent expressly does “not [] deny or minimize.” Ante, at 122
    (quoting Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753 (1982)).
    Still our colleagues in partial dissent assert that the judicially determined
    best interests of the child are “paramount.” See, e.g., ante, at 108, 132. Apart from
    relying on this court’s case law and the District’s termination of parental rights
    statutes, neither of which can trump the constitutionally compelled fitness inquiry,
    they defend terminating parental rights solely on a consideration of the best
    interests of the child by stating in a footnote that “parental ‘fitness’ should be
    defined as coextensive with the child’s best interests.” Ante, at 105 n.84 (emphasis
    added). They do not explain how they reconcile this definition with Supreme
    Court case law, see infra, which clearly distinguishes between the threshold
    (. . . continued)
    140
    We write separately to emphasize that these procedural protections are
    compelled by Supreme Court precedent recognizing the substantive due process
    right of parents to maintain their relationships with their children and keep their
    families intact.   We also write separately to highlight the inadequacy of the
    District’s TPR and adoption statutes. Passed in 1977 and 1963 respectively, these
    statutes do not reflect modern Supreme Court precedent recognizing that the
    Constitution requires a showing of unfitness by clear and convincing evidence as a
    prerequisite to legal dissolution of the parent-child relationship. Not only do the
    statutes fail to require a determination of parental unfitness at some point in
    termination or adoption-without-consent proceedings, they fail to mention fitness
    altogether. Thus they do not define what constitutes parental unfitness. They say
    nothing about who must prove unfitness and by what measure. And they do not
    specify when such fitness determinations should be made. In these and other
    respects, the District’s statutes stand in poor contrast to other states’ statutes
    establishing procedures for termination of the parental-child relationship and for
    (….continued)
    parental fitness inquiry—i.e., whether the parent is able to provide adequate care
    for the child—and the question of what is “best” for the child.
    Our colleagues in partial dissent also argue that the “right to parent one’s
    child is not a right to harm one’s child.” Ante, at 106. But the harm they posit is
    the harm of returning a child to her fit parents. This is not a constitutionally
    cognizable harm, and there is no authority for the radical expansion of government
    intervention in the lives of families that these colleagues favor.
    141
    adoption without consent. The result is that our statutes do not with sufficient
    clarity protect the constitutional rights of parents to maintain their relationships
    with their children without government interference. Nor do they address critical
    policy issues, such as the preference, if any, to be given to kinship adoptions.
    These are matters for the legislature, not the judiciary, to address. We urge the
    Council of the District of Columbia to reassess and revise the District’s TPR and
    adoption statutes.
    As to this court’s implicit decision to retain (at least for now) the weighty
    consideration test, we dissent. Not only does this test lack clarity and force, it
    cannot be reconciled with this court’s clear holding that a parent’s rights may not
    be terminated absent a determination of unfitness and, correspondingly, with the
    presumption that a parent who has not been deemed unfit makes decisions in the
    best interests of the child. Thus, if a parent has not been determined to be unfit,
    her choice of adoptive placement should not merely be given “weighty
    consideration.” It should presumptively control.
    142
    I.   A Showing of Unfitness by Clear and Convincing Evidence as a
    Constitutional Prerequisite to Termination of a Parent’s Rights
    With this opinion, a majority of the en banc court definitively holds that
    before the rights of a parent who has grasped her opportunity interest may be
    involuntarily terminated either directly or indirectly via adoption without consent,
    the District must prove the parent’s unfitness by clear and convincing evidence. In
    so holding we build on recent acknowledgments by this court that a showing of
    unfitness is an essential part of the termination inquiry,5 and we overrule prior
    pronouncements that proof of unfitness is not constitutionally required to
    permanently sever an existing parent-child relationship—that all that is needed is a
    showing that termination is in the best interests of the child. 6 Supreme Court
    precedent compels this change in our law.7
    ____________________
    5
    See ante, at 41 (discussing In re S.L.G., 
    110 A.3d 1275
    (D.C. 2015), and
    In re G.A.P., 
    133 A.3d 994
    (D.C. 2016)); see also In re J.J., 
    111 A.3d 1038
    , 1044-
    45 (D.C. 2015) (acknowledging the parental presumption and the centrality of a
    fitness determination); In re D.S., 
    88 A.3d 678
    , 681 (D.C. 2014) (same).
