New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services v. J.S. in the Matter of the Guardianship of A.G., a Minor , 433 N.J. Super. 69 ( 2013 )


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  •                      RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0512-12T1
    NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF YOUTH
    AND FAMILY SERVICES,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    October 17, 2013
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    J.S.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE
    GUARDIANSHIP OF A.G., a minor.
    ________________________________
    Submitted October 1, 2013   -    Decided October 17, 2013
    Before Judges Messano, Sabatino, and Hayden.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
    Passaic County, Docket No. FG-16-08-12.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
    for appellant (Angelo G. Garubo, Designated
    Counsel, on the brief).
    John J. Hoffman, Acting Attorney General,
    attorney    for    respondent   (Lewis    A.
    Scheindlin, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel; Lisa A. Puglisi, Assistant Attorney
    General, on the brief).
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, Law
    Guardian, attorney for minor A.G. (Lisa M.
    Black, Designated Counsel, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    SABATINO, J.A.D.
    Defendant J.S., the biological father of A.G., appeals the
    Family Part's August 31, 2012 order terminating his parental
    rights as to A.G. following a multi-day trial.                             Among other
    things, defendant argues that the trial court erred in upholding
    a decision of the Division of Youth and Family Services1 (the
    "Division")      to     "rule    out"   two   relatives       who      had    expressed
    interest in serving as alternative caregivers for the child.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the final judgment
    terminating          defendant's   parental        rights.        As   part    of    our
    analysis,       we    reject    defendant's    argument       that      the    Division
    lacked the authority to rule out relatives under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1   based     upon     considerations      of    a   child's     best     interests.
    Instead, we hold that the applicable statutory provisions and a
    related regulation, N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1, allow the Division to
    rule out a relative on such "best-interests" grounds, regardless
    of the relative's willingness or ability to care for a child.
    However, the Division's rule-out authority is always subject to
    the    Family    Part's     ultimate    assessment       of   that      child's     best
    1
    A reorganization of the Department of Children and Families
    under L. 2012, c. 16, effective June 29, 2012, changed the name
    of the Division of Youth and Family Services to the Division of
    Child Protection and Permanency.
    2                                    A-0512-12T1
    interests.      There is ample support in the trial record in this
    case to sustain the trial court's conclusion that termination of
    defendant's parental rights and A.G.'s continued placement with
    his foster parents are in A.G.'s best interests.
    I.
    A.G. was born in October 2009.                  About eight months later,
    in June 2010, the Division conducted a Dodd removal2 of him from
    the care of his biological mother, J.G., based upon reports that
    she had carelessly left him with highly intoxicated persons.                           At
    the time of the child's removal, defendant was incarcerated in
    the county jail.       A.G. was immediately placed in a foster home,
    where he has resided ever since.
    In April 2011, J.G., who had a history of substance abuse,
    prostitution, and a lack of stable housing, voluntarily agreed
    to   an   identified       surrender    of     A.G.   to     the   foster     parents.3
    Hence,    the   issues      on   appeal      relate    solely      to   the    child's
    biological father, defendant J.S.
    Defendant      had     been   diagnosed         with    mental    health       and
    substance    abuse     issues.         After    he    was    released    from     jail,
    2
    A "Dodd removal" refers to the emergency removal of a child
    without a court order, pursuant to the Dodd Act, N.J.S.A. 9:6-
    8.21 to -8.82.   N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. P.W.R.,
    
    205 N.J. 17
    , 26 n.11 (2011).
    3
    J.G. did not appear at the guardianship trial and has not
    appealed the termination of her own parental rights.
    3                                    A-0512-12T1
    defendant tested positive for cocaine.                        He was    referred for
    substance    abuse     treatment,       but     had    difficulty      maintaining    a
    drug-free life, as evidenced by the fact that he tested positive
    for cocaine four times between February and April 2012 while on
    probation.
    Defendant initially identified from jail four relatives as
    potential    alternative       caretakers       for     A.G.     After    those    four
    initial candidates were ruled out within a month by the Division
     decisions that defendant does not contest on this appeal 
    two other relatives were suggested as alternative caretakers.
    First, in October 2010, defendant proposed M.R., his second
    cousin, as a potential caretaker.                   Within a month, the Division
    contacted     M.R.,    had     her    complete         necessary      paperwork,    and
    arranged visitations for M.R. with the child from October 2010
    through April 2011.           The Division's investigation of M.R. was
    complicated    by     the    fact    that     she     had   apparent    psychological
    problems and limited space in her home, and also by initial
    difficulties    in     getting       fingerprints       from    another    adult    who
    lived in her home.          Ultimately, the Division ruled out M.R. as a
    caretaker based upon its assessment of A.G.'s best interests.
    In May 2011, seven months after M.R. was identified,                          J.P.,
    a   first    cousin     of    defendant,        contacted       the    Division     and
    expressed interest in caring for A.G.                       By that time, J.P. had
    4                                A-0512-12T1
    already   begun    visiting      A.G.       weekly,   at    defendant's    request,
    starting in April 2011.          The Division investigated her as well,
    but the investigation revealed that J.P. was disabled and had
    four   children       living    in    her    home,    two     of   whom   were   also
    disabled.      Upon considering her circumstances, the Division also
    ruled out J.P., on a best-interests basis.                         In the meantime,
    defendant continued to present an inability to care for his son,
    who was doing well with the foster parents.
