In re M.M. and C.M., Juveniles , 200 Vt. 540 ( 2015 )


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  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
    revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
    of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court,
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    2015 VT 122
    No. 2015-144
    In re M.M. and C.M., Juveniles                              Supreme Court
    On Appeal from
    Superior Court, Franklin Unit,
    Family Division
    July Term, 2015
    Howard E. Van Benthuysen, J.
    Matthew F. Valerio, Defender General, and Joshua O’Hara, Appellate Defender, Montpelier, for
    Appellant Mother.
    William H. Sorrell, Attorney General, and Benjamin D. Battles, Assistant Attorney General,
    Montpelier, for Appellee State.
    PRESENT: Dooley, Skoglund, Robinson and Eaton, JJ., and Burgess, J. (Ret.),
    Specially Assigned
    ¶ 1.    EATON, J. Mother appeals from the trial court’s order finding M.M. and C.M.
    to be children in need of care or supervision (CHINS). We affirm.
    ¶ 2.    M.M. was born in September 2006; C.M. was born on June 25, 2014. The
    Department for Children and Families (DCF) began working with mother in June 2012. On June
    25, 2014, DCF filed a petition alleging that M.M. and C.M. were CHINS. The parties agreed to
    a conditional care order with mother retaining custody subject to extensive conditions. Father
    was incarcerated at the time.
    ¶ 3.    Following a January 2015 merits hearing, the court found the children to be
    CHINS. The trial court made the following findings. Mother became an opiate addict at age
    eighteen after which she “embarked on an unhappy diaspora of addiction.” She has been on and
    off Suboxone for nine years. Mother’s addiction issues may include alcohol. In October 2013,
    mother was arrested for driving while intoxicated. Her BAC Datamaster test result was .159%,
    roughly twice the legal limit for intoxication, which the court found sufficiently high to show an
    unhealthy tolerance for alcohol. Daughter M.M., then age seven, was riding in mother’s car at
    the time of mother’s DWI. She was not in a child safety seat or booster seat but was instead
    lying on the backseat with a seatbelt draped over her. The arresting officer was very familiar
    with mother and M.M. and he recognized them on contact. He had previously stopped and
    warned mother for allowing M.M. to ride in the car without proper restraints. The officer
    estimated that M.M. weighed fifty pounds at the time of mother’s DWI.
    ¶ 4.    The court found that mother has been on and off treatment over the years. Some
    of the events that interrupted her prolonged treatment were outside of her control, such as the
    retirement of one of her doctors. It concluded that others, like losing her license and therefore
    her transportation to treatment in April 2014, were entirely her own fault. From the late fall of
    2013 to May 2014, mother was not in treatment. Mother became pregnant with C.M. in the fall
    of 2013. During that fall and winter, mother was using street, or unprescribed, buprenorphrine
    (Suboxone).
    ¶ 5.    In the spring of 2014, after mother revealed her street buprenorphrine use, a
    public health nurse told mother that she should continue to use the drug to avoid the harmful
    prospect of intrauterine damage to the unborn child and herself if she suddenly stopped. When
    mother returned to professional treatment on May 20, 2014, she was prescribed Subutex, a form
    of Suboxone. As a result of her self-medication—which itself then necessitated her being
    2
    prescribed Subutex for her last month of pregnancy—C.M. was born opioid-dependent and
    required two months to be weaned off of opioids.
    ¶ 6.   Despite her recent DWI incident, mother used alcohol on one occasion in
    February 2014 while five months pregnant with C.M. Mother also smokes cigarettes and did so
    throughout her pregnancy.       The court found that not only was C.M. born significantly
    underweight at five pounds, but he also had a heart defect. There was no medical opinion
    provided linking mother’s continued smoking during pregnancy or her episode with alcohol to
    any medical issues with the child in utero, although mother admitted that she had been told by
    hospital personnel that her smoking and drug use may have contributed to the baby’s small birth
    weight.
    ¶ 7.   As indicated above, DCF had been working with mother since June 2012. DCF
    was attempting to assist mother with issues involving domestic abuse by her male partner, failure
    to supervise M.M., and her admitted history of substance abuse. Mother was an inconsistent
    participant in DCF’s efforts to assist her, sometimes refusing to sign releases and disappearing
    for periods of time, but being cooperative and actively engaged in services at other times. For
    his part, father had apparently been in and out of jail and not engaged with the children.
