In re: O.P. ( 2019 )


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  • In re O.P., No. 2877, September Term, 2018. Opinion by Fader, C.J.
    APPEALABILITY – COLLATERAL ORDER DOCTRINE
    An order denying a petition for continued shelter care filed by a local department of social
    services is an interlocutory order that is appealable under the collateral order doctrine
    because it constitutes the final resolution of an important issue that is completely separate
    from the merits of a CINA petition and would be effectively unreviewable on appeal.
    CONTINUATION OF SHELTER CARE IN CINA PROCEEDINGS– STANDARD
    OF PROOF
    For a juvenile court to authorize the continuation of shelter care beyond emergency shelter
    care, the court must find by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) returning the child
    home is contrary to the child’s safety and welfare and (2)(a) removal is necessary due to
    an alleged emergency and to provide for the child’s safety, or (b) reasonable efforts were
    made but were unsuccessful in preventing or eliminating the need for removal. Md. Code
    Ann. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-815(d).
    Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
    Case No. C-02-JV-18-000692
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 2877
    September Term, 2018
    ______________________________________
    IN RE: O.P.
    ______________________________________
    Fader, C.J.,
    Meredith,
    Friedman,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Fader, C.J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: March 29, 2019
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2019-03-29
    15:22-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    We must first determine the correct standard of proof for a juvenile court to apply
    to a petition for continued shelter care1 of a minor pending consideration of a petition to
    find that the minor is a child in need of assistance. We conclude that for a juvenile court
    to authorize the continuation of shelter care, the court must find by a preponderance of the
    evidence that (1) returning the child home is contrary to the child’s safety and welfare, and
    (2)(a) removal is necessary due to an alleged emergency and to provide for the child’s
    safety, or (b) reasonable efforts were made but were unsuccessful in preventing or
    eliminating the need for removal. Here, the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, sitting
    as a juvenile court, did not err in applying the preponderance standard to the petition for
    continued shelter care filed by the appellant, Anne Arundel County Department of Social
    Services (the “Department”).
    We are asked, second, to determine whether the juvenile court clearly erred in
    making certain findings of fact or abused its discretion in ultimately determining that the
    Department did not carry its burden of proof. On this record, we conclude that the juvenile
    court did not clearly err as to the findings of fact on which it based its ultimate conclusion
    or abuse its discretion and, therefore, we affirm.
    Decisions concerning continuation of shelter care, especially where the minor is an
    infant, are some of the most difficult that a court can face. Information is often unavoidably
    scarce, facts are often developing and disconcertingly unclear, the law requires immediate
    1
    “‘Shelter care’ means a temporary placement of a child outside of the home at any
    time before disposition.” 
    Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-801
    (aa) (Repl. 2013; Supp.
    2018).
    action, and the interests and stakes involved—the health and safety of defenseless children
    and parents’ fundamental liberty interest in raising their children—are among the most
    important a court can be called upon to assess. The General Assembly has implemented a
    statutory scheme to navigate these issues and balance these interests. That scheme calls
    upon a juvenile court to find by a preponderance the necessary factors or, if it cannot do
    so, to deny continued shelter care. After reviewing the principles and interests involved,
    we find no compelling constitutional principle that would permit, much less compel, us to
    depart from that scheme.
    BACKGROUND
    Emergency Shelter Care
    O.P. was born seven weeks prematurely, on October 7, 2018, to parents N.R.
    (“Mother”) and S.P. (“Father”). He spent the first seven weeks of his life in the neonatal
    intensive care unit (“NICU”) of Johns Hopkins Hospital until his discharge on November
    23. Three weeks later, on December 14, the Department received a report that O.P. had
    been admitted to Johns Hopkins Hospital due to unexplained brain injuries. On December
    21, the hospital discharged O.P to the Department’s custody to be placed in emergency
    shelter care.
    The Department’s First Petition for Continued Shelter Care
    On December 26, the next day the courts were open, the Department filed a Child
    in Need of Assistance (“CINA”) petition and a request for continued shelter care with the
    juvenile court. The petition included the following allegations:
    2
    • According to O.P.’s parents, on December 12, there had been an incident in
    which O.P. was choking and “appeared to have stopped breathing.” Father
    “performed CPR” and Mother called 911. The parents reported that the
    emergency personnel who responded to the incident determined that O.P.
    “appeared fine at that time.”
    • When O.P. visited his pediatrician two days later, the doctor “was concerned
    about the infant’s increased head circumference and had [O.P.] sent
    immediately to Johns Hopkins Hospital emergency room.”
    • O.P. was admitted to the hospital after it was determined that he “had both
    subdural and subarachnoid hemorrhaging.”
    • Medical providers “indicated that the injuries and finding [sic] are consistent
    with abusive head trauma and strongly recommended that [O.P.] not be
    returned to the parents’ care at that time, given that there was no plausible
    explanation as to what caused the brain bleeds and both parents’ troubling
    mental health histories.”2
    • The Department held a “Team Decision Making meeting” on December 26
    in which O.P.’s parents participated. They “were unable to develop a plan
    that would assure [O.P.’s] safety other than to place him in out of home care.”
    That same day, December 26, a juvenile magistrate held a hearing and granted the
    Department’s request for an order continuing shelter care pending adjudication.
    The First De Novo Shelter Care Hearing
    Mother exercised her statutory right to request an immediate review of the
    magistrate’s order and the juvenile court held a de novo shelter care hearing the next day.3
    2
    The “troubling mental health histories” included that (1) Mother “is diagnosed
    with Bi-polar disorder and depression” and was treated with Lithium “from June 2018 until
    sometime recently when she stopped the medication because of side effects,” and
    (2) Father, in the past, had “significant suicidal ideation and depression” and is not
    currently in treatment. Father had been previously prescribed anti-depressants but stopped
    taking them because “they sometimes made him aggressive.”
    3
    Pursuant to Rule 11-111(a), magistrates are “authorized to order detention or
    shelter care in accordance with Rule 11-112 (Detention or Shelter Care) subject to an
    immediate review by a judge if requested by any party.” As to all other matters, magistrates
    are “authorized to hear any cases and matters assigned to him by the court,” but a
    3
    The Department presented (1) the testimony of child protective services worker Joshua
    Kay and (2) the hospital’s discharge summary for O.P. In light of the nature of the
    challenge to the juvenile court’s findings and ultimate determination, we present Mr. Kay’s
    testimony in some detail.4
    Mr. Kay testified regarding what the parents had told him about the incident in
    which O.P. had stopped breathing:
    • The incident occurred on December 12;
    • Father, who was home with O.P. at the time, heard O.P. “beg[i]n to make
    choking noises” and then it “appeared that he had stopped breathing.”
    • When Father checked and “could not hear or feel any breathing,” he
    administered CPR.
    • O.P. then began to breathe and at some point, Father called Mother who
    called 911.
    • O.P’s parents told Mr. Kay that emergency medical services (“EMS”)
    personnel checked O.P’s vitals and determined that O.P. was “okay.”
    • The paramedics then gave the parents three options: allow EMS to take O.P.
    to the hospital, take O.P. to the hospital themselves, or take O.P. to a
    previously scheduled doctor’s appointment the following day.
    • “EMS then recommended that they just go to the appointment that was
    already scheduled on the 13th.”
    Mr. Kay also spoke to O.P’s pediatrician, Dr. David Dominguez, and others within
    Dr. Dominguez’s office. Based on those conversations, Mr. Kay testified that O.P. was
    “schedule[d] to have weekly appointments” because “he had been having trouble gaining
    magistrate’s “findings, conclusions and recommendations” on such other matters “do not
    constitute orders or final action of the court.” Md. Rule 11-111(b).
    4
    As discussed below, the Rules of Evidence do not apply to shelter care hearings.
    Md. Rule 11-112(d). As a result, Mr. Kay was permitted to, and did, testify without any
    restrictions against the introduction of hearsay.
    4
    weight.” The pediatrician’s office told Mr. Kay that O.P. had been scheduled for an
    appointment on December 12, which was missed, and that he had never been scheduled for
    an appointment on December 13. The parents brought O.P. for an appointment on
    December 14, at which Dr. Dominguez became concerned about O.P.’s “expanded head
    circumference” and “the observable veins in [his] head.” As a result, Dr. Dominguez told
    Mr. Kay, he “sent them to the ER.” The parents never informed Dr. Dominguez about the
    incident in which O.P. was choking and stopped breathing. The doctor learned about that
    incident only later from Dr. Mitch Goldstein of Johns Hopkins Hospital.
    Mr. Kay also testified about his communications with Dr. Goldstein, the physician
    in charge of the child protection team that evaluated O.P. at the hospital. Dr. Goldstein
    told Mr. Kay that he had conducted tests and reviewed some of O.P’s medical records. Dr.
    Goldstein also reported that there was “intracranial bleeding,” specifically “subdural
    hematoma and subarachnoid hematoma,” which was “consistent with abusive head
    trauma” incurred “on two different occasions.” The doctor believed the injuries occurred
    on two different occasions because there was “newer blood and older blood” in “two
    different locations,” which could not be the result of a birth defect or medical issue.
    Notably for our purposes, Mr. Kay also reported that Dr. Goldstein said that he could
    not determine the timing or age of the two bleeds, other than “that one was older and one
    was newer.” Although the Department had attempted to get information that would narrow
    the timeframe, Dr. Goldstein told Mr. Kay that “medical technology does not allow them
    to put any dates, whether it was, you know, two weeks old, two months old or [sic] either
    5
    of the bleeds.” Indeed, on cross-examination, when asked if “[t]he bleeding could have
    occurred while [O.P.] was in the NICU,” Mr. Kay responded that “[w]hat was explained
    to [him] is, yes, that there is just no time frame for when the bleeding occurred.”
    Mr. Kay also acknowledged during cross-examination that Mother had shown him
    a picture from when O.P. was still in the NICU in which he had the same protruding veins
    that had concerned Dr. Dominguez on December 14.
    Finally, Mr. Kay testified that he had initially attempted to establish a safety plan
    under which O.P. “could come home and be under 24-hours a day/seven days a week
    supervision by the maternal grandfather, [who lived in the same home with O.P. and his
    parents], that he would ensure that the parents were never left alone with” O.P. However,
    once the Department received information from Dr. Goldstein that O.P.’s injuries were
    consistent with abusive head trauma, he became concerned that the grandfather might “be
    a possible cause of the head trauma” and so the Department was no longer “comfortable
    doing a safety plan with the parents.”
    O.P.’s hospital discharge summary, which the court admitted into evidence,
    indicates that on December 14, O.P.’s head circumference was 40 centimeters, his “[s]calp
    veins were prominent,” and his “[e]yes showed mild sundowning.” Notes near the end of
    the summary state that the hospital’s child protective team “noted concern[] for possibility
    of inflicted neurotrauma.” An MRI taken on December 19 identified multiple hemorrhages
    6
    and hematomas in O.P.’s head.5 The summary also noted that the protruding veins were
    “likely secondary to trauma”; and that this “[c]onstellation of findings can be seen in the
    setting of nonaccidental injury, clinical correlation recommended.” Mr. Kay testified that
    in addition to this discharge summary, he had Dr. Goldstein’s “written findings” in his
    possession, but he did not produce them at the hearing.