    The trial court entered a permanency order on June 2, 2011,
    approving the Division's plan to terminate defendant's rights
    and to proceed with the adoption of A.G. by his foster parents.
    The Division accordingly filed a guardianship complaint against
    defendant seeking the termination of his parental rights.
    Later   that    month,    on    June     22,   2011,    the    Division   sent
    letters separately to M.R. and J.P., advising them that they had
    been ruled out as potential caretakers based, in both instances,
    upon the Division's assessment of the child's best interests.
    J.P. attempted an administrative appeal within the Division of
    the rule-out determination as to her.                      However, the Division
    declined to review her appeal administratively, in accordance
    with N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1, which prescribes that there is no
    right to an administrative appeal of such a "best interest"
    decision.      The trial court denied her request, in anticipation
    5                               A-0512-12T1
    that   the    rule-out    issues     would      be    addressed       as    part     of   the
    Family Part's application of the third prong of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    15.1(a), and also in recognition that defendant and the Law
    Guardian     were    participating      in      the    case    and    would     have      the
    opportunity to advocate for an alternate placement with J.P. if
    appropriate.
    In September 2011, Robert Kanen, Psy.D., an expert that the
    Division retained, conducted a bonding evaluation between A.G.
    and his foster parents.          Dr. Kanen concluded in his report that
    A.G.   "is    strongly    attached      to      the   foster     parents       and    would
    suffer serious and enduring harm if removed from them."                              Such a
    removal, Dr. Kanen opined, "would take the form of regression in
    the developmental gains [A.G.] has experienced" and "also would
    severely     impair    his   sense     of    trust     in     human       relationships."
    During his subsequent cross-examination at trial, Dr. Kanen was
    emphatic that removing A.G. from his foster family would cause
    harm, no matter where he was placed.
    In    January    2012,    Dr.    Kanen         performed       a    psychological
    evaluation      of     defendant.           That      evaluation          revealed        that
    defendant has a history of mental illness, which has resulted in
    numerous psychiatric hospitalizations.                   Additionally, Dr. Kanen
    noted that defendant has a long history of substance abuse and
    antisocial     behavior.        According        to    Dr.    Kanen,       defendant       has
    6                                      A-0512-12T1
    significant cognitive limitations which "seriously impair his
    ability to supervise, protect, and care for a child."                        Dr. Kanen
    concluded in his report that defendant's "problems are so severe
    that they are unlikely to ever be resolved to the point where he
    could independently care for himself and a child."                      The      expert
    also   opined     that     returning      A.G.    to    defendant's     care    "would
    expose the child to an unnecessary risk of harm."
    The   guardianship         trial   was    held   over   eight    intermittent
    days    between      May    and    July     2012.       The    Division      presented
    testimony     from    Dr.     Kanen,      two   caseworkers,     and    an    adoption
    supervisor.       It also relied upon extensive records that were
    admitted     into     evidence         without      objection,     except       as    to
    defendant's criminal history, by defense counsel.                      Defendant did
    not testify, nor did he present a competing expert to counter
    Dr. Kanen's opinions.             He did, however, present testimony from
    M.R. and J.P., both of whom reiterated their respective desires
    to care for A.G.
    After considering these proofs, the trial judge issued a
    detailed oral opinion on August 31, 2012, concluding that the
    Division had proven, by clear and convincing evidence, all four
    prongs of the statutory factors for termination under N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-15.1(a).         This    appeal      by    defendant     followed,     which    is
    opposed by the Division as well as the Law Guardian.
    7                                  A-0512-12T1
    II.
    We begin our review of these issues with a recognition that
    the termination of a parent's right to raise his or her child is
    a matter of constitutional magnitude.         See In re Guardianship of
    K.H.O., 
    161 N.J. 337
    , 346 (1999); see also N.J. Div. of Youth &
    Family Servs. v. F.M., 
    211 N.J. 420
    , 447 (2012).             To be sure,
    "[p]arents have a fundamental constitutional right to enjoy a
    relationship with and raise their children."           N.J. Div. of Youth
    & Family Servs. v. F.H., 
    389 N.J. Super. 576
    , 608 (App. Div.
    2007), certif. denied, 
    192 N.J. 68
     (2007) (citing K.H.O., supra,
    161 N.J. at 346-47).        However, this constitutional right is
    "tempered    by   the   State's   parens     patriae   responsibility    to
    protect the welfare of children."          In re Guardianship of J.N.H.,
    
    172 N.J. 440
    , 471 (2002).
    It is well established that when seeking the termination of
    a parent's rights under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a), the Division has
    the burden of establishing, by clear and convincing proof, the
    following elements:
    (1) The     child's   safety,    health  or
    development has been or will continue to be
    endangered by the parental relationship;
    (2) The parent is unwilling or unable to
    eliminate the harm facing the child or is
    unable or unwilling to provide a safe and
    stable home for the child and the delay of
    permanent placement will add to the harm.
    Such   harm  may   include  evidence  that
    8                            A-0512-12T1
    separating the child from his resource
    family parents would cause serious and
    enduring emotional or psychological harm to
    the child;
    (3) The [D]ivision has made reasonable
    efforts to provide services to help the
    parent correct the circumstances which led
    to the child's placement outside the home
    and the court has considered alternatives to
    termination of parental rights; and
    (4) Termination of parental rights will not
    do more harm than good.