    6
    We acknowledge that there might be “truly ‘exceptional circumstances’”
    where termination is permissible notwithstanding a parent's fitness. Ante, at 54
    (brackets omitted). The “exceptional circumstances” language that this court
    endorsed in In re S.L.G. appears to come from a Maryland statute that incorporates
    a Maryland common law rule predating the Supreme Court decisions discussing
    the relationship between fitness and termination of parental rights. See In re
    (. . . continued)
    143
    As the Supreme Court explained in Troxel v. Granville, the government
    presumptively has no authority to intervene in parent-child relationships:
    “[O]ur constitutional system long ago rejected any
    notion that a child is the mere creature of the State and,
    on the contrary, asserted that parents generally have the
    right, coupled with the high duty, to recognize and
    prepare [their children] for additional obligations. . . .
    Accordingly, so long as a parent adequately cares for
    his or her children (i.e., is fit), there will normally be no
    reason for the State to inject itself into the private realm
    of the family to further question the ability of that parent
    to make the best decisions concerning the rearing of that
    parent’s children.
    (….continued)
    
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    (quoting In re Rashawn H., 
    937 A.2d 177
    , 189-90 (Md.
    2007) (citing Md. Code, Fam. Law § 5-323 (2007), which specifically provides
    that a court can grant guardianship without parental consent if it finds that the
    parent is unfit or “exceptional circumstances” exist)); see also Ross v. Pick, 
    86 A.2d 463
    , 468 (Md. 1952) (noting that parents “are ordinarily entitled to []
    custody” unless they are unfit or “some exceptional circumstances render such
    custody detrimental to the best interests of the child”). There is no express support
    for this safety valve in the Supreme Court case law, but as that precedent does not
    plainly foreclose this safety valve, it is theoretically possible that it exists.
    7
    Our colleagues in partial dissent rely on this court’s earlier decisions
    pronouncing that the best-interests-of-the-child inquiry is controlling. As we are
    sitting en banc, however, we are not bound by this precedent. M.A.P. v. Ryan, 
    285 A.2d 310
    , 312 (D.C. 1971). And given that these decisions fail to adequately
    protect the constitutional rights of a parent who has not been found unfit, as
    recognized by the Supreme Court, see infra at 141-49, we must disavow them.
    144
    
    530 U.S. 57
    , 68-69 (2000) (quoting Parham v. J.R., 
    442 U.S. 584
    , 602 (1979))
    (brackets in original). In this same body of precedent to which the Court in Troxel
    alluded, the Court has made clear that a parent’s relationship with her child enjoys
    intertwined substantive and procedural due process protection, and thus that this
    relationship may not be involuntarily, permanently terminated absent a showing by
    clear and convincing evidence of parental unfitness.8
    In Meyer v. Nebraska, 
    262 U.S. 390
    (1923), the Court acknowledged that the
    substantive due process guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment include the right
    to “establish a home and bring up children.”            
    Id. at 399.
      And Prince v.
    Massachusetts, 
    321 U.S. 158
    (1944), stated that “[i]t is cardinal with us that the
    custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents, whose primary
    function and freedom include preparation for obligations the state can neither
    supply nor hinder.” 
    Id. at 166.
    Accordingly, in Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    (1972), the Court held that as “a matter of due process of law,” a parent is “entitled
    ____________________
    8
    Our colleagues in partial dissent seek to distinguish between discussions
    of procedural due process rights and substantive due process rights, ante, at 113-
    16, but as the former flow from the latter in this context, both are implicated, Smith
    v. Org. of Foster Families for Equal. & Reform, 
    431 U.S. 816
    , 842 (1977)
    (acknowledging that parental rights are “afforded both substantive and procedural
    protection”). And the fact remains that the Supreme Court has identified a
    showing of unfitness as the constitutional prerequisite to the termination of an
    existing parent-child relationship.