    At the conclusion of the Department’s case, the juvenile court granted Mother’s
    request to deny the petition for continued shelter care. The court determined that the
    Department had failed to meet its burden, even construing the facts presented in the light
    most favorable to the Department. As a result, the court ordered the immediate return of
    O.P. to his parents.6
    The First Appeal
    The Department immediately noted an appeal and sought an injunction from this
    Court. We granted a temporary stay and remanded the matter “to permit the juvenile court
    to explain the basis for its decisions and to allow for preparation and transmission of all of
    5
    The MRI revealed “[m]ultifocal and extensive extra-axial hemorrhages; [b]ilateral
    frontoparietal subdural collections, bilateral posterior parietal subdural hematomas,
    posterior fossa small subdural hemorrhage, bilateral frontal subpial and subarachnoid
    hemorrhages.”
    6
    The court also denied the Department’s request for an order to control the conduct
    of the parties, as authorized by Rule 11-110(e) (“The court, upon its own motion or on
    application of any person, institution, or agency having supervision or custody of, or other
    interest in a respondent child, may direct, restrain or otherwise control the conduct of any
    person properly before the court in accordance with the provisions of Section 3-827 of the
    Courts Article.”). The court denied the request on the ground that it was “beyond the
    purpose” of the hearing.
    7
    the evidence considered by the juvenile court” so that we could consider the request further.
    In the meantime, we ordered that, pending the issuance of a new order by the juvenile court,
    “the parties shall return to the status quo that preceded the issuance of the juvenile court’s
    December 27, 2018 decisions (i.e., the infant O.P. shall be immediately returned to the
    Department’s emergency shelter care).”
    Further Juvenile Court Proceedings
    On December 31, 2018, the juvenile court issued a memorandum opinion and order
    explaining its December 27 decision. On January 3, 2019, the Department filed in the
    juvenile court an amended CINA petition with an amended request for shelter care, stating
    that it had acquired additional evidence. The amended petition included the following new
    allegations:
    • Although the parents had contended that the incident in which O.P. was
    found choking and not breathing occurred on December 12, the Department
    had learned that it occurred on December 10. The responding paramedics
    indicated that Father had told them that O.P. “had been gagging” and that
    Father “picked up [O.P.] and began stimulating and delivering back slaps.”
    The paramedics did not mention any “administering [of] CPR or [O.P] not
    breathing.”
    • Those paramedics also stated that O.P.’s parents had refused their
    recommendation that O.P. “be transported to the Emergency Room for
    evaluation at that time.”
    • When seen on December 14, O.P. had “sunsetting of his eyes” as well as the
    “increased head circumference” that were “concerning for hydrocephalus,[7]
    which was not present at prior visits.”
    7
    Hydrocephalus is “a condition in which fluid accumulates in the brain, typically
    in young children, enlarging the head and sometimes causing brain damage.” New Oxford
    American Dictionary, “hydrocephalus,” at 853 (3d ed. 2010).
    8
    • O.P.’s birth records, also newly-received, “indicate that [O.P.’s] head was
    examined and determined to be normocephalic[8] and atraumatic[9] on at least
    three occasions during the child’s birth stay [at the NICU], including at
    discharge on November 23,” and that there was no “concern for [O.P.’s] head
    size or condition, or that [O.P.] suffered any brain related incidents while in
    the hospital.”
    • At O.P.’s appointments with his pediatrician on November 27 and December
    5, his “head was described as normocephalic and atraumatic.”
    On January 2, 2019, Mother filed a motion in this Court to lift its stay and
    immediately return O.P. to his parents. The Department opposed the motion in a filing that
    noted its new evidence and newly-filed amended petition. We denied Mother’s motion but
    ordered that the stay would expire as soon as the juvenile court entered an order resolving
    the Department’s amended shelter care request. On January 7, a magistrate held a hearing
    on the amended request and granted continued shelter care. The parents again requested
    an immediate review by the juvenile court, which held a de novo hearing on January 8 and
    9 limited in scope “to all new allegations not contained in the original Petition.”
    The Second De Novo Shelter Care Hearing
    At the second de novo hearing, the Department again presented Mr. Kay as its only
    witness and also introduced additional documentary evidence, including EMS records from
    the paramedics who responded to the incident that occurred on December 10 and medical
    records from O.P.’s time in the NICU and subsequent visits to the pediatrician.
    Normocephalic means “having a normal head.” Stedman’s Medical Dictionary,
    8
    “normocephalic,” at 1331 (28th ed. 2006).
    9
    Atraumatic is defined as “not resulting from trauma.” Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical
    Dictionary, “atraumatic,” at 209 (21st ed. 2009).
    9
    Mr. Kay testified as to the new information he had learned in the 12 days since the
    first hearing, which consisted almost entirely of the contents of the EMS and medical
    records. He testified that the EMS records showed that the incident in which O.P. had
    choked and stopped breathing had actually occurred on December 10, which meant that it
    had taken the parents four days, not two, to take O.P. to a doctor following that incident.
    Those records also showed that Father “had refused medical advice” that O.P. be “taken
    immediately to the E.R,” whereas Father “had previously stated that he had followed the
    recommendations of the paramedic to go to the pediatrician the following day.”
    Mr. Kay also testified that medical records from Dr. Dominguez’s office showed
    that Dr. Dominguez had expressed concern that O.P. had missed medical appointments
    with specialists, including a gastro-reflux doctor and an ear, nose, and throat doctor, and
    that Mother did not follow through “for postpartum discretion [sic] screening.” As
    identified in the amended petition, the pediatric records also note that when O.P. was taken
    in on December 14, he had “an increasing head circumference,” “bulging . . . scalp veins,”
    and “sunsetting of his eyes,” which were “concerning for hydrocephalus.” Mr. Kay also
    testified that O.P.’s records from the NICU, which he had obtained since the first hearing,
    indicated that O.P.’s “head circumference [was] normal.”
    Mr. Kay testified that he had not spoken with Dr. Goldstein or any other members
    of the Hopkins evaluation team since the first hearing. He also acknowledged that the
    written findings from Dr. Goldstein that he referred to in his testimony at the first hearing,
    but did not produce, were in the form of an e-mail “sent from a coordinator that was in
    10
    reference to statements that were from Dr. Goldstein, but it was not part of the records that
    we received.” The e-mail was not presented to the court.
    The EMS records the Department introduced into evidence identify the choking
    incident as having occurred on December 10. The records also reveal that the paramedics
    informed O.P.’s parents that “EMS recommends transport to local pediatric ER for
    evaluation but indicate they no longer believe it to be necessary. . . . Parents were also
    advised if they did not transport [O.P.] to local ER of their choice to still contact [O.P.’s]
    pediatrician in the morning.” The EMS personnel obtained Father’s signature for “refusal
    of services” against medical advice.
    However, the EMS records also reflect that the provider’s “Primary Impression” of
    O.P. as a result of the incident was “No Apparent Illness/Injury [Unknown].” The space
    for a secondary impression is left blank. The narrative explanation of the incident also
    notes that the EMS providers found O.P. “in no apparent distress with good skin color,”
    and that his “baseline vitals were assessed and stable.”
    The Hopkins medical records contain findings from several different evaluations
    performed during O.P.’s seven weeks in the NICU and at three pediatric visits. The NICU
    records indicate that O.P.’s head circumference at birth was 31cm. By November 19, four
    days before discharge, his head had grown to 37.6 cm. Pediatric records from a visit on
    December 5 state that his head circumference was 37.5 cm. Each of these records from
    birth through December 5 describes O.P.’s head as both “normocephalic” and
    11
    “atraumatic.” None of the medical records before December 14 appear to identify any
    concern with the size of O.P.’s head.
    After the Department closed its case, the court considered, and then denied, a motion
    by the parents to dismiss the petition. The parents then presented testimony from both
    Mother and Father. Mother testified that O.P. suffered from acid reflux, causing him to
    have difficulty “keeping his food down,” and had been prescribed Zantac. He also had
    laryngomalacia, which caused episodes of sleep apnea and had caused him to stop
    breathing twice while in the NICU. “One time he corrected it himself, and then another
    time the nurse . . . had to get involved and help him.” Mother testified she was not given
    any instructions from the hospital regarding the laryngomalacia or what to do if O.P.
    stopped breathing again.
    Mother acknowledged that Dr. Dominguez had advised her to make an appointment
    with a specialist for O.P.’s conditions.      She had missed the appointment for the
    laryngomalacia because it had been scheduled on a date when O.P. was still in the hospital
    for the brain injury. She also attempted to schedule an appointment for the acid reflux, but
    was told that, absent an emergency, an appointment could not be scheduled for
    approximately one month.
    In explaining the discrepancy as to the date of the incident in which O.P. choked
    and briefly stopped breathing while at home, Mother testified that she “had [her] dates
    mixed up” when she initially spoke with Mr. Kay. She also testified that the paramedics
    did not inform her of a health risk if she did not take O.P. to the hospital right away and
    12
    she explained that she did not do so because she assumed the incident was just another
    incidence of what had occurred in the NICU: “[S]o I wasn’t too worried about it because
    it’s happened before and with that condition it’s more than likely to happen again.”
    With respect to missing pediatric appointments, Mother testified that she had missed
    the appointment on December 12 due to a confusion about the time. She made an
    appointment for the following day, but that morning was informed that Dr. Dominguez
    would not be there. She then made the appointment for December 14, which led to O.P.’s
    hospitalization.   She acknowledged that she had not told Dr. Dominguez about the
    December 10 incident during that appointment, but said that she did not have the
    opportunity because Dr. Dominguez “seemed really urgent about the head circumference
    and he just wanted us to go to the ER.”
    Mother also introduced a medical chart from the hospital showing O.P.’s head
    growth over time. The chart depicts the head circumference-for-age percentiles for
    premature boys of 23.5 to 50 gestational weeks (i.e., based on age since conception rather
    than age since birth) with curves identifying the 3rd, 10th, 50th, 90th, and 97th percentiles,
    and plots O.P.’s head circumference on the same chart. According to the chart, (1) O.P.’s
    head circumference at birth (33 gestational weeks) was right at the 50th percentile; (2) his
    head circumference increased over the following few weeks, rising above the 90th
    percentile by 39 weeks and almost to the 97th percentile at approximately 40 weeks, which
    was around the time of his discharge; (3) his head circumference then stopped expanding
    for a brief period, falling back under the 90th percentile by approximately 42 weeks; and
    13
    (4) then measured well above the 97th percentile line beginning at approximately 44 weeks,
    which corresponds to his visit to the pediatrician on December 14 and subsequent
    hospitalization.
    Father’s testimony was more limited. He testified that he learned infant CPR in the
    Navy and performed it on O.P. on December 10 when he “heard no breathing.” When the
    paramedics arrived, O.P. “was breathing, crying, and he seemed back from where he was.”
    The paramedics “indicated that they didn’t seem that there was a continuing emergency”
    and that a baby crying following CPR “is the best sound you can hear.”