    [N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a); see also N.J. Div.
    of Youth & Family Servs. v. A.W., 
    103 N.J. 591
    ,   604-11  (1986)  (reciting  the  four
    controlling standards later codified in
    Title 30).]
    In the present appeal, defendant only challenges the trial
    court's findings with respect to the third and fourth prongs of
    the statute, and does not contest the court's adverse findings
    on the first two prongs.        We thus confine our analysis to the
    two    latter   prongs,     although       we   note   parenthetically      our
    recognition that the first two prongs were amply proven by the
    Division, given defendant's long-standing chronic deficits and
    his patent inability to care for A.G. himself.
    Our scope of review is limited.            "On appeal, a reviewing
    court must determine whether a trial court's decision in respect
    of    termination   of    parental   rights     was    based   on   clear   and
    convincing evidence supported by the record before the court."
    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. P.P., 
    180 N.J. 494
    , 511
    9                              A-0512-12T1
    (2004).        The    trial       court's   factual   findings     "should   not    be
    disturbed unless they are so wholly unsupportable as to result
    in    a    denial    of     justice."       J.N.H.,   supra,   172   N.J.    at    472
    (citations omitted).
    A.
    1.
    Defendant's main argument on appeal concerning the third
    termination         prong    is    that     the   Division   violated    a   related
    statutory       provision,           N.J.S.A.       30:4C-12.1,4      because        it
    4
    N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1 provides as follows:
    a.   In any case in which the Department of
    Children and Families accepts a child in its
    care or custody, including placement, the
    department shall initiate a search for
    relatives who may be willing and able to
    provide the care and support required by the
    child. The search shall be initiated within
    30 days of the department's acceptance of
    the child in its care or custody.        The
    search will be completed when all sources
    contacted have either responded to the
    inquiry or failed to respond within 45 days.
    The department shall complete an assessment
    of each interested relative's ability to
    provide the care and support, including
    placement, required by the child.
    b.   If the department determines that the
    relative is unwilling or unable to assume
    the care of the child, the department shall
    not be required to re-evaluate the relative.
    The department shall inform the relative in
    writing of:
    (continued)
    10                              A-0512-12T1
    unreasonably     decided     not   to     place      A.G.    with      either    of
    defendant's cousins, M.R. or J.P.             As we have already noted,
    M.R.   and   J.P.    were   respectively      brought       to   the   Division's
    attention in October 2010 and May 2011, after the Division had
    already sent rule-out letters to the first four relatives that
    defendant proposed.         When the Division formally ruled out both
    M.R. and J.P. in June 2012, it rested its decisions on the best
    interests of the child.         Defendant maintains that the Division
    did not adequately investigate M.R. and J.P., as called for
    (continued)
    (1) the reasons     for    the    department's
    determination;
    (2) the responsibility of the relative
    to inform the department if there is a
    change in the circumstances upon which
    the determination was made;
    (3) the possibility that termination
    of parental rights may occur if the
    child remains in resource family care
    for more than six months; and
    (4) the right to seek review by the
    department of such determination.
    c.   The department may decide to pursue the
    termination  of   parental  rights   if  the
    department determines that termination of
    parental rights is in the child's best
    interests.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    11                                   A-0512-12T1
    under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1(a).                    That alleged failure, defendant
    argues,       signifies        that     the     Division         failed       to   adequately
    consider alternatives to termination, as required by the third
    statutory      prong      for       termination.            N.J.S.A.      30:4C-15.1(a)(3)
    (requiring the court to consider "alternatives to termination of
    parental rights").
    Defendant raises two separate, but related, points on his
    claim of the allegedly improper rule-outs.                              First, he argues
    that M.R. and J.P. "were never fully evaluated by the Division."
    Second,       he     makes      a     broader        challenge     to        the   Division's
    construction of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1(c), which the Division has
    interpreted to allow it to rule out relatives based solely on
    its assessment of the best interests of the child involved.
    As this court has previously observed, N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1
    "does not permit the Division to embark on a course set for
    termination of parental rights and adoption by a foster parent
    without at least first exploring available relative placements."
    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. K.L.W., 
    419 N.J. Super. 568
    ,    580    (App.      Div.      2011).       An       important     objective     of   the
    statutory      scheme      is       "prompt   identification            of    relatives    and
    notice    to       them   of    the   results        of    the   investigation       and   the
    potential for termination if the child remains in foster care."
    Ibid.     "So understood, the Division's compliance with N.J.S.A.
    12                                   A-0512-12T1
    30:4C-12.1    is   not   in    any     way    inconsistent        with     the    goal   of
    permanency."       Ibid.           "Delay     of    permanency      or     reversal       of
    termination    based     on      the     Division's       noncompliance          with    its
    statutory obligations is warranted only when it is in the best
    interests of the child."             Id. at 581 (citing N.J. Div. of Youth
    & Family Servs. v. M.F., 
    357 N.J. Super. 515
    , 527 (App. Div.
    2003)).
    That said, although the Division has a statutory duty to
    evaluate     relatives      as      potential        caretakers,         there     is     no
    presumption    favoring        the      placement        of   a    child     with       such
    relatives.     As we have explained, "although there are statutory
    provisions    in   Title      30   and    Title     9    which    refer    to    relative
    placements, the statutes do not create a presumption in favor of
    such   placement."         M.F.,       supra,      357   N.J.     Super.    at    528-29.