    ¶ 8.   At times, mother had responded to DCF concerns.          When confronted about
    significant dental neglect of M.M., for example, mother scheduled a dentist’s appointment and
    remedied the problem.      The court concluded that M.M.’s dental neglect could likely have
    worsened had DCF not threatened intervention.          Fortunately for mother and the children,
    mother’s father and his girlfriend had consistently stepped up to support mother and protect the
    children.
    3
    ¶ 9.    Based on its findings, the court concluded that at the time the petition was filed,
    both children were CHINS.1 The court determined that M.M. was grossly neglected when on
    two occasions, mother drove while M.M. was unrestrained by an appropriate car seat. In the
    second incident, mother was driving while highly intoxicated. The court found that mother
    exposed her young child to a grave and real risk of serious bodily injury by driving drunk with
    M.M. unrestrained in the car. The court concluded that C.M. was CHINS at the time of the
    petition as well. He was born, in part due to mother’s substance abuse, addicted to opiates2 and
    with a low birth weight. He required two months to be weaned off of substances, substances that
    were present because of mother’s addiction. While all of C.M.’s health problems might not be
    directly attributable to mother’s addiction (mother claimed that his heart condition was genetic),
    the court noted that it was uncontroverted that the child was born addicted. The court also noted
    that while mother was seemingly not ready to take responsibility for that during her testimony, it
    was simply a fact that could not be disputed.
    ¶ 10.   While the children were CHINS, the court noted some positive progress by
    mother since C.M.’s birth. Mother was substance free and in treatment. She lived in her own
    apartment and no longer at her father’s home. She was trying to quit smoking. DCF allowed the
    1
    Although both parties agree that a CHINS determination requires that a child be one
    who is in need of care, 33 V.S.A. §§ 5315(a), 5102(3)(B), the parties have not preserved the
    issue of whether the use of the word “is” requires that the child need care only at the time the
    CHINS petition is filed or whether the child must also need care at the time of the merits
    determination. For purposes of this appeal, both parties agree that the use of the present tense in
    § 5315 and in § 5102 applies only to the time of filing the petition. Accordingly, we do not
    consider the issue further.
    2
    Although witnesses and the trial court stated that C.M. had been exposed in utero to
    opiates, the evidence more accurately indicated C.M. had been exposed to a synthetic
    medication, buprenorphine (Suboxone), which is an opioid as opposed to an opiate. We have
    used the term “opioid” in our analysis, but have not substituted it in place of the parties’ use of
    “opiate” in their contentions. The distinction between an opiate and an opioid does not affect our
    analysis.
    4
    children to be placed with mother. In short, the court concluded, mother seemed to be on a
    positive trajectory toward overcoming her addiction and being a responsible parent.
    ¶ 11.   Mother appeals from the court’s order, raising numerous arguments. She first
    takes issue with some of the court’s findings, arguing that: C.M. was born at five pounds, fifteen
    ounces, which is not “significantly underweight”; C.M. was not “addicted” to opiates as that
    term is technically defined; the court erroneously stated that mother became pregnant with C.M.
    “because” she was using drugs; mother was “in treatment” from the fall of 2013 to May 20,
    2014, even though she refused to sign releases; and her high BAC did not demonstrate an
    “unhealthy tolerance for alcohol.” As to C.M., mother contends that he was not CHINS simply
    because he was opiate-dependent at birth and that the court construed the CHINS statute too
    broadly in reaching its decision.3 Mother also asserts that M.C. was not CHINS because the
    DWI and the dental neglect occurred well before the CHINS petition was filed.
    ¶ 12.   A child is CHINS if he or she “is without proper parental care or subsistence,
    education, medical, or other care necessary for his or her well-being.” 33 V.S.A. § 5102(3)(B).
    As we recently reiterated, “[t]he focus of a CHINS proceeding is the welfare of the child. The
    State must prove, and the court must determine [by a preponderance of the evidence], if the
    allegations in a CHINS petition have been established.” In re B.R., 
    2014 VT 37
    , ¶ 13, 
    196 Vt. 304
    , 
    97 A.3d 867
    (quotation omitted). A child does not need to suffer “actual harm” before he or
    she can be adjudicated CHINS. In re L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 29, 
    195 Vt. 637
    , 
    93 A.3d 553
    . On
    review, we will uphold the trial court’s findings unless they are clearly erroneous, and the court’s
    legal conclusions will stand when supported by the findings. In re D.D., 
    2013 VT 79
    , ¶ 34,
    3
    Mother also filed a motion asking this Court to take judicial notice of a statement made
    by the State in another case, In re D.S., No. 2015-029, 
    2015 WL 3767188
    (Vt. June 1, 2015), that
    the State “does not oppose Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) for pregnant women with
    opiate addictions.” The State reiterates that position in this appeal, but it points to other factors
    in this case that led the court to reach the conclusion that it did. We deny mother’s request to
    take judicial notice of the State’s position in another case.