    On January 10, 2019, the court issued a second memorandum opinion and order in
    which it made findings of fact including the following:
    • Following the December 10 choking/not breathing incident, O.P. was
    checked by the paramedics “and determined to be normal.” “The EMT
    narrative clearly indicates” that transport to the emergency room “was
    advised for ‘evaluation’ and not for emergency treatment, as the EMT’s
    found the child’s condition on the scene to be normal.”
    • The Department “did not produce the pediatrician at either review hearing.”
    • Dr. Goldstein, as relayed through Mr. Kay, “characterized his findings . . . as
    being ‘consistent’ with abusive head trauma, ‘in the absence of plausible
    explanation.’” However, Mr. Kay “acknowledged that he made no inquiry
    of Dr. Goldstein about what other scenarios would be ‘consistent’ with
    [O.P.’s] condition” nor did the Department undertake efforts “to investigate
    the care of [O.P.] while in the hospital NICU for 48 days; the majority of the
    young infant’s life.”
    • “[O]f greatest significance, [Mr.] Kay testified that he was advised by Dr.
    Goldstein that current medical science cannot date the age of either of the
    two hemorrhages.” The Department “produced no additional evidence at the
    second hearing to establish a timeline for the injuries, nor any evidence as to
    the cause of such injuries.”
    • Although the Department alleged “neglect by the parents in not allowing the
    EMT’s to transport [O.P.] to an emergency room, and waiting four days to
    14
    see the pediatrician, there was no evidence presented that those decisions by
    the parents in any way harmed the child.”
    • “While in the NICU, [O.P.’s] head was growing abnormally large.”
    • “The Court finds both parents to be completely credible, especially as to their
    descriptions of the events at issue, and most especially their concern and
    caring for an infant with multiple medical challenges. They are young, a bit
    overwhelmed by the events, especially since the filing of the CINA petition,
    and clearly have had challenges navigating the healthcare system.”
    • “It is telling that the [Department] . . . never questioned the parents as to the
    care of the minor child during the 22 days he was in the home after the initial
    stay in the NICU, except for the administration of medications. Neither were
    questioned whether any events occurred in the home to explain the internal
    head injuries.”
    • Mr. Kay “only summarize[d] hearsay conversations with the doctors, leaving
    a number of details unanswered.” “[T]he Court was not given the opportunity
    to judge first-hand the accuracy, consistency or credibility of either the
    EMT’s or the pediatrician. Such witnesses were available to the
    [Department], which did not avail itself of compulsory process, nor gave any
    real explanation of why such witnesses were not produced, other than ‘we
    tried. . . ’. This is a critical consideration for the Court having found the
    parent’s [sic] descriptions of events and explanations of minor discrepancies
    to be credible.”
    • “The Court finds that the timing of the two hemorrhages cannot be
    determined. All of the intra-cranial bleeding could have occurred while
    [O.P.] was in the NICU . . . for seven weeks, or during the 22 days after the
    child was home, including during the justifiably vigorous administration of
    CPR at the time of the choking/[not] breathing event. The stubborn refusal
    of [the Department] to thoroughly investigate the hospital stay is
    inexplicable.” “As such, no reasonable inferences can be drawn placing
    responsibility for such injuries upon the parents.”
    • The Department “did not make reasonable efforts in preventing or
    eliminating the need for removal of the child from the home.” The
    Department abandoned the safety plan prepared “solely on the basis of Dr.
    Goldstein] of Hopkins telling [Mr.] Kay that in the absence of any plausible
    explanation, the head injuries were due to non-accidental trauma. The Court
    finds that to be insufficient reason to decline to pursue the safety plan . . . .”
    Based on these findings, the Court concluded that the Department “failed to meet
    its burden, even by a preponderance of the evidence, to prove that the injuries suffered by
    15
    [O.P.] were 1) non-accidental or; 2) that they were caused by the abuse or neglect of the
    parents while in their custody or control.” The Department also “failed to meet its burden
    to prove that the parents neglected their child by failure to allow the EMT’s to transport
    the child for evaluation after the choking/[not] breathing incident, or by waiting four days
    to see the pediatrician.” The court therefore denied the Department’s request for continued
    shelter care and, because this Court’s injunction automatically expired upon the issuance
    of the juvenile court’s opinion and order, ordered the Department to return O.P. to his
    parents that day.
    The Department and O.P. noted immediate appeals and again sought an injunction
    from this Court. We denied the request for an injunction pending appeal but expedited
    briefing and argument and directed the parties to address in their briefing the appropriate
    legal standard for continuing shelter care.
    DISCUSSION
    In Part I of this opinion we lay out the relevant statutory scheme as it relates to
    CINA cases generally and the shelter care proceedings that are the focus of this appeal.
    In Part II, we turn to Mother’s claim that we lack jurisdiction over this interlocutory
    appeal. We conclude that we have jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine because
    the juvenile court’s order constitutes the final resolution of an important issue—whether
    O.P. should be placed in shelter care on an emergency basis—that is completely separate
    from the merits of the CINA petition and that would be effectively unreviewable on appeal.
    16
    In Part III, we address the core dispute among the parties as to the proper standard
    of proof to apply in a shelter care hearing. The parties’ arguments reveal a wide chasm in
    their respective positions on this issue. The Department contends that the correct legal
    standard of proof is “reasonable under the circumstances.” O.P. similarly argues for a
    “reasonable grounds to believe” standard.         Father, on the other hand, argues for a
    preponderance of the evidence standard, which is what the juvenile court employed, while
    Mother argues for clear and convincing evidence. Based on the plain language of the
    statute, as well as on its context and the important interests involved, we conclude that
    preponderance of the evidence is the correct standard.
    In Part IV, we return to the facts of this case and address the claims of the parties
    that they each should prevail regardless of the applicable standard of proof, including the
    claims of the Department and O.P. that the juvenile court made clearly erroneous findings
    of fact and erred in reaching its ultimate conclusion.
    The standard of review applicable to CINA proceedings is well-established: (1) we
    review factual findings of the juvenile court for clear error, (2) we determine, “without
    deference,” whether the juvenile court erred as a matter of law, and if so, whether the error
    requires further proceedings or, instead, is harmless, and (3) we evaluate the juvenile
    court’s final decision for abuse of discretion. In re Adoption/Guardianship of H.W., 
    460 Md. 201
    , 214 (2018).
    17
    I.     THE STATUTORY SCHEME
    A.     CINA Proceedings Generally
    A “child in need of assistance,” or CINA, is “a child who requires court intervention
    because: (1) The child has been abused, has been neglected, has a developmental disability,
    or has a mental disorder; and (2) The child’s parents, guardian, or custodian are unable or
    unwilling to give proper care and attention to the child and the child’s needs.” Cts. & Jud.
    Proc. § 3-801(f), (g). The General Assembly has codified the provisions of the law
    governing CINA proceedings in Subtitle 8 of Title 3 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings
    Article, and has defined the “purposes of th[e] subtitle” as:
    (1) To provide for the care, protection, safety, and mental and physical
    development of any child coming within the provisions of this subtitle;
    (2) To provide for a program of services and treatment consistent with the
    child’s best interests and the promotion of the public interest;
    (3) To conserve and strengthen the child’s family ties and to separate a child
    from the child’s parents only when necessary for the child’s welfare;
    (4) To hold parents of children found to be in need of assistance responsible
    for remedying the circumstances that required the court’s intervention;
    (5) Except as otherwise provided by law, to hold the local department
    responsible for providing services to assist the parents with remedying the
    circumstances that required the court’s intervention;
    (6) If necessary to remove a child from the child’s home, to secure for the
    child custody, care, and discipline as nearly as possible equivalent to that
    which the child’s parents should have given;
    (7) To achieve a timely, permanent placement for the child consistent with
    the child’s best interests; and
    (8) To provide judicial procedures for carrying out the provisions of this
    subtitle.
    Id. § 3-802(a). The statute also commands that it “shall be construed liberally to effectuate
    these purposes.” Id. § 3-802(b).
    18
    Subtitle 8 establishes a comprehensive statutory scheme to govern proceedings
    when a child is alleged to be a CINA. The statute gives “exclusive original jurisdiction”
    to a juvenile court over proceedings arising from CINA petitions, id. § 3-803(a)(2), and
    establishes, among other things, the scope of the court’s jurisdiction over children, venue
    for proceedings, assignment of judges, the appointment and authority of juvenile
    magistrates, the review of decisions or recommendations of magistrates to the juvenile
    court, the confidentiality of proceedings, the scope of a local department’s obligation to
    make reasonable efforts to reunify children and parents, and the State’s obligation to
    provide counsel to represent children, as well as indigent parents and guardians of an
    alleged CINA, in CINA proceedings, id. §§ 3-804, 3-805, 3-806, 3-807, 3-810, 3-812, &
    3-813.
    A local department of social services is required to file a CINA petition if, after
    receiving “a complaint from a person or agency,” “it concludes that the court has
    jurisdiction over the matter and that the filing of a petition is in the best interests of the
    child.” Id. § 3-809(a). “A CINA petition . . . shall allege that a child is in need of assistance
    and shall set forth in clear and simple language the facts supporting that allegation.” Id.
    § 3-811(a)(1). Once a CINA petition is filed, a juvenile court “shall hold an adjudicatory
    hearing,” id. § 3-817(a), for the purpose of “determin[ing] whether the allegations in the
    petition, other than the allegation that the child requires the court’s intervention, are true,”
    id. § 3-801(c). At the adjudicatory hearing, the rules of evidence apply and the allegations
    of the petition must “be proved by a preponderance of the evidence.” Id. § 3-817(b), (c).
    19
    Following an adjudicatory hearing, the juvenile court must “hold a separate
    disposition hearing,” either “on the same day as the adjudicatory hearing” or later. Id.
    § 3-819(a). With respect to a child who is alleged to be a CINA arising from abuse or
    neglect, the court’s disposition may entail (1) finding that the child is not a CINA and
    terminating the case, (2) finding that the child is not a CINA and awarding custody to a
    noncustodial parent, or (3) finding that the child is a CINA and making a custody
    determination from among various options. See generally id. § 3-819. Depending on the
    disposition, additional proceedings that are beyond the scope of this opinion follow.10
    B.     Shelter Care Proceedings
    Section 3-815 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article authorizes a local
    department that believes a child may be a CINA to place the child in emergency shelter
    care under certain circumstances. As explained further below, shelter care is not a
    necessary stage in a CINA proceeding but instead is a parallel proceeding to provide
    interim protection for a child pending completion of the adjudicatory hearing and
    disposition. Subsection (a) of § 3-815 provides the general authorization for emergency
    shelter care: “In accordance with regulations adopted by the Department of Human
    Services, a local department may authorize shelter care for a child who may be in need of
    10
    The statute imposes on the court a variety of different requirements and tools that
    must or may be used in connection with the adjudication and disposition of a CINA
    proceeding, including the right to order that studies be conducted and the obligation to hold
    periodic review hearings, assess whether the local department has satisfied its obligations,
    and inquire as to the child’s educational stability. Cts. & Jud. Proc. §§ 3-816(a), 3-816.1,
    3-816.2, 3-816.4.