    Rather, "[a] presumption of custody only exists in favor of a
    natural parent as opposed to placement with relatives or foster
    parents."     Id. at 528 n.3 (citing Watkins v. Nelson, 
    163 N.J. 235
    , 246 (2000)).
    Here, in finding that the Division did, in fact, comply
    with N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1, and also, therefore, N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    15.1(a)(3), the trial court reasoned:
    No viable alternatives to termination
    of parental rights have been presented to
    the [c]ourt.  [Defendant] has proposed that
    a relative could take custody of [A.G.] for
    13                                   A-0512-12T1
    a period of time during which he will
    overcome the barriers he faces to safely
    parent the child.
    . . . .
    This [c]ourt concurs with the Division
    in its assessment that each relative was
    properly ruled out from custody and that
    [defendant's]   proposed  alternative[s] to
    placement [are] therefore impractical.
    Furthermore, a simple suggestion by the
    defendant that someone might be interested
    in caring for his child is very different
    from   contacting   that   person   himself,
    securing his or her cooperation and making
    any and all necessary arrangements for the
    child's care.
    The defendant's reliance on [K.L.W.,
    supra, 419 N.J. Super. at 568] is misplaced.
    This [c]ourt cannot ignore that the Division
    did, in fact, contact all relatives named by
    [defendant].     Some  of   these  relatives
    declined or were not approved for various
    and legitimate reasons, such as the prior
    history or living arrangements of the person
    in question.
    Additionally, the child in K.L.W. had
    siblings already in that relative's home and
    in that case there was expert testimony that
    the harm could be mitigated.
    I find that the Division has carried
    its   burden   by  proving   by  clear and
    convincing evidence as to [p]rong [three]
    under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(3).
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Subsection   (a)    of   N.J.S.A.   30:4C-12.1   instructs    the
    Division to initiate a search of relatives and to complete an
    14                         A-0512-12T1
    assessment of each interested relative's ability to care for the
    child.     Subsection (b) sets forth the Division's duty to inform
    the prospective relative if the Division determines "that the
    relative      is    unwilling        or    unable     to    assume     the   care   of    the
    child[.]"      N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1(b).                Principally at issue here is
    subsection (c), which states that "the [Division] may decide to
    pursue the termination of parental rights if [it] determines
    that    termination        of    parental        rights     is    in   the   child's     best
    interests."        N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1(c) (emphasis added).
    Although the Division's brief does not explicitly reference
    subsection (c), it appears that the Division commonly interprets
    that section as granting it the authority to rule out relatives
    based    on   the     Division's          assessment       that   placement     with     that
    relative      would    not      be   in    the    child's     best     interests.        That
    interpretation        is   also      evidenced        by   the    Division    regulation,
    N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1(b),5 which provides that a relative does not
    5
    N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1(b) reads in full:
    A relative does not have a right to appeal,
    as a status issue, a Division action that it
    is not in a child's best interest to be
    placed with a relative.      A relative can
    appeal a Division action that the relative
    is either unwilling or unable to care for a
    child.
    15                                 A-0512-12T1
    have the right to pursue an administrative appeal of a rule-out
    decision predicated solely upon a best-interests assessment.6
    Defendant essentially argues that the Division's statutory
    interpretation improperly relieves it of its duty to prove each
    of the best-interests prongs by clear and convincing evidence,
    because it allegedly takes the question of the child's best
    interests  or at least this aspect of it  out of a trial
    judge's hands.    In defendant's view, the Division "must present
    the court with complete information" so that the court, and not
    the   Division,   can   determine   what   is   in   the   child's   best
    interests.
    The Division took into account a similar concern raised by
    Legal Services of New Jersey ("LSNJ") when promulgating N.J.A.C.
    10:120A-3.1(b).    The Division described LSNJ's comment to the
    proposed regulation in the New Jersey Register as follows:
    LSNJ recommends that the Division delete the
    proposed amendment to N.J.A.C. 10:120A-
    3.1(b).      Best   interest  determinations
    regarding a child's placement are not made
    unilaterally by the Division, but by the
    Superior Court.   See N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.54 and
    30:4C-61.2.   The litigants can and should
    make recommendations as to the appropriate
    placement but the ultimate decision is under
    the court's authority.
    6
    Although defendant has not mentioned N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1(b) in
    his brief, his arguments logically implicate the validity of
    that regulation involving a "best interest" rule-out.
    16                          A-0512-12T1
    [41 N.J.R. 242(a) (Jan. 5, 2009).]
    The Division responded to this comment by stating:
    N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1 permits the [Division]
    to make determinations that a relative is
    either unwilling or unable to care for a
    child.   Pursuant to the statute, relatives
    have the right to seek review of these
    decisions by the [Division].        N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-12.1 does not provide for a [Division]
    review of decisions not related to the
    relative's unwillingness or inability to
    care for a child.   Placement decisions made
    by the Division and based on other factors,
    such as the relatives' location or personal
    relationship between the child and the
    relative, are not subject to administrative
    appeal.     The Division agrees that the
    statutes cited by LSNJ address the [c]ourt's
    role in placing children.