    5
    
    194 Vt. 508
    , 
    82 A.3d 1143
    . It is not our role “to second-guess the family court or to reweigh the
    evidence.” In re S.B., 
    174 Vt. 427
    , 429, 
    800 A.2d 476
    , 479 (2002) (mem.).
    ¶ 13.   None of the alleged factual errors identified by mother are significant and none
    warrant reversal. See In re R.W., 
    2011 VT 124
    , ¶ 17, 
    191 Vt. 108
    , 
    39 A.3d 682
    (stating that
    Supreme Court applies harmless error analysis in juvenile cases, and will reverse judgment only
    where error has affected substantial rights of party); see also In re D.D., 
    2013 VT 79
    , ¶ 34
    (reiterating that in juvenile proceedings, court’s decision will not be reversed, even if some of
    trial court’s findings are unsupported, “if the remainder of the court’s findings, which are
    supported by the record, are sufficient to sustain the decision” (quotation and brackets omitted)).
    ¶ 14.   The court stated that C.M. was five pounds at birth, which it characterized as
    “significantly underweight” and as a “low birth weight.” Mother points to her testimony that
    C.M. was five pounds, fifteen ounces, when born. Even if the court incorrectly believed that a
    five or six pound newborn is “underweight,” it was not a significant finding in light of other
    evidence of the newborn’s condition. We note that mother herself testified that she was told by
    hospital employees that the child was “a little small,” and that there had been concern during her
    pregnancy, given her drug use and her smoking throughout the pregnancy, that the child would
    have a low birth weight.
    ¶ 15.   It cannot reasonably be disputed that C.M. was “addicted” to opioids at birth
    applying a common-sense definition of that term, or that he needed two months to be weaned off
    of drugs. It is of no moment that the court used the word “addicted” as opposed to opioid-
    dependent. It is beyond dispute that C.M. had to be weaned off drugs because mother used drugs
    while he was pregnant. The reason that mother was put on a prescribed dose of drugs during her
    last month of pregnancy was because mother had used Suboxone she acquired on the street up to
    that point in her pregnancy, and thus, the unborn baby would suffer from acute withdrawal if
    mother were to stop using drugs immediately. Again, mother herself testified to this effect. The
    6
    court’s finding that mother became pregnant “because” she was using drugs appears to be a
    simple misstatement. Alternatively, as the State posits, the court may have been commenting
    that it was unfortunate, because mother was using drugs, that mother became pregnant.
    Regardless, this statement had no bearing on the court’s decision that C.M. was CHINS.
    ¶ 16.   The court’s findings that mother was in and out of treatment and that she refused
    to sign releases are also supported by the evidence. The focus of the court’s concern was
    mother’s inconsistency in addressing her drug problem. It is uncontested that mother has been in
    treatment for nine years. Mother was DWI in October 2013, and she reported to DCF in
    December 2013 that she had relapsed and was using opiates. She was seeing a doctor but the
    doctor had asked her to leave his care. The social worker testified that between December 2013
    and May 2014, mother was inconsistent in providing urine screens and there was a concern that
    she was not in treatment. The social worker further testified that mother was not in treatment
    between February 2014 and May 2014. Mother relapsed with alcohol in February 2014, and she
    acknowledged being kicked out of her doctor’s care. Mother was supposed to go to a daily clinic
    in Burlington but she claimed it was difficult for her to do so. At a May 14, 2014 meeting with
    DCF, mother acknowledged that she was not in treatment and that she was using Suboxone off
    the street. On May 20, 2014, mother entered a program at Fletcher Allen.
    ¶ 17.   Mother’s own testimony echoes this sequence of events.           She described the
    retirement of her treating doctor and her search for a new doctor in the fall of 2013. She testified
    that before she was accepted into the new program in November 2013, she was using Suboxone
    off the street. She continued to use street drugs as she disclosed to DCF at a May 2014 meeting.