    20
    assistance and has been taken into custody under this subtitle.” Subsection (b) then
    establishes the following parameters:
    (b) A local department may place a child in emergency shelter care before a
    hearing if:
    (1) Placement is required to protect the child from serious immediate
    danger;
    (2) There is no parent, guardian, custodian, relative, or other person able
    to provide supervision; and
    (3) (i) 1. The child’s continued placement in the child’s home is contrary
    to the welfare of the child; and
    2. Because of an alleged emergency situation, removal from the
    home is reasonable under the circumstances to provide for the
    safety of the child; or
    (ii) 1. Reasonable efforts have been made but have been unsuccessful
    in preventing or eliminating the need for removal from the child’s
    home; and
    2. As appropriate, reasonable efforts are being made to return the
    child to the child’s home.
    Following placement of a child in emergency shelter care, “the local department
    shall immediately file a petition to authorize continued shelter care.” Id. § 3-815(c)(1).
    The court is required to “hold a shelter care hearing on the petition before disposition to
    determine whether the temporary placement of the child outside of the home is warranted.”
    Id. § 3-815(c)(2)(i). Absent good cause, the hearing must “be held not later than the next
    day on which the circuit court is in session.” Id. § 3-815(c)(2)(ii). It is such a petition for
    continued shelter that is at issue here.
    21
    Subsection (d) provides the criteria for the circuit court to use in determining
    whether to authorize continued shelter care:
    (d) A court may continue shelter care beyond emergency shelter care only if
    the court finds that:
    (1) Return of the child to the child’s home is contrary to the safety and
    welfare of the child; and
    (2)(i) Removal of the child from the child’s home is necessary due to an
    alleged emergency situation and in order to provide for the safety of the
    child; or
    (ii) Reasonable efforts were made but were unsuccessful in preventing
    or eliminating the need for removal of the child from the home.
    The duration of a term of shelter care is expressly limited: “A court may not order shelter
    care for more than 30 days except that shelter care may be extended for up to an additional
    30 days if the court finds after a hearing held as part of an adjudication that continued
    shelter care is needed to provide for the safety of the child.” Id. § 3-815(c)(4).
    II.    THIS COURT HAS JURISDICTION TO REVIEW THE JUVENILE COURT’S
    SECOND ORDER DENYING THE DEPARTMENT’S REQUEST FOR
    CONTINUED SHELTER CARE.
    Before addressing the parties’ respective positions regarding the applicable standard
    of proof in a shelter care proceeding, we must first address Mother’s contention that neither
    of the Department’s appeals are properly before us. Mother moved to dismiss on two
    grounds: (1) that the juvenile court’s December 27 order is moot because it was superseded
    by the January 10 order; and (2) that neither of the orders is “appealable as a final,
    collateral, or interlocutory order.” We agree with Mother that the December 27 order is
    moot but we conclude that the January 10 order is appealable under the collateral order
    doctrine.
    22
    A.     The December 27 Order Is Moot.
    Following the juvenile court’s December 27 order, the Department filed an amended
    CINA petition with a request for continued shelter care. After a magistrate continued
    shelter care pursuant to the amended petition, the juvenile court held a second de novo
    hearing and issued the January 10 opinion and order denying continued shelter care. The
    juvenile court’s second order superseded the first. As a result, the first order is moot and
    “vacating [it] will provide no relief whatever to appellants.” In re Joseph N., 
    407 Md. 278
    ,
    303 (2009) (quoting In re Justin D., 
    357 Md. 431
    , 444 (2000)); see also In re Iris M., 
    118 Md. App. 636
    , 643 (1998) (noting that an initial no-contact order was superseded by a
    subsequent no-contact order, rendering the first order moot).11
    B.     The Denial of a Petition for Continued Shelter Care Is Appealable
    Under the Collateral Order Doctrine.
    An order denying continued shelter care is an interlocutory order. Interlocutory
    orders are ordinarily appealable only in three circumstances: “appeals from interlocutory
    orders specifically allowed by statute; immediate appeals permitted under Maryland Rule
    2-602; and appeals from interlocutory rulings allowed under the common law collateral
    order doctrine.” Salvagno v. Frew, 
    388 Md. 605
    , 615 (2005). We find the juvenile court’s
    January 10 order falls under the collateral order doctrine exception.12
    11
    To the extent the Department challenges the juvenile court’s verbal denial of its
    request for an ordering controlling the conduct of the parties on December 27, the
    Department did not renew that request in connection with its amended request for
    continued shelter care. As a result, that issue is not preserved and we do not consider it.
    12
    The Department originally advocated jurisdiction under § 12-303(3)(x) of the
    Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article, which allows an interlocutory appeal from an
    23
    The collateral order doctrine “is a very limited exception to the principle that only
    final judgments terminating the case in the trial court are appealable . . . .” In re Foley, 
    373 Md. 627
    , 633 (2003). It “treats as final and appealable a limited class of orders which do
    not terminate the litigation in the trial court.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Bunting v. State, 
    312 Md. 472
    ,
    476 (1988)).    To be appealable under the collateral order doctrine, the order must:
    (1) “conclusively determine[] the disputed question”; (2) “resolve[] an important issue”;
    (3) “resolve[] an issue that is completely separate from the merits of the action”; and (4) “be
    effectively unreviewable if the appeal had to await the entry of a final judgment.” Dawkins
    v. Balt. City Police Dep’t, 
    376 Md. 53
    , 58 (2003) (quoting Pittsburgh Corning v. James,
    
    353 Md. 657
    , 660-61 (1999)). “[I]n Maryland the four requirements of the collateral order
    doctrine are very strictly applied.” In re Foley, 
    373 Md. at 634
    .
    The first, second, and fourth requirements are easily satisfied here. As to the first,
    the issue to be resolved at a shelter care hearing is “whether the temporary placement of
    order “[d]epriving a parent . . . of the care and custody of his child, or changing the terms
    of such an order.” However, that applies exclusively to orders depriving a parent of
    custody. See In re Samone H., 
    385 Md. 282
    , 315-16 (2005) (noting that an order that does
    not deprive a mother of custody of her children or detrimentally change her terms of
    custody is not immediately appealable under § 12-303(3)(x)). When we originally granted
    in part the Department’s first emergency request for an injunction, we concluded that we
    had jurisdiction under § 12-303(3)(i) and (iii), which allow interlocutory appeals from,
    respectively, orders “[g]ranting or dissolving an injunction” and “[r]efusing to grant an
    injunction.” We did so based on our conclusion that the juvenile court’s order mandating
    the Department’s return of O.P. to his parents constituted an injunction—“an order
    mandating . . . a specified act,” Md. Rule 15-501(a)—and that its order denying the
    Department’s request for continued shelter care was in the nature of the denial of an
    injunction. Upon further reflection and research, we have concluded that the collateral
    order doctrine provides a sounder basis for appellate jurisdiction here and so refrain from
    addressing those other grounds.
    24
    the child outside of the home is warranted.” Cts. & Jud. Proc. §§ 3-801(bb) & 3-815(c).
    The grounds on which such a placement may be warranted are that not doing so “is contrary
    to the safety and welfare of the child” and that either removal “is necessary due to an
    alleged emergency situation and in order to provide for the safety of the child” or
    “[r]easonable efforts were made but were unsuccessful in preventing or eliminating the
    need for removal of the child from the home.” Id. § 3-815(d). A juvenile court’s order
    denying continued sheltered care conclusively resolves the issue as it returns the child
    home for the duration of the CINA proceedings, the only period of time at issue.
    The second requirement is also satisfied because the issue resolved is an undeniably
    important one. Denying continued shelter care returns the child to the very situation that
    the Department contends presents an imminent risk to the child’s health and safety.
    As to the fourth requirement, a decision to deny continued shelter care is effectively
    unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment. Because shelter care is designed to provide
    emergency protection for a child only until a juvenile court rules on the merits of a CINA
    petition, it will always be moot and effectively unreviewable when the merits are reached.
    If the juvenile court’s shelter care decision was wrong, and the child suffers the harm
    against which the Department was trying to protect, nothing within any appellate court’s
    power will be able to turn back the clock and place the child in safety during that time
    period. The nature of the decision makes it unreviewable if not by immediate appeal.
    Notably, the fourth requirement of the collateral order doctrine necessarily involves
    a judgment on “whether delaying review until the entry of final judgment ‘would imperil
    25
    a substantial public interest’ or ‘some particular value of a high order.’” Harris v. State,
    
    420 Md. 300
    , 321 (2011) (quoting Mohawk Indus v. Carpenter, 
    558 U.S. 100
    , 107 (2009)).
    As discussed further below, the protection of children from imminent risks to their health
    and safety is a substantial public interest in general and is particularly so in light of the
    parens patriae responsibility of the courts in furthering that interest. Absent a right of
    immediate appeal, a decision by a juvenile court judge that is contrary to that of a
    magistrate and to the view of the State agency charged with protecting the health and safety
    of children would be effectively unreviewable.
    Our consideration of the third requirement of the collateral order doctrine—whether
    the decision “resolves an issue that is completely separate from the merits of the action,”
    Dawkins, 
    376 Md. at 58
     (citation omitted)—presents a closer question. The merits of the
    action here is whether O.P. is a CINA. That requires a determination regarding whether
    O.P. “requires court intervention because” (1) he “has been abused, has been neglected,
    has a developmental disability, or has a mental disorder” and (2) his parents “are unable or
    unwilling to give proper care and attention to [him] and [his] needs.” Cts. & Jud. Proc.
    § 3-801(f). As set forth above, the decision as to whether a child is a CINA happens in two
    separate proceedings, the adjudicatory hearing and the disposition hearing, and the
    outcome, if the Department is successful, is to work toward a long-term arrangement
    focused on providing the child a healthy, stable, and permanent arrangement.
    A request for continuation of shelter care frequently accompanies a CINA petition,
    but it is neither a necessary step in a CINA proceeding nor does it constitute part of the
    26
    CINA determination.      Although the facts relevant to a determination of whether to
    authorize continued shelter care and whether a child is a CINA may substantially overlap,
    the issues in the two proceedings are fundamentally distinct. The core issue in a shelter
    care proceeding is whether there is an impending risk to the health and safety of a child—
    from whatever source and for whatever reason—if the child is returned home before the
    court can complete the disposition phase of a CINA proceeding. Id. § 3-815(d). The
    resolution of that issue will determine where and with whom the child will reside prior to
    the adjudication of the merits of the CINA petition. The core issues in a CINA proceeding,
    by contrast, are (1) whether the child has been abused or neglected and whether his or her
    parents or guardians are unwilling or unable to care for him or her, and (2) if so, what plan
    the court will approve for permanency for the child subsequent to the adjudication and
    disposition of the CINA petition. Id. §§ 3-801(f); 3-819(b).
    The unique nature of shelter care proceedings informs our conclusion that an order
    denying continued shelter care is completely separate from the merits of a CINA
    proceeding for purposes of the collateral order doctrine. Because a hearing must be held
    on a petition for continued shelter so soon after a local department places a child in
    emergency shelter care, the Rules of Evidence do not apply at the hearing. Md. Rule
    11-112(d). As a result, as in this case, much of the evidence that is submitted can be based
    on hearsay that would be inadmissible in any subsequent proceeding. The purpose of a
    shelter care hearing is thus not to gather evidence for either side to prove its ultimate case,
    nor is such a hearing a necessary step on the path to an adjudicatory hearing or disposition.