    [Ibid. (emphasis added).]
    The Division's interpretation and regulatory approach in
    implementing the "best interests" language in N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1(c), as manifested in the promulgation of N.J.A.C. 10:120A-
    3.1(b),   is    entitled   to   considerable     deference.    Although   we
    certainly are not bound by the Division's construction of the
    law,    "[i]t    is   settled    that    '[a]n    administrative   agency's
    interpretation        of   statutes      and     regulations   within     its
    implementing and enforcing responsibility is ordinarily entitled
    to our deference.'"        Wnuck v. N.J. Div. of Motor Vehicles, 
    337 N.J. Super. 52
    , 56 (App. Div. 2001) (quoting In re Appeal by
    Progressive Cas. Ins. Co., 
    307 N.J. Super. 93
    , 102 (App. Div.
    17                         A-0512-12T1
    1997)); see also Waksal v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    215 N.J. 224
    ,
    231   (2013)         (noting    that     our   courts      "generally     defer    to     the
    interpretation that an agency gives to a statute that agency is
    charged     with       enforcing"      (internal      quotation     marks    omitted)).
    Moreover,        a    "strong     presumption         of    reasonableness        must     be
    accorded [to an] agency's exercise of its statutorily delegated
    duties."        In re Certificate of Need Granted to the Harborage,
    
    300 N.J. Super. 363
    , 380 (App. Div. 1997).
    We are persuaded that the Division's interpretation of the
    "best interests" language of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1 comports with
    the intended meaning of the statute and the overall statutory
    scheme for the termination of parental rights.                        If, as defendant
    argues,     a    non-parental       relative        could    be   ruled    out    only     in
    instances where he or she is unwilling or unable to care for the
    child, then N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1 would essentially be creating a
    statutory        presumption        in     favor      of    placing     children         with
    competent and willing relatives.                    Such a presumption would be in
    contravention to this State's case law interpreting Title 30.
    The reality is that, no matter how fit or willing a proposed
    relative may be, a child will, in some instances, be better off
    remaining in a successful foster placement.
    The       satisfaction      of     the    rule-out      criteria     in     N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-12.1 is, in essence, just one element of the requirements
    18                                 A-0512-12T1
    imposed by N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)'s four-prong "best interests"
    test.        Allowing    the   Division        to    make   an   assessment      of    the
    child's      best    interests      in   the    rule-out      context    of    N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-12.1(c) does not relieve the Division of its duty to prove
    at    a    guardianship     trial    all   four      prongs      of   N.J.S.A.     30:4C-
    15.1(a).         The burden still remains on the Division to defend its
    determinations, as it must prove to a Family Part judge by clear
    and    convincing      evidence     that   it       "made   reasonable     efforts       to
    provide services to help the parent correct the circumstances
    which led to the child's placement outside the home and the
    court      has    considered   alternatives          to   termination     of   parental
    rights."         N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(3).               We therefore perceive no
    dissonance between the Division's ability to rule out a relative
    as a caretaker purely on a "best interests" assessment under
    N.J.S.A. 30:4C-12.1, and the overarching four-pronged statutory
    test of termination under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a).
    As a practical matter, allowing a relative who had been
    ruled out as a caretaker on best-interests grounds to pursue an
    administrative appeal of that decision through the dispositional
    hearing process of N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.2 (and possibly an appeal
    thereafter to this court, pursuant to N.J.A.C. 10:120A-2.8 and
    Rule      2:2-3)    could   readily      interfere        with   the   Family     Part's
    ongoing jurisdiction over the related guardianship case.                               The
    19                                    A-0512-12T1
    best-interests issues and evidence in the administrative matter
    will undoubtedly overlap with the disputed issues and evidence
    before the Family Part in the guardianship action.           There is no
    sensible reason to allow those same best-interests questions to
    be litigated twice  once in an administrative forum and once in
    a judicial forum.7
    We do not construe the statutory and regulatory schemes to
    permit    the   risk   of   inconsistent   adjudicated   outcomes     in   an
    administrative appeal and the separate guardianship proceedings
    in the Family Part.          That may present a situation that could
    inject more uncertainty and delay into the future path of a
    child needing permanency.          The Division can defend its best-
    interests rule-out of a relative in the fuller context of the
    guardianship case.          In that case, the Family Part judge will
    have the benefit of a fuller record of testimony and exhibits.
    The judge also will have the benefit of the advocacy of the
    child's parent or parents, and the Law Guardian, who presumably
    would not otherwise be parties to the relative's administrative
    appeal.
    7
    We contrast that with a situation in which the Division has
    ruled out a potential caretaker for cause on narrow grounds,
    e.g., an apparent criminal record, where the administrative
    hearing would be focused on that narrow issue.
    20                             A-0512-12T1
    In sum, we concur with the Division that a relative has no
    right to pursue an administrative appeal of a rule-out decision
    in   instances   when   that    decision    is    predicated    upon   a   best-
    interests assessment, rather than a finding that the relative is
    unfit    or   unwilling.       The   regulation    that   the   Division     has
    adopted expressing that prohibition, N.J.A.C. 10:120A-3.1, is
    valid.    The regulation is not at odds with the overall statutory
    scheme or its objectives, with the important caveat that the
    court, not the Division, is the ultimate arbiter of the child's
    best interests.