    145
    to a hearing on his fitness . . . before his children [are] taken from him.” 
    Id. at 649.
    The Court noted that a parent’s right to raise his own children is “essential” and
    “substantial” and deserving of deference “absent a powerful countervailing
    interest.” 
    Id. at 651-52.
    Although the Court acknowledged the state’s interest in
    protecting the wellbeing of children, it pronounced that “the State registers no gain
    towards its declared goals when it separates children from the custody of fit
    parents.” 
    Id. at 652.
    The Court thus held that “the Due Process Clause mandates”
    an individualized hearing to assess a parent’s fitness “when the issue at stake is the
    dismemberment of his family.”9 
    Id. at 658.
    Five years after Stanley, the Court shed more light on the constitutional
    nature and bounds of the familial liberty interest in Smith v. Org. of Foster
    Families for Equal & Reform, 
    431 U.S. 816
    (1977). The Court distinguished
    ____________________
    9
    Our colleagues in partial dissent highlight this court’s examination of
    Stanley in In re P.G., 
    452 A.2d 1183
    , 1184 (D.C. 1982), and quote its
    pronouncement that “[l]ack of fitness was an essential finding in [Stanley] only
    because under state law, that was the only basis for granting an adoption without
    parental consent.” Ante, at 114. But this is not what Stanley said, as other courts
    have recognized. See, e.g., In re Sanders, 
    852 N.W.2d 524
    , 533 (Mich. 2014)
    (explaining that “[t]he rule from Stanley is plain: all parents ‘are constitutionally
    entitled to a hearing on their fitness before their children are removed from their
    custody’” (quoting 
    Stanley, 405 U.S. at 658
    )).
    146
    between the substantive rights of “natural” families10 not to be dismantled and the
    rights of individuals serving as foster parents to keep in their care children with
    whom they may have formed strong emotional bonds.11 The Court determined that
    the same substantive and procedural protections owed to the former were not owed
    to the latter. 
    Id. at 842-51.
    The next year, in Quilloin v. Walcott, 
    434 U.S. 246
    (1978), the Court rejected the due process claim of a non-custodial father who
    objected to the adoption of his child by the child’s mother’s partner. On the one
    hand, the Court observed that a non-custodial parent who has not taken affirmative
    steps to claim parentage of the child and raise him or her will not be granted the
    substantive due process protections that a “family unit already in existence” will
    enjoy.        
    Id. at 255.
      On the other hand, the Court, quoting Justice Stewart’s
    ____________________
    10
    Although families with same-sex partners had yet to be validated as such,
    the Court explained that its concept of a “natural” family was not limited to
    biological ties, but rested also on “intrinsic human rights,” such as the right to
    marry and have children. 
    Smith, 431 U.S. at 845
    ; see also Obergefell v. Hodges,
    
    135 S. Ct. 2584
    (2015). In addition, the Court contrasted the natural family with
    the relationship between a foster parent and a child in her care, which “derives
    from a knowingly assumed contractual relation with the State.” 
    Smith, 431 U.S. at 845
    ; see also 
    id. at 844
    n.51 (acknowledging adoption “as the legal equivalent of
    biological parenthood”). When we use the term “natural family,” we understand it
    to have this broader meaning.
    11
    The development of strong emotional bonds between foster parents and
    the children in their care is unquestionably a good thing. But these bonds cannot,
    as our colleagues in partial dissent argue, be elevated over natural familial
    relationships such that their preservation justifies terminating a fit parent’s
    constitutional rights. See ante, at 116-28.
    147
    concurrence in Smith, stated that it had “little doubt that the Due Process Clause
    would be offended ‘if a State were to attempt to force the breakup of a natural
    family, over the objections of the parents and their children, without some showing
    of unfitness and for the sole reason that to do so was thought to be in the children’s
    best interest.’”12 
    Id. (quoting Smith,
    431 U.S. at 862-63 (Stewart, J., concurring in
    judgment)).