    27
    Instead, it is parallel to and separate from the proceedings that ultimately lead to the CINA
    decision. That distinguishes the orders resulting from such proceedings from others that
    our appellate courts have found not to constitute appealable collateral orders.
    In Harris v. State, for example, the Court of Appeals declined to extend the
    collateral order doctrine to include an order granting the State’s discovery request for
    medical records, including competency evaluations, in a murder trial. 420 Md. at 318.
    The discovery request aimed to uncover critical facts that could be outcome determinative
    in a competency hearing, the resolution of which would ultimately affect the merits of the
    trial. Id. at 319. The Court noted that “[i]f an order decides an issue merely as a step
    toward final disposition of a prosecution, it is interlocutory; however, if it disposes of a
    separable branch of the case, it is an appealable final judgment.” Id. at 320 (quoting Sigma
    Reprod. Health Ctr. v. State, 
    297 Md. 660
    , 666 (1983)). A competency hearing, although
    “a distinct phase of a criminal trial,” is “‘a step toward the final disposition of a
    prosecution.’” Harris, 420 Md. at 320 (quoting Sigma, 
    297 Md. at 666
    ). Here, by contrast,
    a ruling on continuation of shelter care is a “separable branch of the case,” not a step on
    which other steps build.
    Similarly, in In re Samone, the Court of Appeals declined to treat an order denying
    a mother’s motion for an independent evaluation to determine whether a bond existed
    between her and her children as an appealable collateral order. 
    385 Md. at
    316 n.13. There,
    the children had been adjudicated CINA and, after a periodic review hearing, were placed
    on a permanency plan of adoption. 
    Id. at 288
    . Before an annual review hearing, the mother
    28
    filed a motion for an independent clinical study to assess her relationship with the children
    and to determine whether removal of the children from foster care would be harmful. 
    Id. at 291
    . The trial court denied the mother’s motion and reaffirmed the adoption permanency
    plan. 
    Id. at 296
    . Although the primary focus of the Court’s opinion was on whether the
    order was appealable under § 12-303(3)(x) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings
    Article—and the Court found it was not, id. at 316—the Court also concluded that the order
    was not appealable under the collateral order doctrine. Id. at 316 n.13. Addressing the
    third prong of that doctrine, the Court concluded that the order was “not completely
    separate from the merits of the action because such studies are one factor that the court
    relies upon to assess child placement.” Id.
    Here, the shelter care determination is not a “step toward the final disposition” of a
    CINA proceeding. Shelter care runs its course not in the path of the CINA adjudication,
    but collaterally, in its own lane, without advancing or hindering the final CINA decision.
    That, combined with its conclusive resolution of an important issue that is effectively
    unreviewable on direct appeal, renders it among the narrow class of orders reviewable
    under the collateral order doctrine.
    III.   THE COURT MUST FIND, BY A PREPONDERANCE, THE FACTORS
    REQUIRED TO CONTINUE SHELTER CARE.
    As a matter of first impression, we must determine what standard of proof a juvenile
    court must use in determining whether to authorize continued shelter care. Here, the
    juvenile court used a preponderance of the evidence standard. Father argues that the
    juvenile court got the standard right. The Department and O.P. contend that the court must
    29
    apply a lower standard: either reasonable under the circumstances or reasonable grounds
    to believe that continuation of shelter care is warranted. Mother advocates for a clear and
    convincing standard. We begin our analysis, as we must, with the plain language of the
    statute.
    A.     Statutory Construction
    “When we construe a statute, we search for legislative intent.” Bell v. Chance, 
    460 Md. 28
    , 53 (2018). Our “primary guide” in that search is the statutory text. 
    Id.
     “We begin
    our analysis by looking to the normal, plain meaning of the language of the statute.” Wash.
    Gas Light Co. v. Md. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 
    460 Md. 667
    , 682 (2018) (quoting Shealer v.
    Straka, 
    459 Md. 68
    , 84 (2018)). We “read[] the statute as a whole to ensure that no word,
    clause, sentence or phrase is rendered surplusage, superfluous, meaningless or nugatory.”
    
    Id.
     We also read the plain language “within the context of [its] statutory scheme,” and
    “consider[] the purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute . . . .”
    Espina v. Jackson, 
    442 Md. 311
    , 322 (2015) (quoting Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Marcas,
    LLC, 
    415 Md. 676
    , 685-86 (2010)). We must also “check our interpretation against the
    consequences of alternative readings of the text. Throughout this process, we avoid
    constructions that are illogical or nonsensical, or that render a statute meaningless.” Bell,
    460 Md. at 53 (internal citation omitted).
    The provision we are construing is § 3-815(d) of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings
    Article, which provides:
    (d) A court may continue shelter care beyond emergency shelter care only if
    the court finds that:
    30
    (1) Return of the child to the child’s home is contrary to the safety and
    welfare of the child; and
    (2)(i) Removal of the child from the child’s home is necessary due to an
    alleged emergency situation and in order to provide for the safety of the
    child; or
    (ii) Reasonable efforts were made but were unsuccessful in preventing
    or eliminating the need for removal of the child from the home.
    The parties do not dispute what the juvenile court must find before it may authorize
    continued shelter care. The statute spells that out in subsubsections (d)(1) and (d)(2). Nor
    do the parties dispute that it is the local department’s burden to prove those things.13 The
    question at the center of their dispute is the standard by which the juvenile court must find
    those things.
    The statute provides that a court may continue shelter care “only if it finds” the
    conditions listed in the statute. In arguments that are grounded more in policy than the
    language of the statute, the Department and O.P. argue that this language does not mean
    that the court need find that those things are true—even by the standard of more likely than
    not—but that it need only conclude that there is a reasonable possibility that they might be
    true. Our analysis here is guided by that of the Court of Appeals in Volodarsky v.
    Tarachanskaya, 
    397 Md. 291
     (2007). There, the Court analyzed a different statute, but one
    that similarly balances considerations relating to the health and safety of children with the
    fundamental liberty interests of parents in raising their children.
    13
    The Department, however, does argue that if it carries the burden of showing
    continued shelter care would be “reasonable under the circumstances,” the burden would
    “then shift[] to the parents to demonstrate the child will be safe if returned home.”
    31
    In Volodarsky, the Court of Appeals explored the standard of proof to be applied in
    determining whether abuse or neglect had occurred in the context of § 9-101 of the Family
    Law Article. Id. at 292. Under that statute, if a “court has reasonable grounds to believe
    that a child has been abused or neglected by a party to the proceeding,” the court is not
    permitted to give custody or unsupervised visitation to that party unless it “specifically
    finds that there is no likelihood of further child abuse or neglect by the party.” 
    Md. Code Ann., Fam. Law § 9-101
    . The question in Volodarsky was by what standard of proof a
    court must make the initial finding that abuse or neglect has occurred so as to give rise to
    the obligation to make the subsequent finding. The circuit court in that case recognized
    that there was evidence that the child had been “exposed to sexual behavior,” but the court
    was not “convinced by a preponderance of the evidence that [the child had] been the victim
    of sexual abuse, or that her father [had] perpetrated sexual abuse.” 
    Id. at 302
    . This Court
    reversed, determining that the correct standard was not preponderance, but, as specified in
    the statute, “reasonable grounds to believe” that abuse or neglect had occurred. 
    Id. at 293
    .
    The Court of Appeals determined that, in the context of § 9-101, there is no tension
    between the application of a preponderance standard and the statute’s “reasonable grounds
    to believe” language. Id. at 304. That, the Court held, is because the statutory language
    “requir[ing] a specific finding that ‘further abuse or neglect’ is not likely clearly implies
    that there must be some sort of finding or determination by the court that abuse or neglect
    likely occurred in the first instance.” Id. For that to be true, the Court observed, the earlier
    32
    finding must have been made by, at a minimum, a preponderance of the evidence
    standard.14 Id. at 308. Anything else would not be a finding at all.
    In reaching this conclusion, the Court drew extensively from Addington v. Texas,
    
    441 U.S. 418
     (1979), in which “the Supreme Court set forth the function of a standard of
    proof and explained the three standards that exist.” Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 304
    . “The
    function of a standard of proof,” noted the Court, “as that concept is embodied in the Due
    Process Clause and in the realm of factfinding, is to instruct the factfinder concerning the
    degree of confidence our society thinks he should have in the correctness of factual
    conclusions for a particular type of adjudication. ” 
    Id. at 305
     (quoting Addington, 
    441 U.S. at 423
    ).
    Quoting Addington, the Court of Appeals described the standard of proof at “the
    low end” of the spectrum as “a mere preponderance of the evidence,” which is the standard
    used in “the typical civil case involving a monetary dispute between private parties, the
    outcome of which is of minimal concern to society.” Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
     (quoting
    Addington, 
    441 U.S. at 423
    ). When using that standard, the parties “share the risk of error
    14
    We note that we are concerned here with what it means for a court to “find”
    something, not with what it means for “reasonable grounds” to exist. In Volodarsky, the
    Court of Appeals read “reasonable grounds,” in the context of § 9-101, to require a
    preponderance standard only because of the later reference in the same statute to the court
    “find[ing]” something else, which the Court concluded necessarily implies a
    preponderance standard. Later in the same year that it decided Volodarsky, the Court
    concluded that “reasonable grounds” can, in other contexts, refer to a standard that is well
    short of preponderance. See Motor Vehicle Administration v. Shepard, 
    399 Md. 241
    ,
    258-59 (2007) (concluding, in context of statute authorizing police officer to pull over a
    driver suspected of driving under the influence, that “reasonable grounds means less than
    probable cause. Ipso facto, it does not mean preponderance of the evidence.”).
    33
    in roughly equal fashion.” 
    Id.
     “The intermediate standard, of clear, cogent, or convincing
    evidence, is used in cases, such as fraud, quasi-criminal wrongdoing, or ‘to protect
    particularly important individual interests in various civil cases’ where the interest at stake
    is ‘deemed to be more substantial than mere loss of money.’” Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
    (quoting Addington, 
    441 U.S. at 424
    ). The highest standard, beyond a reasonable doubt,
    applies to cases that “are of such magnitude that historically and without any explicit
    constitutional requirement they have been protected by standards of proof designed to
    exclude as nearly as possible the likelihood of an erroneous judgment.” Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
     (quoting Addington, 
    441 U.S. at 423
    ). The Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals
    observed, did “not even contemplate[]” a standard of proof lower than a preponderance of
    the evidence. Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
    .
    From this, the Court of Appeals reasoned that it could not possibly be the case that
    a court’s “finding,” especially in the context of § 9-101, could be premised on a standard
    lower than preponderance: “It defies logic and reason to permit a court to make what is
    essentially a finding of fact, especially one that may lead to the deprivation of a
    Constitutionally-based right of access to one’s child, when the court is unable to find, even
    by the slimmest margin, that the fact is more likely so than not.” Id. at 305-06. In other
    words, for a court to “find” something, it must be persuaded to at least some minimal extent
    that that thing is true.