    Lest our opinion be misunderstood, we emphasize that we do
    not construe the Division's authority to reject a relative on
    "best interests" grounds under subsection (c) of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1 to relieve it of its responsibility under subsection (a) of
    that statute requiring it to conduct a fair investigation of
    such a relative who identifies himself or herself as a potential
    caretaker in a reasonably prompt manner.               The Division cannot
    ignore such a relative's timely application out of bureaucratic
    inertia, or consider that application based upon an arbitrary,
    preordained preference for the foster placement.                 The Division
    must perform a reasonable investigation of such relatives that
    is fair, but also sensitive to the passage of time and the
    child's critical need for finality and permanency.
    21                              A-0512-12T1
    If, hypothetically, the Division has been lax or capricious
    in    its     assessment           of    such           timely-presented            alternative
    caretakers, it bears the litigation risk that a Family Part
    judge will conclude, under N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(3), that it
    has   failed     to       prove    by   clear          and    convincing         evidence     that
    "alternatives         to     termination          of     parental         rights"    have      been
    appropriately         considered.            See       also       K.L.W.,   supra,      419    N.J.
    Super. at 582 (noting that the Division's statutory obligation
    "does not permit willful blindness and inexplicable delay in
    assessing"       a    relative).8            In    the       present      case,     however,    we
    discern     no       such    abuse      of    the       Division's          investigative        or
    decision-making authority.
    Apart      from        the    correctness              of     the     Division's        legal
    construction         of     the    best-interests             language      in    the   rule-out
    statute,    there         are     compelling,          fact-specific         reasons     in     the
    present case for upholding its rule-outs of M.R. and J.P.9
    8
    Although this judicial assessment will normally be made
    conclusively after a guardianship trial, our opinion does not
    foreclose the Family Part judge from making an earlier inquiry
    into the merits of the Division's administrative rule-out of a
    relative, as part of the court's ongoing oversight of the
    family. If such inquiry reveals that the Division has ruled out
    a potential caretaker arbitrarily or prematurely, the judge can
    take that into account in making decisions about the child
    during the course of litigation.
    9
    We note that neither M.R. nor J.P. has moved to intervene in
    this appeal.   We therefore need not address whether the court
    (continued)
    22                                     A-0512-12T1
    A.G.    has    been     with    his   foster         family    since    June      2010.
    According      to     the    Division's      unrebutted         expert      witness,       Dr.
    Kanen, the child has developed a strong and secure attachment to
    his foster parents.            Aside from a limited number of visitations
    at which M.R. and J.P. were present, A.G. has no long-standing
    relationship with these distant relatives.                       Given that there is
    no   legal    presumption        in    favor      of    a    child's     placement        with
    relatives,      and    that     defendant      has      not    progressed         closer    to
    becoming an able parent, there is no realistic basis to perceive
    that    placement      with     M.R.    or     J.P.     would    be    in     A.G.'s      best
    interests.       This is especially true in light of this State's
    "strong public policy in favor of permanency."                           K.H.O., supra,
    161 N.J. at 357; see also N.J.S.A. 30:4C-11.3 (stating that "the
    child's need for permanency shall be of paramount concern to the
    court").
    The    record        suggests    that      M.R.,       although      she    was     not
    specifically ruled out for cause, had numerous constraints that
    might   make    a     placement       with   her       problematic,      including        some
    (continued)
    erred in denying J.P.'s request to intervene in the guardianship
    proceeding, although we envision that such participation could
    have presented complications.
    23                                     A-0512-12T1
    psychiatric issues and space limitations.10       M.R. had no apparent
    pre-existing relationship with A.G. prior to October 2010, and
    her visits with A.G. ended in April 2011.
    J.P.,   meanwhile,    was   herself   disabled,   and   was   already
    caring for four children, two of whom had special needs.                J.P.
    did not come forward until the child had already been in foster
    care for ten months.        Where a child has been in a positive
    foster home environment for a prolonged period, the Division
    should have the ability to rule out proposed relatives after an
    unreasonable delay.       See K.L.W., supra, 419 N.J. Super. at 580
    10
    With respect to M.R., a second cousin, we also note the
    Division's limited definition of "relative."     N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1 imposes a duty on the Division to search for "relatives,"
    but does not contain a definition for that term.     See N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-2 (defining relevant terms in Title 30).     The Department
    of Human Services regulations, however, define "relative" as a
    birth    or   adoptive   brother,   sister,
    stepparent, stepbrother, stepsister, uncle,
    aunt, first cousin, niece, nephew, as well
    as relatives of half blood or marriage and
    those denoted by the prefixes "grand" and
    "great," including grandparent or great-
    grandparent, and limited to those having a
    history of being active in planning for the
    child's future.
    [N.J.A.C. 10:120A-1.3 (emphasis added).]
    According to M.R.'s testimony, she and defendant were only
    second cousins.    Hence, M.R. was not a "relative" that the
    Division was obligated to investigate under the applicable
    regulations, although it did so anyway.
    24                              A-0512-12T1
    (noting that the "plain meaning and purpose" of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1 "is prompt identification of relatives" (emphasis added)).
    In addition, J.P., like M.R., had no evident prior relationship
    with the child.11
    2.