    Then, in 1982, the Supreme Court decided Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    (1982), holding unconstitutional a New York statute permitting termination of
    ____________________
    12
    Our colleagues in partial dissent assert that this proposition—that a best-
    interests-of-the-child test cannot be employed to break existing parental bonds—
    has no application to this case or in any case where there has been a determination
    of neglect and the child has been temporarily removed from the parent’s care,
    because in such cases the parents “do not have an unbroken custodial relationship
    with the child.” Ante, at 112 (emphasis omitted). There is no support in the
    Supreme Court’s case law for the proposition that a single determination of
    neglect, made only by a preponderance of evidence, suffices to change the
    constitutional calculus for termination of parental rights. Indeed, the Supreme
    Court rejected this proposition in Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U.S. 745
    , 753 (1982);
    see also supra at 146-47. The only circumstance in which the Court has indicated
    that parental rights are diminished is in cases where, as in Quilloin, the parent has
    been absent from the child’s life and failed to grasp the opportunity to form a
    familial bond with the child. See Lehr v. Robertson, 
    463 U.S. 248
    , 261 (1983)
    (explaining that the “difference between the developed parent-child relationship
    that was implicated in Stanley and Caban and the potential relationship involved in
    Quilloin and this case, is both clear and significant”). Moreover, while there may
    be “truly exceptional circumstances” under which a fitness inquiry can be
    circumvented, we are confident that a determination of past, temporary neglect is
    not one of them.
    148
    the parental rights of a father who had been found to have “permanently neglected”
    his child by only a preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id. at 768.
    The Court held that
    permanent neglect had to be proven by clear and convincing evidence before a
    parent’s rights could be terminated. 
    Id. at 769.
    The Court explained that “[t]he
    fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in the care, custody, and
    management of their child does not evaporate simply because they have not been
    model parents or have lost temporary custody of their child to the State.” 
    Id. at 753.
    To the contrary, because the right to parent one’s children is “an interest far
    more precious than any property right” and because the termination of that right
    “work[s] a unique kind of deprivation,” protection of that right by a high
    evidentiary standard was necessary. 
    Id. at 758-59.
    Santosky was centrally focused on the state’s burden of proof, but there was
    never any serious question that what had to be proved by clear and convincing
    evidence was some type of unfitness, in that case “permanent neglect.”13 The
    Court observed that, although the precise issue of fitness was not presented by that
    case, it was not at all “clear that the State constitutionally could terminate a
    ____________________
    13
    Permanent neglect was statutorily defined as more than a year-long period
    during which “the child’s natural parents failed substantially and continuously or
    repeatedly to maintain contact with or plan for the future of the child although
    physically and financially able to do so.” 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 748
    .
    149
    parent’s rights without showing parental unfitness.”        
    Id. at 760
    n.10 (citing
    
    Quilloin, 434 U.S. at 255
    ). But Stanley had already established that the essential
    predicate to a person’s parental rights is his or her fitness to parent. 
    See 405 U.S. at 651-52
    ; see also 
    id. at 657-58.
    Moreover, elsewhere in Santosky the centrality
    of fitness was accepted as a given:       the Court noted, for example, that the
    termination of parental rights “entails a judicial determination that the parents are
    unfit to raise their own 
    children.” 455 U.S. at 760
    . It also observed that, “until the
    State proves parental unfitness, the child and his parents share a vital interest in
    preventing erroneous termination of their natural relationship.” 
    Id. Santosky, in
    conjunction with Stanley, makes clear that for the state to terminate parental rights
    consistent with the Constitution, a determination of unfitness by clear and
    convincing evidence must be made.
    In short, in every case of the last fifty years addressing the termination of
    parents’ substantive due process rights, the Supreme Court’s “threshold focus”14
    has been parental fitness.15 With our decision in this case, this court aligns our law
    ____________________
    14
    Annette R. Appell & Bruce A. Boyer, Parental Rights vs. Best Interests
    of the Child: A False Dichotomy in the Context of Adoption, 2 DUKE J. GENDER L.
    & POL’Y 63, 68 (1995).