    Particularly notable for our purposes is the Court’s analysis in Volodarsky
    distinguishing situations in which a trial court is called upon to make a finding of fact as to
    34
    which it must be persuaded and other situations in which a trial court is called upon only
    to determine whether certain objective circumstances are identified that, if true, would be
    legally sufficient. The preponderance standard is not required for an objective analysis “in
    situations in which only a preliminary determination need be made, based on incomplete
    and often non-testimonial hearsay evidence,” such as in considering whether there is
    probable cause to issue a warrant. Id. at 306. In that case, “the issuing magistrate usually
    takes the affidavit offered in support of the application at face value and determines only
    whether the facts alleged are legally sufficient to establish probable cause.” Id. “The
    magistrate is normally not required to make ultimate credibility determinations or weigh
    the ultimate persuasiveness of the averments in the affidavit and, unless the application or
    documents offered in support of the application are deficient or suspiciously ambiguous,
    usually has no basis for doing so.” Id. at 306-07. Section 9-101 determinations, by
    contrast, are not probable cause determinations. The “ultimate factual decisions are made
    by a judge based on conflicting testimonial evidence.” Id. at 307. Thus, “[i]t is by using
    the preponderance standard that the judge determines whether reasonable grounds exist.”
    Id. at 308; see also In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. 551
    , 587 (2003) (“The burden is on the parent
    previously having been found to have abused or neglected his or her child to adduce
    evidence and persuade the court to make the requisite finding under § 9-101(b).”).
    A decision under § 3-815(d) falls somewhere in between the finding required by
    § 9-101 of the Family Law Article and a magistrate’s probable cause determination
    regarding a warrant. On one hand, a decision under § 3-815(d) is only preliminary and
    35
    may be based on evidence, including hearsay, that could not be introduced in a proceeding
    in which the Rules of Evidence apply. On the other hand, the court need not assume the
    facts presented by the local department are true and it is able to make at least some
    credibility determinations. Unlike a probable cause determination in which the court has
    only the allegations written in the warrant application, a juvenile court assessing whether
    to continue shelter care receives evidence from both sides and, at least when the evidence
    is in dispute, “the court must receive testimony as to the material, disputed allegations.” In
    re Damien F., 
    182 Md. App. 546
    , 584 (2008).
    In that context, we find both the procedure the statute requires and its language
    governing the decision the juvenile court must make to be particularly instructive. As to
    procedure, the General Assembly did not simply provide for a juvenile court to review the
    allegations in a petition to determine whether, if true, they would justify a continuation of
    shelter care. Instead, the statute requires the juvenile court to hold a hearing that, absent
    good cause, must take place “not later than the next day on which the circuit court is in
    session.” Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-815(c)(2)(ii). That hearing, as noted, is an adversarial one
    in which parents are able to challenge through cross-examination the evidence presented
    by the local department and, even more significantly, present their own evidence. Damien
    F., 182 Md. App. at 583. Indeed, in Damien F., this Court found that a juvenile court that
    refused to permit parents to present evidence to dispute the local department’s allegations
    based on a belief that a shelter care hearing is analogous to a probable cause determination
    made a “serious error” and “misconstrued the nature of a shelter care hearing.” Id.
    36
    The General Assembly’s choice of language to identify the juvenile court’s role is
    equally clear: “A court may continue shelter care beyond emergency shelter care only if
    the court finds that . . . .” (emphasis added). This language requires the court not to defer
    to or assume the truth of allegations in a petition, but to actually find—in other words, as
    Volodarsky instructs, to be at least slightly persuaded as to the truth of—the things the
    statute specifies. Moreover, by stating that the juvenile court may continue shelter care
    “only if” it makes those findings, the language makes clear that the juvenile court lacks
    discretion to continue shelter care in the absence of making those findings. To conclude,
    as the Department and O.P. advocate, that the juvenile court must order continued shelter
    care if the evidence persuades the court only of a reasonable possibility that a return home
    would be contrary to the child’s health and safety, without regard to whether the court
    believes it likely to be true, would require us to ignore the language chosen by the General
    Assembly.15
    This conclusion accords with the common understanding of what it means to “find”
    something as reflected in legal and popular dictionaries. Black’s Law Dictionary defines
    find as: “To determine a fact in dispute by verdict or decision.” Black’s Law Dictionary,
    “find,” at 749 (10th ed. 2014). Merriam–Webster similarly defines find as: “to determine
    15
    To be sure, the findings required by § 3-815(d) are preliminary. Both parties are
    generally at only the preliminary stage of gathering and understanding the evidence,
    rendering the record presented at such a hearing necessarily incomplete and so generally
    inadequate to serve as a basis for ultimate factual determinations. That, however, does not
    dictate that we can ignore the General Assembly’s choice of language requiring that the
    juvenile court actually be persuaded by the “slimmest margin,” Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
    , as to the likely correctness of those facts before authorizing continued shelter care.
    37
    and make a statement about.” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary “find,” at 469
    (11th ed. 2014); see also New Oxford American Dictionary, “find,” at 647 (“ascertain
    (something) by study, calculation, or inquiry” or “officially declare to be the case”). These
    definitions support our conclusion that the requirement that the court “find” certain things
    to be true must necessarily mean that the court must be persuaded that it is more likely than
    not that those things are true.
    Our conclusion from plain language is also consistent with case law in other
    contexts, which provides that in the absence of an explicit statement that a different
    standard of proof applies, a court’s findings are ordinarily made by a preponderance
    standard. See, e.g., Coleman v. Anne Arundel County Police Dep’t, 
    369 Md. 108
    , 129
    (2002) (noting that “the preponderance of the evidence standard is generally applied in
    civil cases”) (quoting Everett v. Balt. Gas and Elec. Co., 
    307 Md. 286
    , 301 (1986)); Wills
    v. State, 
    329 Md. 370
    , 373-74 (1993); Mathis v. Hargrove, 
    166 Md. App. 286
    , 310 n.5
    (2005); Attorney Grievance Comm’n of Maryland v. Ward, 
    394 Md. 1
    , 16 (2006); see also
    2 McCormick on Evid. § 339 (7th ed.) (“According to the customary formulas a party who
    has the burden of persuasion of a fact must prove it in criminal prosecutions ‘beyond a
    reasonable doubt,’ in certain exceptional controversies in civil cases, ‘by clear, strong and
    convincing evidence,’ but on the general run of issues in civil cases ‘by a preponderance
    of evidence.’”).
    Thus, by its plain language, § 3-815(d) precludes a juvenile court from continuing
    shelter care unless the court is persuaded, by the evidence presented at a shelter care
    38
    hearing, that it is at least more likely than not that (1) returning home is contrary to the
    child’s safety and welfare and (2) removal is necessary due to an alleged emergency and
    to provide for the child’s safety, or reasonable efforts were made but were unsuccessful in
    preventing or eliminating the need for removal.
    That, however, is not the end of our analysis, because our construction of this statute
    must “consider[] the purpose, aim, or policy of the” General Assembly. Espina, 442 Md.
    at 322. That is particularly so here, where both sides of the dispute claim that important
    policy-based interests that the General Assembly intended to protect in the statute counsel
    interpretations in their favor. Indeed, both sides are correct, as this case presents a clash of
    competing interests of the highest order—the State’s parens patriae interest in protecting
    children from harm and the fundamental liberty interest of parents in raising their children.
    Moreover, both sides are also correct that the General Assembly had as an expressly-
    identified purpose of Subtitle 8 the protection of each of these interests, among others:
    (1) To provide for the care, protection, safety, and mental and physical
    development of any child coming within the provisions of this subtitle;
    . . .; [and]
    (3) To conserve and strengthen the child’s family ties and to separate a child
    from the child’s parents only when necessary for the child’s welfare; . . . .
    Id. § 3-802(a).
    Because these competing interests push in opposite directions, we discuss each of
    them in turn to determine whether our plain language interpretation of § 3-815(d) is in
    keeping with the public policy purposes of the General Assembly, or whether a different
    interpretation or imposition of a “judicial gloss” is warranted. See Koshko v. Haining, 398
    
    39 Md. 404
    , 426-27 (2007) (reading additional requirements into the grandparent visitation
    statute as a “judicial gloss” to bring it “into compliance with constitutional principles”).
    B.     The Fundamental Liberty Interest of Parents
    “The proper starting point for legal analysis when the State involves itself in family
    relations is the fundamental constitutional rights of a parent.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. at 565
    .
    The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution protects parents’ right to
    raise their “children as [they] see[] fit, without undue interference by the State.” 
    Id.
     “The
    United States Supreme Court has long avowed the basic civil right encompassed by child
    rearing and family life.” In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. 687
    , 705 (2001). Maryland courts have
    “consistently echoed the Supreme Court, declaring a parent’s liberty interest in raising a
    child a fundamental one . . . .”         In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. at 566
    ; see also In re
    Adoption/Guardianship Nos. CAA92–10852 & CAA92–10853, 
    103 Md. App. 1
    , 12 (1994)
    (“This right is in the nature of a liberty interest that has long been recognized and protected
    under the state and federal constitutions.”). “This liberty interest provides the constitutional
    context which looms over any judicial rumination on the question of custody or visitation.”
    Koshko, 398 Md. at 423.
    We view this right to be so fundamental that it “cannot be taken away unless clearly
    justified.” In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 705
     (quoting Boswell v. Boswell, 
    352 Md. 204
    , 218
    (1998)). “The Legislature and the Supreme Court have both expressed the view that
    children should not be uprooted from their family but for the most urgent reasons.” In re
    Jertrude O., 
    56 Md. App. 83
    , 99 (2003) We have recognized that “depriving a parent of
    40
    custody of a child is a drastic measure that should only be taken when necessary for the
    welfare of the child.” In re Joseph G., 94 Md. App. at 350. Thus, “[t]he fear of harm to
    the child or to society must be a real one predicated upon hard evidence; it may not be
    simply gut reaction or even a decision to err-if-at-all on the side of caution.” Id. at 351
    (quoting In re Jertrude O., 56 Md. App. at 100).
    This fundamental right gives rise to a presumption “that it is in the child’s best
    interest to be placed with a parent.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. at 566, 572
    ; see also Koshko,
    398 Md. at 423-24 (“Where parents claim the custody of a child, there is a prima facie
    presumption that the child’s welfare will be best subserved in the care and custody of its
    parents rather than in the custody of others, and the burden is then cast upon the parties
    opposing them to show the contrary.”) (quoting Monroe v. Monroe, 
    329 Md. 758
    , 781 n.4
    (1993) (Eldridge, J. concurring)). “If it were otherwise, the most disadvantaged of our
    adult citizens always would be at greater risk of losing custody of their children than those
    more fortunate. Those of our citizens coping with emotional or mental difficulties could
    be faced with such discrimination.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. at 571
    . “This presumption is
    premised on the notion that ‘the affection of a parent for a child is as strong and potent as
    any that springs from human relations and leads to desire and efforts to care properly for
    and raise the child, which are greater than another would be likely to display.’” Koshko,
    398 Md. at 424 (quoting Melton v. Connolly, 
    219 Md. 184
    , 188 (1959)).