    ¶ 18.   Even if it is not completely accurate to say that mother was not in treatment from
    the late fall of 2013 to May 2014, the error is harmless. Her participation was inconsistent, at
    best, and continued to involve the use of street drugs. She enrolled in a course of treatment
    7
    through a hospital only one month before C.M. was born.            Her refusal to sign releases
    concerning her care also raises concerns.
    ¶ 19.   Based on this and other evidence, the court did not err in concluding that C.M.
    was CHINS. This is not a case where mother learned of her pregnancy and immediately sought
    help in a therapeutic setting, following a prescribed course of treatment, as in New Jersey
    Division of Child Protection and Permanency v. Y.N., 104 A.3d. 244 (N.J. 2014). The New
    Jersey court also applied a completely different statutory standard in conducting its analysis.
    Y.N. involved a prosecution of a parent for abusing and neglecting her child, and the State was
    required to prove that the mother “unreasonably inflicted harm on her newborn and did so, at
    least, by acting with gross negligence or recklessness.” 
    Id. at 246,
    253 (stating that New Jersey
    statute “makes clear that parental fault is an essential element for a finding of abuse and
    neglect”). By contrast, “the focus of a CHINS proceeding is the welfare of the child,” In re B.R.,
    
    2014 VT 37
    , ¶ 13 (quotation omitted), and the court must determine if a child is without the
    proper parental care necessary for his or her well-being, 33 V.S.A. § 5102(3)(B).
    ¶ 20.   The New Jersey court held, under the New Jersey statute, that “absent exceptional
    circumstances, a finding of abuse or neglect cannot be sustained based solely on a newborn’s
    enduring methadone withdrawal following a mother’s timely participation in a bona fide
    treatment program prescribed by a licensed healthcare professional to whom she has made full
    disclosure.” 
    Y.N., 104 A.3d at 246
    . Its decision turned on the absence of evidence to show
    parental fault. See 
    id. at 255
    (concluding that lower court erred “by concentrating on harm
    without regard to parental fault”). Even putting aside critical differences in statutory language,
    mother’s disclosure and enrollment in a bona fide treatment program in the instant case one
    month before giving birth cannot be construed as “timely.”
    ¶ 21.   The record here shows that mother was kicked out of treatment, accessed un-
    prescribed Suboxone off the street, and did not return to a medically monitored treatment
    8
    regimen until shortly before the birth of the child. We agree that pregnant women should not run
    the risk that taking prescribed drugs for addiction treatment will necessarily result in a CHINS
    finding should their children be born addicted to medications prescribed to treat that addiction.
    That a child is born addicted to opioids, standing alone, does not necessarily require a finding of
    CHINS where that addiction is the result of the mother consistently and fully following a bona
    fide addiction treatment program. To hold otherwise would serve as a disincentive for pregnant
    women to seek out treatment for their addiction. But such is not the case here. Although access
    to services may provide barriers in some instances, mother had gotten treatment through
    approved sources and lost that opportunity due to her own conduct. Mother’s choice to use
    drugs accessed on the street, without proper medical monitoring, is fraught with danger in a host
    of ways, including abuse of Suboxone itself.
    ¶ 22.   Finally, it was reasonable for the court to consider that a person who can operate a
    car with a BAC of .159—almost twice the legal limit—may have an “unhealthy tolerance for
    alcohol.” Even if this were not a reasonable assumption, the error is harmless. It is undisputed
    that mother was driving while significantly impaired with her minor daughter unrestrained in the
    backseat. This was the focus of the court’s concern, not mother’s relative tolerance for alcohol.
    Mother’s consumption of alcohol on one occasion during her pregnancy does not rise to the level
    of concern necessary to support a CHINS determination. More concerning is the timing of her
    resumption of alcohol use, coming just a few months after a DUI arrest where her BAC was
    nearly twice the legal limit and during a time when she was not in treatment for her opioid
    addiction. The use of alcohol under those conditions, to say nothing of the fact of her pregnancy,
    is evidence that mother’s stability concerning substances was perilous. There was sufficient
    evidence for the Court to find C.M. was CHINS as of the date the petition was filed.
    ¶ 23.   We thus turn to mother’s remaining arguments. Mother argues that the court’s
    findings concerning M.M. were too far removed from the date that the CHINS petition was filed.