    With respect to the other facet of the third statutory
    prong   for   termination,   defendant   argues   that   the   Division's
    efforts to provide him with services were deficient in several
    respects.     His primary argument is that the Division should have
    placed him in an inpatient drug treatment program.               He also
    11
    Although it does not affect our statutory analysis under prong
    three, we do agree with defendant that the Division should have
    advised M.R. sooner than the June 2011 rule-out letter informing
    her that she had been rejected as a potential caretaker.       A
    contact sheet in the Division's records dated December 10, 2010
    noted that the case was on a "fast track to adoption" and that a
    rule-out letter to M.R. was one of the multiple tasks left to
    perform.   If, as the contact sheet suggests, the Division knew
    in December 2010 that it was going to rule out M.R., it should
    have informed her of that decision much sooner than June 2011,
    when it sent the rule-out letter to her.    It was, at the very
    least, discourteous to M.R. to keep her in the dark for six
    additional months. The Division attempts to justify that delay
    because it apparently wanted to ensure that the placement with
    the foster parents would continue to be successful.     However,
    that excuse is unpersuasive since nothing would have prevented
    the Division (and, for that matter, the trial court) from
    reviving M.R.'s application at a later point if she were still
    interested. While there is no fixed deadline in N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    12.1 for the issuance of rule-out letters, and a late rule-out
    letter does not affect the Division's satisfaction of prong
    three of the termination criteria, we urge the Division to act
    with reasonable diligence in notifying a potential caretaker
    that he or she has been ruled out, assuming that the
    investigation has been completed.
    25                             A-0512-12T1
    argues that the Division failed to provide him with sufficient
    visitation.    In this regard, defendant emphasizes his consistent
    attendance at visitations and the positive reports about his
    interactions with A.G.            The trial court rejected defendant's
    criticisms of the many services that the Division provided to
    him, and so do we.
    We recognize that the Division is required, pursuant to
    N.J.S.A.    30:4C-15.1(a)(3)        and    -15.1(c),     to    make    "reasonable
    efforts" to "assist the parents in remedying the circumstances
    and conditions that led to the placement of the child and in
    reinforcing    the     family     structure."         (Emphasis     added).      The
    reasonableness       of   those    efforts      is    "not   measured     by   their
    success."      In    re   Guardianship     of    D.M.H.,     
    161 N.J. 365
    ,   393
    (1999).     Rather, "[t]hese efforts must be assessed against the
    standard of adequacy in light of all the circumstances of a
    given case.         Consistent efforts to maintain and support the
    parent-child    bond      are   central    to   the    court's     determination."
    Ibid.
    In ruling here that the Division had proven this aspect of
    the third prong by clear and convincing evidence, the trial
    judge observed:
    This [c]ourt is satisfied that the
    Division has taken reasonable efforts.   The
    Division  has   provided  [defendant]   with
    parenting      instruction,       supervised
    26                               A-0512-12T1
    visitation,   substance   abuse  assessment,
    substance abuse treatment, mental health
    treatment,     and    access    to    public
    transportation.    It has coordinated with
    service providers and has met regularly with
    [defendant].
    Had [defendant] fully availed himself
    of the Division's efforts, it is the
    [c]ourt's opinion that he would have had the
    opportunity to correct the circumstances
    which led to [A.G.'s] placement with his
    resource parents.
    The judge also specifically rejected defendant's argument
    that   the   Division   failed   to    meet   its   services    obligations
    because defendant was never enrolled in court-ordered inpatient
    drug    treatment.      In   reaching      this   conclusion,   the   judge
    reasoned:
    This [c]ourt finds this claim to be without
    merit.     [The Division was ordered to]
    provide [defendant] with inpatient treatment
    on [June 2, 2011].        The Division made
    several attempts to enroll [defendant] in
    different programs, but none would accept
    him because he did not test positive for
    narcotics.     During this time he simply
    refused to provide a urine sample.     It is
    apparent to this [c]ourt that [defendant]
    was aware of the prerequisite to admission
    of testing positive and intentionally did
    not provide a urine sample in order to avoid
    going to inpatient treatment.
    [Defendant's] failure to enroll was
    entirely the product of his own plan and
    does not reflect a lack of reasonable
    efforts on the part of the Division.    When
    he was enrolled in some of the programs his
    attendance was extremely poor and, as stated
    27                           A-0512-12T1
    many times prior to this, he acted out in an
    aggressive manner.
    Lastly, any claims by the defense that
    the Division failed to find a program are
    disingenuous as [defendant] is currently
    attending an outpatient program through his
    placement . . . as he is on probation a[t]
    the current time.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The      judge's        observations       are    adequately        supported     by
    substantial,         credible    evidence      in     the     record.       Defendant
    contends that there was no direct evidence at trial that he ever
    refused to provide a drug screen.                    However, there is evidence
    from both the testimony of a caseworker, Anna Cebula, and a
    December    13,      2010   clinical     summary       from    Options,    a   program
    provider, indicating defendant's failure to attend treatment, at
    which    time   his     urine    would   presumably         have    been   tested    for
    drugs.     The court made a reasonable inference that defendant was
    attempting      to    evade     detection   by       his    non-attendance     at    the
    treatment sessions.           In any event, even assuming for the sake
    of argument that such an inference was mistaken, there is ample
    other proof in the record to support a finding of an overall
    reasonable effort to provide him with services.