    15
    Our colleagues in partial dissent cite Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl, 
    133 S. Ct. 2552
    , 2579 (2013), for the proposition that the Court endorsed the
    (. . . continued)
    150
    with Supreme Court precedent (and with the laws of other states16) and
    acknowledges fitness as the constitutional dividing line: parents who have not
    been deemed unfit have a substantive due process right to parent their children;
    they are accorded broad authority over their children and are presumed to act in
    their children’s best interests.    
    Troxel, 530 U.S. at 68
    .       This right may be
    temporarily restricted if it is determined by a preponderance of the evidence that a
    (….continued)
    constitutionality of a best-interests-of-the-child test for the termination of parental
    rights under the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978. Ante, at 109-11. But not only
    was no constitutional challenge raised in that case, that statute does not employ a
    best-interests-of-the-child test. Rather, to advance its goal of reducing “abusive
    child welfare practices that resulted in the separation of large numbers of Indian
    children from their families and tribes through adoption . . . usually in non-Indian
    homes,” Congress mandated that parental rights of Native Americans could not be
    terminated absent a “heightened showing,” above and beyond that of unfitness
    proved by clear and convincing evidence, that the parent’s continued custody of
    the child would, beyond a reasonable doubt, result in “serious emotional or
    physical damage.” Adoptive 
    Couple, 133 S. Ct. at 2557-58
    ; see also 
    id. at 2579
    (Sotomayor, J., dissenting) (explaining that the ICWA imposes a “more demanding
    [standard] than the showing of unfitness under a high ‘clear and convincing
    evidence’ standard, [which] is the norm in the states” for termination decisions);
    
    id. at 2583
    n.14 (emphasizing that the ICWA “is more protective” of parent’s
    rights).
    16
    See ante, at 39-40 n.33. Indeed, we were able to find only one other
    state—New Jersey—that appears to allow termination of parental rights based only
    on the best interests of the child. See N.J. Stat. Ann. 30:4C-15.1. Further research
    reveals, however, that (1) New Jersey’s “best interests” inquiry focuses solely on
    the abilities of the parent, and thus is effectively a fitness inquiry, and (2) the New
    Jersey Supreme Court has held that consideration of a TPR petition must include
    “an evaluation of parental unfitness.” N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. G.L.,
    
    926 A.2d 320
    , 325 (N.J. 2007).
    151
    child was abused or neglected while in the parent’s care. See 
    Stanley, 405 U.S. at 658
    . In that scenario, the child may be removed from the parent’s home for a
    limited time. But consistent with the Constitution, a parent’s relationship with her
    child may not be permanently severed unless and until the District has proved
    unfitness by clear and convincing evidence. 
    Santosky, 455 U.S. at 769
    .
    II.    The Inadequacy of the District’s Statutes and the Need for
    Legislative Action
    Although this court has now recognized that parental rights may not be
    terminated without a determination of parental unfitness, the fact remains that our
    TPR and adoption statutes make no mention of this constitutional marker. It is an
    omission that only lends itself to confusion—confusion that should not be tolerated
    given the magnitude of the issues at stake. Moreover, this statutory silence leaves
    unanswered a number of related policy questions that are for the Council, not this
    court, to address.17
    ____________________
    17
    The termination procedures of other states may be a helpful reference
    point for the Council. See ante, at 39-40 n.33.
    152
    Preliminarily, there is the question of how to define unfitness. As this court
    acknowledged in In re 
    S.L.G., 110 A.3d at 1286
    , and in contrast to other states,18
    the D.C. Code currently contains no reference to unfitness. We tried to fill this
    statutory gap in In re S.L.G. by noting that “[b]roadly speaking . . . fitness refers to
    the parent’s intention and ability over time to provide for a child’s wellbeing and
    meet the child’s needs. . . . [It] turns, in other words, on whether the parent is, or
    within a reasonable time will be, able to care for the child in a way that does not
    endanger the child’s welfare.” 
    Id. at 1286
    -87. We thus indicated that a trial court
    must assess, as a threshold matter, the parent’s ability to function as such. It
    should not consider whether removing the child from the foster parents who now
    seek to adopt would disrupt the child’s continuity of care,19 or whether the adoptive
    parents are comparatively more healthy (physically, mentally or emotionally) than
    ____________________
    18
    Other jurisdictions have legislatively defined parental unfitness.