    The statutory recognition of the fundamental nature of this right is reflected not only
    in the statement of the express purpose of the State in § 3-802(3), but in requirements such
    41
    as the provision of counsel at State expense to indigent parents “at every stage of the
    proceedings” pursuant to § 3-813, In re Damien F., 182 Md. App. at 568, and the
    requirement to hold an immediate hearing on shelter care, with notice to the parents, after
    the local department removes a child, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-815(c) & Md. Rule 11-112(a).
    We recognize that the temporary deprivation of custody of one’s children pursuant
    to a shelter care order is less intrusive to a parent’s fundamental liberty interest than is a
    permanent or long-term deprivation of custody. However, that difference is one of degree
    only and “is not a difference of constitutional magnitude.” Koshko, 398 Md. at 430.
    Temporarily removing a child from a parent’s custody for weeks or months undoubtedly
    “intrudes upon the fundamental right of parents to direct the ‘care, custody, and control’ of
    their children.” Id.
    C.     The Court’s Parens Patriae Responsibility to Protect Children
    Our courts have been equally clear that as important an interest as parents have in
    raising their children, it is not absolute. “One need not wander far into the thickets of
    family law before running into situations and circumstances where application of an
    absolute right of the parent would fail to produce a just result.” In re Yve S., 
    373 Md. at 568
    . Due process demands the balancing of all of the competing interests involved in the
    litigation, and, in the context of family law, “the State’s interest is to protect the child’s
    best interests as parens patriae.” 
    Id. at 569
     (quoting Wolinski v. Browneller, 
    115 Md. App. 285
    , 300 (1997)). The doctrine of parens patriae emanates from the “State’s interest in
    protecting the health, safety, and welfare of its citizenry.” Id at 569. Pursuant to that
    42
    doctrine, “the State of Maryland has an interest in caring for those, such as minors, who
    cannot care for themselves.” In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 705
    . A juvenile court thus
    possesses “wide discretion concomitant with [its] ‘plenary authority to determine any
    question concerning the welfare of children within [its] jurisdiction.’”            Reichert v.
    Hornbeck, 
    210 Md. App. 282
    , 305 (2013) (quoting Bienenfeld v. Bennett-White, 
    91 Md. App. 488
    , 503 (1992)).
    Therefore, “the best interests of the child may take precedence over the parent’s
    liberty interest in the course of a custody, visitation, or adoption dispute.” In re Mark M.,
    
    365 Md. at 706
     (quoting Boswell v. Boswell, 
    352 Md. 204
    , 219 (1998)); see also In re
    Adoption/Guardianship No. 10941, 
    335 Md. 99
    , 113 (1994) (noting that “the controlling
    factor . . . is . . . what best serves the interest of the child”). “That which will best promote
    the child’s welfare becomes particularly consequential where the interests of a child are in
    jeopardy, as is often the case in situations involving sexual, physical, or emotional abuse
    by a parent.” In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 706
    . A child’s welfare is a “compelling state
    interest,” Koshko, 398 Md. at 426, that “is a consideration that is of transcendent
    importance when the child might . . . be in jeopardy.” In re Najasha B., 
    409 Md. 20
    , 33
    (2009) (quoting In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 705-06
    ).
    “The broad policy of the CINA Subtitle is to ensure that juvenile courts (and local
    departments of social services) exercise authority to protect and advance a child’s best
    interests when court intervention is required.” In re Najasha B., 
    409 Md. at 33
    . Thus,
    “where abuse or neglect is evidenced, particularly in a CINA case, the court’s role is
    43
    necessarily more pro-active.” 
    Id. at 34
     (quoting In Re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 706
    ); see also
    In re Mark M., 
    365 Md. at 706
     (“[C]ourts have a higher degree of responsibility where
    abuse is proven.”). The juvenile court has a “clear and continuous supervisory role to play”
    in CINA proceedings. In re Najasha B., 
    409 Md. at 39
     (quoting In re Justin D., 
    357 Md. 431
    , 449 (2000)). In such cases, a juvenile court “acting under the State’s parens patriae
    authority, is in the unique position to marshal the applicable facts, assess the situation, and
    determine the correct means of fulfilling a child’s best interests.” In re Mark M.., 
    365 Md. at 707
    .
    D.    Returning to Our Statutory Construction
    After considering these two fundamental interests—both compelling in their own
    right, both expressly identified as purposes of the statutory scheme, and both pulling in
    opposite directions—we are unable to conclude that either should cause us to deviate from
    our interpretation of the plain language of the statute. “[W]e are duty bound to strike a
    balance between the State’s compelling interest to do all that it can to protect children from
    child abuse and neglect, while at the same time recognizing the fundamental right of a
    parent to raise his or her child.” In re Damien F., 182 Md. App. at 579-80 (internal citations
    omitted).
    Although the Department and O.P. are undoubtedly correct that courts have an
    obligation to be vigilant and proactive in protecting the health and safety of children who
    have no way to protect themselves, the preponderance standard contained in the statute is
    not inherently inconsistent with that role, especially when viewed in the context of the
    44
    countervailing interest of parents who face being deprived of at least weeks of custody of
    their children. See Volodarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305-06
    . The preponderance of the evidence
    standard requires proof “that something is more likely so than not so. In other words . . .
    such evidence as, when considered and compared with that opposed to it, has more
    convincing force and produces in [one’s] mind[] a belief that it is more likely true than not
    true.” Weisman v. Connors, 
    76 Md. App. 488
    , 502 (1988). Although it weighs slightly
    against the party with the burden of proof, that is a light thumb on the scale for a standard
    that in large measure “share[s] the risk of error” among the parties “in roughly equal
    fashion.” Voladarsky, 
    397 Md. at 305
     (quoting Addington, 
    441 U.S. at 423
    ).
    The Department and O.P. contend that applying the preponderance standard to
    shelter care hearings will make it more difficult to protect children who are at risk.
    However, a local department that has placed a child in emergency shelter care must already
    have made a determination that doing so “is required to protect the child from serious
    immediate danger” and that “[t]here is no parent, guardian, custodian, relative, or other
    person able to provide supervision.” Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-815(b)(1) & (2). The local
    department must also have concluded either (1) that “continued placement in the child’s
    home is contrary to the welfare of the child” and that removal is “reasonable under the
    circumstances” because of an alleged emergency situation or (2) that reasonable efforts to
    prevent or eliminate the need for removal have been unsuccessful and reasonable efforts to
    return the child home are being made. Id. § 3-815(b)(3). At a shelter care hearing, the
    local department is able to convey the bases for its own conclusions on these points to the
    45
    court without the restrictions of the Rules of Evidence. It is not unreasonable to expect
    that the same information that has persuaded the local department of the need to act, if
    effectively conveyed, should also be sufficient to persuade a court that it is more likely
    necessary than not.
    Moreover, we expect juvenile courts assessing whether they are persuaded by a local
    department’s presentation of evidence to be cognizant of the circumstances and limitations
    under which that presentation is being made. Courts should not have unreasonable
    expectations of the local department’s ability to (1) present live testimony from fact or
    expert witnesses with minimal or no notice, (2) marshal documentary evidence that may
    yet be unknown to it or outside of its control in a matter of hours or days, or (3) have
    reached fully-articulated causal analyses of injuries that may have only recently come to
    light and still be under investigation. Preponderance of the evidence is a standard that is
    far short of certainty. It does not demand that a court know anything to be true, only that
    it reach a conclusion—preliminary in the context of a shelter care hearing—as to what is
    more likely than not the case after accounting for the totality of the information presented,
    including both what is known and what is not, and the reasonable inferences that may be
    drawn from both.
    Mother advocates for the more stringent standard of clear and convincing evidence
    based on the risk to the fundamental liberty interest of parents. Her arguments, however,
    fail to take proper account of the countervailing interest in the health and safety of the
    children. Application of the clear and convincing standard at the shelter care stage would
    46
    render the State almost completely helpless to protect some children. Moreover, the local
    department is only required to prove its case at the CINA adjudicatory hearing by a
    preponderance of the evidence. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-817(c). It would be illogical to
    interpret the statute to impose on a local department the obligation to prove its case by clear
    and convincing evidence at the shelter care stage—when it may only have had a matter of
    hours to begin to assemble and process information—and then reduce that standard to a
    preponderance a month later.
    The Department and O.P. find support for their “reasonable” standards in the
    provisions of the statute defining when a local department may place a child in emergency
    shelter care. In making that argument, they rely on the reference in § 3-815(b)(3) to “an
    alleged emergency situation” in which “removal from the home is reasonable under the
    circumstances to provide for the safety of the child.” (emphasis added). We find that
    reference inapplicable for several reasons, most prominently: (1) it is contained only in
    the subsection of the statute identifying when a local department may initiate emergency
    shelter care, and is thus notably absent two subsections later addressing a court’s ability to
    “continue shelter care beyond emergency care,” id. § 3-815(d); and (2) even in its own
    subsection, it applies only to one of several factors that must exist before the local
    department may place a child in emergency shelter care.
    Each party also alleges that the unique nature of the shelter care hearing—having to
    occur immediately following placing a child in emergency shelter care; with neither party
    generally having access to complete information; and not being subject to the Rules of
    47
    Evidence—puts it at a disadvantage that merits a standard of proof that is more favorable
    to it. Although we do not rule out that one party or the other will be placed at a greater
    disadvantage in this procedure in individual cases, we do not expect that the disadvantage
    will always fall on one side. In any event, our decision here is controlled by existing
    statutory language that requires a juvenile court to “find” the existence of certain conditions
    before it is permitted to continue shelter care. Advocates for a different standard may look
    to the General Assembly for a change.
    IV.    THE JUVENILE COURT DID NOT ABUSE ITS DISCRETION IN DENYING THE
    PETITION FOR CONTINUED SHELTER CARE AS TO O.P.
    Turning finally to the facts of this case, we address the claims of the Department
    and O.P. that the juvenile court abused its discretion when it denied the Department’s
    petition for continued shelter care of O.P. The Department, O.P., or both also contend that
    the court erred in finding that (1) a medical expert was available to the Department as a
    witness at the shelter care hearing, (2) the delay in getting medical care for O.P. did not put
    him at “risk of danger,” (3) the parents were credible witnesses, (4) the lack of information
    about the timing of O.P.’s injuries was dispositive, (5) O.P.’s head was growing
    “abnormally large” while in the NICU, and (6) the Department did not make reasonable
    efforts to prevent O.P.’s removal from his home. Although we disagree with some of the
    juvenile court’s comments, we conclude that the court (1) did not clearly err as to the
    findings on which it based its ultimate decision and (2) did not abuse its discretion as to
    that ultimate decision. We address the factual findings first and then the court’s ultimate
    conclusion.
    48
    A.     The Juvenile Court’s Challenged Factual Findings
    The Department and O.P. contend that the court clearly erred in several of its factual
    findings. First, O.P. and the Department contend that the juvenile court erred in finding
    that a medical expert, Dr. Goldstein, was available to the Department as a witness at the
    second de novo shelter care hearing. To the extent the court’s statements indicate an
    expectation that the Department should have had Dr. Goldstein physically present in the
    courtroom, we agree with the Department and O.P.’s criticism. In circumstances in which
    a witness is outside the control of a local department, including a medical professional with
    responsibilities to other patients, it is unreasonable for a court to expect a local department
    to be able to produce that witness at a shelter care hearing on short notice and even more
    unreasonable for a court to penalize the local department for failing to do so. We reject
    that aspect of the juvenile court’s criticism of the Department.