    In     addition,        defendant's     criticisms         of    the   visitation
    provided to him ring particularly hollow, as the record shows
    that the Division provided him with the opportunity for regular
    28                                   A-0512-12T1
    weekly visits with A.G.            There is no expert proof that such
    visitation      opportunities      were     insufficient.        In    sum,    the
    services aspect of the third prong was amply met.
    B.
    We lastly turn to the fourth prong of the statute, and the
    question of whether termination of defendant's parental rights
    would do A.G. more harm than good.             As our case law has noted,
    this   fourth     prong   is   especially     important     to   a    termination
    analysis.     The fourth prong functions as a "fail-safe" to guard
    against the unwise termination of a defendant's parental rights.
    N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. G.L., 
    191 N.J. 596
    , 609
    (2007).     One of the critical aspects of the analysis under the
    fourth    prong     is   the   "paramount    need    the   children     have   for
    permanent     and    defined    parent-child        relationships."       In    re
    Guardianship of J.C., 
    129 N.J. 1
    , 26 (1992); see also N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-11.3.
    In addressing this fourth prong, the trial judge provided
    the following detailed analysis:
    Termination of [defendant's] parental rights
    as to [A.G.] will not do more harm than
    good.   It is the opinion of this [c]ourt
    that   the   termination   of   [defendant's]
    relationship with [A.G.] will have minimal,
    if any, adverse effect on the child.
    In contrast, there is ample reason to
    believe that severing the ties between
    [A.G.] and his resource parents would cause
    29                                 A-0512-12T1
    harm to the child and undo much       of   the
    progress he has made in their care.
    Dr.    Kanen    performed  a    bonding
    evaluation on March 2, 2012 with [A.G.],
    [defendant], and [A.G.'s] resource parents.
    [A.G.] went into distress when taken from
    his   resource    parents   and brought   to
    [defendant].   He had difficulty separating
    from his resource parents and took 35
    minutes to speak.
    [A.G.] referred to [defendant] . . . by
    his first name and his resource parents as
    mommy and daddy.   When [defendant] left the
    room [A.G.] was not concerned.     Dr. Kanen
    interpreted these observations to mean that
    [A.G.] does not see [defendant] as a
    parental figure and perceives his resource
    parents as his parents. Thus, the result of
    the bonding evaluation strongly suggests
    that [A.G.] would be negatively affected if
    he were to be separated from his resource
    parents and minimally affected if denied
    contact with [defendant].
    [A.G.] exhibited developmental delays
    including difficulties with speech when he
    was first placed with his resource parents
    at age eight months.    Dr. Kanen testified
    that    [A.G.]    has    made    significant
    improvements over time and that there was a
    high risk of losing developmental progress
    if [A.G.] were to be removed from his foster
    home.
    Dr. Kanen further testified that [A.G.]
    would be very traumatized and at risk for
    depression if separated from his resource
    parents.  He has grown and more importantly
    thrived under the care of his foster
    parents.    He regards this couple as his
    parents.
    30                          A-0512-12T1
    It is highly unlikely                   that   . . .
    [defendant] will be able to                  care   for the
    child in the near future.
    As    discussed,     the   prognosis    for
    [defendant's] improvement is very poor as
    per the expert testimony of Dr. Kanen.        He
    struggles to even care for himself.          Dr.
    Kanen   testified    that   his   problems   are
    chronic and unlikely to change. He has not
    maintained    stable   housing    nor   obtained
    employment.
    Further,   his  proposed   path   toward
    normalizing    his   parental    relationship
    involves his cousin taking physical custody
    of [A.G.] for an indeterminate period of
    time.   And I must stress that there is a
    need for permanency and consistency.
    We cannot add more to these sound insights by the fact-
    finder.     Defendant asserts that Dr. Kanen's expert opinion, upon
    which the judge relied, was skewed and failed to sufficiently
    take into account defendant's positive interactions with A.G.
    during visitations.             We reject that criticism, as the record
    shows      that     Dr.    Kanen       performed      a     sufficiently       thorough
    assessment of the child's bonding with both defendant and the
    foster parents.
    We    do     not    believe      Dr.   Kanen    was       unfair    or   that   he
    overlooked critical information.                   Since he observed defendant
    interact with A.G. first-hand in the bonding evaluation, it was
    not   vital       for    Dr.   Kanen    to   review       the   written    reports    of
    defendant's visits.            Nor was it vital for Dr. Kanen to interview
    31                                A-0512-12T1
    M.R. or J.P., with whom the child had no prior long-standing
    relationship.
    Indeed, Dr. Kanen's assessment of the child's circumstances
    is essentially unassailable.         It was well within the discretion
    of the trial court to accept the unrebutted and unequivocal
    opinion of the Division's expert.             Brown v. Brown, 348 N.J.
    Super. 466, 478 (App. Div.) (noting that "[a] trial court is
    free    to   accept   or   reject    the    testimony    of   either    side's
    expert"), certif. denied, 
    174 N.J. 193
     (2002).
    Applying our limited standard of review, J.N.H., supra, 172
    N.J. at 472, to the careful judgment that the trial court fairly
    exercised    in   weighing   the    fact-sensitive      considerations     here
    under the fourth prong, we affirm the court's determination.
    III.
    The final judgment terminating defendant's parental rights
    as to A.G. is consequently affirmed.
    32                               A-0512-12T1