    Common statutory grounds include a failure to rectify the conditions that caused
    the child to be adjudicated neglected (“permanent neglect”) despite the state’s
    reasonable efforts toward reunification, sexual abuse, abandonment of the child,
    long-term mental illness or deficiency of the parent, long-term alcohol- or drug-
    induced incapacity of the parent, failure to support or maintain contact with the
    child, conviction for qualifying serious crimes, such as rape or murder, or
    involuntary termination of the rights of the parent to another child. See Child
    Welfare Information Gateway, Grounds for Involuntary Termination of Parental
    Rights (2013), https://www.childwelfare.gov/systemwide/laws_policies/statutes/
    groundtermin.pdf.
    19
    A consideration under D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b)(1).
    153
    the birth parents.20 The District’s statutory scheme should make that clear. It
    should also concretely define what constitutes unfitness.
    Furthermore, there is the question of precisely when an express fitness
    assessment must be made; in particular, whether such an assessment should be
    made in a separate proceeding that precedes consideration of any adoption petition.
    Relatedly, the Council should clarify that the District bears the burden of
    establishing unfitness by clear and convincing evidence. Currently, it appears to
    be common practice for the District to move to terminate parental rights in
    compliance with the timetable set by ASFA and incorporated by the D.C. Code;21
    but if CFSA succeeds in recruiting an adoptive parent, the District’s practice is to
    move to hold the termination petition in abeyance pending the litigation of the
    adoption-without-consent petition. In so doing the District offloads the burden of
    terminating parental rights to the adoptive parents. This creates an unseemly
    situation where a private third party is petitioning the courts both to destroy the
    parent’s rights and to present herself as a viable parental alternative. The District
    should not be permitted to enlist private proxies to do the parens patriae work of
    the government. Rather, if the District wants a child to be eligible for adoption, it
    ____________________
    20
    A consideration under D.C. Code § 16-2353 (b)(2).
    21
    See ante, at 27-30.
    154
    must bear the full burden of demonstrating that a parent’s relationship with her
    child should be severed.
    Lastly, now that this court has recognized that a showing of unfitness is
    required to terminate directly or indirectly a parent’s relationship with her child,
    the Council should clarify how a best-interests-of-the-child analysis interacts with
    a fitness determination.    For example, some states base termination decisions
    solely on a determination that a statutory ground of unfitness has been proved,
    without additional regard for the best interests of the child.22 Other states require
    proof of unfitness as a threshold matter and treat the best interests of the child as an
    additional inquiry—thus allowing a court to preserve an unfit parent’s rights if it
    believes that termination would not be in the child’s best interests.23
    ____________________
    22
    See, e.g., Fla. Stat. § 39.806; La. Child. Code Ann. art. 1015; N.H. Rev.
    Stat. Ann. 170-C:5.
    23
    Some states simply permit courts to consider the best interests of the child
    as an additional factor. See, e.g., Alaska Stat. § 47.10.088, -.011; Ariz. Rev. Stat.
    § 8-533; Colo. Rev. Stat. § 19-3-604; 705 Ill. Comp. Stat. 405/1-2; Iowa Code
    § 232.116; Minn. Stat. 260C.301; Mont. Code Ann. § 41-3-609; N.M. Stat. Ann.
    32A-4-28; N.Y. Soc. Servs. Law § 384-b; 23 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 2511. Other states
    require an explicit determination that termination is in the child’s best interests.
    See, e.g., Conn. Gen. Stat. § 17a-112; Ga. Code Ann. § 15-11-310; Haw. Rev. Stat.
    § 571-61 to -63; Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 22, § 4055; Mich. Comp. Laws § 712A.19b;
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 211.447; N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-1110, -1111; Ohio Rev. Code Ann.
    § 2151.414.
    155
    It is this court’s role to ensure that our statutory scheme for terminating the
    relationship between a parent and her child passes constitutional muster.           By
    recognizing that unfitness is a prerequisite for such a termination decision, this
    court has fulfilled its role. But we acknowledge that we leave behind a statute that
    does not clearly align with the holdings of this case, and that leaves unanswered a
    number of questions regarding how and when unfitness should be assessed. These
    are questions for the Council to address in the course of reevaluating the District’s
    statutory scheme.