    But we also view the juvenile court’s criticism to be broader than the Department’s
    failure to have Dr. Goldstein physically present in the courtroom. The de novo shelter care
    hearing that commenced on January 8 was the second in this case and it followed the first
    by nearly two weeks. The Department was aware well before the hearing that the juvenile
    court had found Mr. Kay’s description of Dr. Goldstein’s statements and conclusions
    inadequate to support continued shelter care, especially with respect to Mr. Kay’s
    testimony that (1) Dr. Goldstein could not provide any timeline as to when O.P. sustained
    his injuries, (2) based on his discussion with Dr. Goldstein, O.P.’s injuries could have
    occurred while in the NICU, (3) Dr. Goldstein did not say what else the injuries might be
    49
    “consistent” with; (4) the bulging veins on O.P.’s forehead that were identified as part of
    the problem that presented on December 14 had also been present while O.P. was in the
    NICU, and (5) he had a writing stating Dr. Goldstein’s conclusion that O.P.’s injuries were
    consistent with abusive head trauma, but he failed to bring it to court.
    These were significant points, going to the heart of the Department’s contention that
    the injuries demonstrated a need for protection, that seemingly begged for clarification.
    Mr. Kay might have misunderstood Dr. Goldstein, the basis for Dr. Goldstein’s conclusion
    that the injuries were consistent with abusive head trauma, or even what it means when a
    doctor says that injuries are “consistent” with something. But the Department did not
    present any evidence suggesting that anyone went back to ask Dr. Goldstein for any
    clarification, response, or additional information during the nearly two weeks between
    hearings. The juvenile court found it difficult to understand why, as do we. If someone
    had sought clarification, any new information could have been presented by hearsay
    testimony or affidavit. We do not find it clearly erroneous, under these circumstances, for
    the court to have questioned the absence of additional information emanating from Dr.
    Goldstein or another medical professional.16
    Second, O.P. and the Department also challenge the juvenile court’s finding that
    “there was no evidence” that the parents’ delay in seeking medical attention for O.P.
    16
    We pause to make the obvious point that the opportunity to seek clarification that
    presented itself here will not be present during most shelter care hearings. Thus, a local
    department’s inability to clarify on the spot a concern raised in a shelter care hearing will
    not, by itself, ordinarily constitute a fair criticism of a local department’s case.
    50
    between the December 10 incident in which he choked and momentarily stopped breathing
    and his December 14 visit to the pediatrician “in any way harmed the child.” Although
    O.P. showed up at the pediatrician’s office on December 14 with concerning growth in his
    head circumference and other symptoms, no witness—including Mr. Kay—made any
    connection between those injuries and the incident on December 10. Nor do the records of
    the emergency medical personnel who responded on December 10 indicate that they
    identified any abnormalities with O.P.’s head.17 If there was a connection between those
    two things, it was not made at either hearing. The juvenile court’s factual finding that there
    was an absence of evidence to support a causal connection between the delay in seeking
    attention and any of O.P.’s injuries is not clearly erroneous.
    Third, O.P. also argues the juvenile court clearly erred in finding the parents credible
    given the contradictions between their testimony and the evidence presented. We disagree.
    The juvenile court found “both parents to be completely credible,” particularly with respect
    to their accounts of the events “and most especially their concern and caring for an infant
    with multiple medical challenges.” In their testimony, Mother and Father addressed the
    inconsistencies in their prior statements. For example, Mother admitted that in her original
    17
    The evidence presented to the court as to the December 10 incident, and
    particularly the involvement of the responding emergency personnel, was mixed. Although
    the records of the emergency medical personnel reflect that they advised the parents to seek
    medical evaluation and that the refusal of their offer to transport O.P. to the emergency
    room at that time was against medical advice, the records also reflect that the “Primary
    Impression” of the responding medical personnel was that O.P. had no apparent illness or
    injury and that they found him “crying normally, in no apparent distress with good skin
    color.” In light of that, we do not find clearly erroneous the court’s finding that Mother’s
    explanation of her behavior was credible.
    51
    account of the December 10 incident, she “had [her] dates mixed up.” She also explained
    that her lack of distress upon learning that O.P. had temporarily stopped breathing was
    because the same thing had happened twice at the hospital and was caused by O.P.’s
    laryngomalacia. To be sure, there were reasons to doubt the testimony of the parents. They
    originally claimed the choking/not breathing incident occurred on December 12, when it
    actually occurred on December 10—a significant difference when considering the gravity
    of the incident and the delay in seeking medical care. There were also some differences in
    the accounts given by Mother and Father of that incident and what is reflected in the
    narrative provided by the EMS personnel (although those differences are not as stark as the
    Department claims). But the juvenile court, which had the opportunity to observe the
    witnesses as they testified, believed the accounts and explanations provided by Mother and
    Father. “Weighing the credibility of witnesses and resolving any conflicts in the evidence
    are tasks proper for the fact finder.” Fone v. State, 
    233 Md. App. 88
    , 115 (2017) (quoting
    Larocca v. State, 
    164 Md. App. 460
    , 471-72 (2005) (in banc)). “[W]e give ‘due regard to
    the [fact finder’s] finding of facts, its resolution of conflicting evidence, and significantly,
    its opportunity to observe and assess the credibility of witnesses.’” 
    Id.
     Recognizing that
    deference, we find no clear error in the court’s credibility determinations.
    Fourth, the Department argues that the juvenile court also clearly erred by “fail[ing]
    to recognize that the lack of information on the timing of O.P.’s injuries was due to the
    preliminary nature of the shelter care hearing.” Unfortunately for the Department, the
    testimony of its own witness could at least reasonably be construed to the contrary.
    52
    Mr. Kay testified at the first hearing that the Department “really tried to get as much of an
    understanding” as it could regarding the timing of the brain injuries, “but [Dr. Goldstein]
    said medical technology does not allow them to put any dates, whether it was, you know,
    two weeks old, two months old [f]or either of the bleeds.” In other words, Mr. Kay’s
    testimony was that medical science was incapable of determining when the injuries
    occurred, not that the doctors needed more time to do so. Although the Department
    attempts to undermine Mr. Kay’s credibility on that point by noting that he is a lay witness
    without medical training, (1) he was the Department’s only witness; and (2) in the almost
    two weeks between shelter care hearings, the Department apparently did not develop any
    new information to clarify or correct his earlier testimony. On this record, we find no clear
    error in the circuit court’s reliance on the testimony of the Department’s witness.
    Fifth, the Department argues that the court “made an unsupported factual finding
    that O.P.’s head ‘was growing abnormally large’ while he was in the NICU.” However, as
    Mother points out, and as discussed above, the growth chart she submitted into evidence
    shows that while O.P. was in the NICU, his head circumference went from the 50th
    percentile to above the 97th percentile.18 Although the Department points out that the
    growth of O.P.’s head then stabilized for a three-week period, (1) the majority of that period
    18
    The growth chart relied on by Mother is specifically for prematurely-born infants
    and is based on gestation age. Other information in the medical records seems to be
    consistent at least with the conclusion that by the time he was discharged, O.P.’s head was
    large in comparison to the rest of his body. For example, on November 27, just a few days
    after O.P. was discharged, his head circumference was in the 20th percentile for all babies
    (presumably based on birth age, not gestation age), while his weight and length were below
    the first percentile.
    53
    occurred after O.P. left the NICU and (2) it does not alter the fact that, according to the
    chart, O.P.’s head grew at a faster-than-normal rate during his stay in the NICU. We find
    no clear error in this factual finding.
    Sixth, the Department also challenges the court’s finding that the Department did
    not make reasonable efforts to prevent O.P.’s removal from his home. The basis for the
    court’s finding was that when it was told that medical personnel believed O.P.’s injuries
    “were due to non-accidental trauma,” the Department abandoned a safety plan it had been
    developing that would have required the parents’ interactions with O.P. to be supervised
    by O.P.’s maternal grandfather, who lived in the same household. Although the juvenile
    court concluded that the Department had not proven the need for continued shelter care to
    its satisfaction, there is no indication anywhere in the record that the Department was
    proceeding in bad faith or that it did not genuinely believe that O.P.’s injuries were the
    result of non-accidental trauma that had taken place in the home in which O.P. lived with
    his parents and grandfather. Once it came to that belief, it was certainly not unreasonable
    for the Department to second-guess a safety plan that would have left supervisory
    responsibilities with one of the individuals who “could also be a possible cause of the head
    trauma.” The juvenile court clearly erred in finding otherwise. However, it does not appear
    that this error affected the result, which was based primarily on the court’s conclusion that
    the Department failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that O.P.’s injuries were
    non-accidental or caused by the parents.
    54
    B.     The Juvenile Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Rendering Its
    Ultimate Conclusion Denying Continued Shelter Care.
    The juvenile court’s ultimate conclusion denying shelter care is reviewed for an
    abuse of discretion, which occurs only when a juvenile court’s decision is “well removed
    from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court and beyond the fringe of what that
    court deems minimally acceptable.” In re Adoption/Guardianship of C.A. & D.A., 
    234 Md. App. 30
    , 45 (2017) (quoting In re Adoption/Guardianship No. 3598, 
    347 Md. 295
    , 313
    (1977)).
    On this record, and affording proper deference to the factual determinations and
    ultimate decision of the juvenile court, we cannot say the court’s denial of shelter care was
    “well removed from any center mark” or “beyond the fringe” of what this Court “deems
    minimally acceptable.” 
    Id.
     The Department presented its case through a single witness
    whose testimony conceded that (1) O.P.’s injuries could have been sustained while in the
    NICU and (2) medical science was not capable of proving otherwise. A different factfinder
    might have been skeptical of both concessions, but neither was contradicted and the court
    was entitled to credit them. The same witness testified that he had received written
    confirmation from a doctor that the injuries were consistent with abusive head trauma but
    failed to (1) provide the confirmation or (2) articulate what that meant with respect to the
    doctor’s level of confidence that there had been abusive head trauma while O.P. was in the
    care of his parents.    The court also received evidence that O.P.’s head had grown
    significantly faster than normal while in the NICU and that the protruding veins observed
    in his forehead on December 14 had also been present while in the NICU. Moreover, the
    55
    court believed the parents, including their explanation for their conduct between December
    10 and 14, which was at least partially supported by records of the responding emergency
    medical personnel indicating that upon arrival they found O.P. in good health and with no
    apparent injury or illness.
    Taking this and the rest of the evidence presented into account, the court found itself
    unpersuaded of those things it was required to find: that O.P.’s return home would be
    contrary to his safety and welfare and that removal of O.P. from his home was necessary
    because of an emergency situation and to provide for his safety. Although the record
    certainly contained sufficient information for a reasonable factfinder to have reached the
    opposite conclusion, in light of the evidence presented, we cannot say that the juvenile
    court’s conclusion here was so far “beyond the fringe” as to constitute an abuse of
    discretion.
    ORDER OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
    56