    III.   Weighty Consideration
    We dissent from this court’s implicit retention of the weighty consideration
    test from In re T.J., 
    666 A.2d 1
    , 12 (D.C. 1995). Four judges of this court state
    that this test equates to a procedural requirement that there be “‘clear and
    convincing’ evidence that the custody arrangement preferred by the parents would
    clearly be contrary to the best interests of the child.” Ante, at 45. Clear and
    convincing evidence of the relative measure of the “best” interests of a child is a
    nebulous standard, and, standing alone, it provides weak protection for parents’
    rights. But it is particularly feeble protection in light of the assertion that evidence
    indicating that “breaking the children’s attachment to [the non-preferred caregiver]
    156
    would significantly harm them” is a “significant consideration in the weighty
    consideration analysis.” Ante, at 51 & n.39. In Superior Court, the conflicts about
    who should adopt a child almost always arise when the choice is between the
    parent’s preferred custodian and the foster parent. Yet it is almost certain that a
    child will have developed emotional ties to the foster parent with whom she has
    been living and who wants to adopt her.        And it is equally certain that the
    “significant consideration” afforded to these emotional ties—particularly when
    such ties are presented in the form of expert “attachment” or “bonding” studies—
    will cancel out the “great weight” of the parental preference, as is true for the
    majority in this case.
    In addition to the inherent weakness of the weighty consideration test, we
    have a more fundamental concern: preservation of this test cannot be reconciled
    with the majority’s holding that determinations of unfitness must precede
    adoption-without-consent decisions. The majority holds that parents who have not
    been deemed unfit cannot have their rights terminated, directly or indirectly
    through adoptions without consent. Ante, at 38-44, 55. But if parents have not
    been deemed unfit, their decisions about the adoptive placement of their child
    157
    should presumptively control.24      See ante, at 38 n.30 (acknowledging the
    presumption that fit parents act in the best interests of their children). In other
    words, the weighty consideration test gives too little protection to parents who
    have not been proven unfit and whose authority to make decisions for their
    children is still constitutionally protected.25 The parents in this case fall in this
    category. They were never determined to be unfit. They chose E.A., a relative
    who was already fostering A.L.’s and Ta.L.’s half-brother, to be the adoptive
    mother of A.L. and Ta.L. In the absence of any concerns about E.A.’s competence
    as a caregiver, that choice should have been honored.
    *            *            *
    ____________________
    24
    Subject to the requirements of D.C. Code § 16-309 (b) (listing criteria for
    court approval of all adoptions).
    25
    Meanwhile, if a parent has been deemed unfit, the parent does not have a
    constitutionally protected right to choose her child’s adoptive parent or to have her
    preference be given any weight. Thus the weighty consideration test gives too
    much, as a constitutional matter, to parents who have properly been found unfit.
    Constitutional rights aside, the Council could decide to give preference to
    the parental choice, even if the parent has been deemed unfit and his constitutional
    rights have been terminated. But that is another policy decision that is beyond the
    authority of this court to make.
    158
    We summarize our points of agreement and disagreement with our
    colleagues. We agree with our colleagues in the majority that permanency goal
    change orders from reunification to adoption are immediately appealable to this
    court, with the focus of the trial court litigation, as well as our appellate review, on
    the District’s efforts to reunify the family. We also agree that a parent’s rights may
    not be terminated directly or indirectly by means of adoption without consent,
    unless and until the District proves that the parent is unfit by clear and convincing
    evidence. We disagree with our colleagues in the majority, however, that this
    court can or should retain our weighty consideration test from In re T.J., and we
    dissent from that portion of the opinion. Consequently, we also dissent from the
    court’s ultimate judgment affirming adoption of the children by R.W. and A.W.
    Finally, we urge the Council to revisit the District’s termination and adoption
    statutes, to align them with the dictates of the Constitution, and to address the
    many policy questions that our concurrence has highlighted.