    9
    She maintains, and we agree, that a child must be CHINS “at the time of the filing of the
    petition,” In re D.T., 
    170 Vt. 148
    , 156, 
    743 A.2d 1077
    , 1084 (1999), and she asserts that the
    “stale evidence” here cannot support a CHINS ruling.
    ¶ 24.   We reject this argument. As mother acknowledges, we held in In re L.M., that a
    court’s CHINS analysis is not “limited only to the child’s well-being on the precise day that the
    CHINS petition was filed.” 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 20. We explained that:
    Obviously, the circumstances leading up to the filing of the CHINS
    petition are relevant in the court’s assessment. This allows the
    court to have a full picture of the child’s well-being and to base its
    decision on all relevant information; it promotes the care and
    protection of the child, while not unfairly undermining parents’
    interest in maintaining family integrity.
    
    Id. ¶ 25.
      In this case, the court was mindful of mother’s inconsistent record in addressing
    her opioid addiction, addressing M.M.’s basic needs such as dental care, and participating in
    DCF’s efforts to assist her in addressing these and other problems. The record before the court
    showed that mother had been on and off Suboxone for nine years. She was using this drug off
    the street, while pregnant, until a month before the CHINS petition was filed. She was in and out
    of treatment for her opioid addiction and she suffered several relapses before the CHINS petition
    was filed. She neglected M.M.’s dental needs to the point where DCF threatened to intervene.
    She drove with M.M. unrestrained in the car twice. She had been warned by a police officer that
    M.M. must be properly restrained, yet she allowed the child to ride in the back seat again
    unrestrained while she was driving the car in a highly intoxicated state. As the trial court found,
    this placed M.M. at a grave risk of harm. Mother pled guilty to DWI in April 2014, shortly
    before the CHINS petition was filed. This evidence was relevant to an assessment of M.M.’s
    well-being and the trial court could properly consider it in reaching its conclusion. We reject
    mother’s argument that this evidence was too “stale” to support a finding, by a preponderance of
    10
    the evidence, that on June 25, 2014, M.M. was without proper parental care necessary for her
    well-being.
    ¶ 26.   Finally, we reject mother’s suggestion that the court here construed the CHINS
    statute too broadly. The court applied the plain language of the statute and appropriately
    assessed whether the children were without proper parental care necessary for their well-being as
    required by 33 V.S.A. § 5102(3)(B). That mother disagrees with the trial court’s conclusion
    does not render its decision unconstitutional.
    Affirmed.
    FOR THE COURT:
    Associate Justice
    ¶ 27.   ROBINSON, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part. The primary bases
    for the trial court’s finding that C.M. is a child in need of care or supervision (CHINS), and the
    majority’s affirmation thereof, are that mother had a history of struggling with opioid addiction;4
    mother was addicted to opioids at the time she became pregnant and continued to take non-
    prescription buprenorphine during her pregnancy; on the advice of a public health nurse, mother
    entered into a medically supervised opioid-assisted treatment program during the last month of
    4
    “Opiates are drugs derived from opium, the extract of the seeds of the opium poppy,
    and include morphine, codeine, and heroin. The term opioid is more comprehensive and
    includes all agonists and antagonists with morphine-like activity, such as hydrocodone and
    hydromorphone, and synthetic drugs, such as oxycodone, methadone, buprenorphine, and
    fentanyl.” E. Warner & N. Sharma, Laboratory Diagnosis, in Principles of Addiction Medicine
    302 (R. Ries et al. eds., 4th ed. 2009). I use the broader term “opioid” in this opinion because it
    more accurately describes mother’s addiction.
    11
    her pregnancy; and C.M. was born with an opioid dependence5 that required that he undergo two
    months of medically supervised weaning.6
    ¶ 28.   In affirming the trial court’s determination that C.M. is CHINS, the majority’s
    reasoning is essentially as follows: mother’s conduct before C.M. was born placed C.M. at risk;
    after birth C.M. required medical treatment as a result of the opioid dependence the fetus
    developed in utero; therefore, C.M. is a child in need of care or supervision. Alternatively, the
    majority’s opinion could be read to hold that mother had a history of opioid addiction; she had
    been in treatment for only a month at the time the CHINS petition was filed; and therefore, C.M.
    is CHINS.
    ¶ 29.   The majority’s analysis either relies on the view that a mother’s prenatal neglect
    of a fetus that causes injury supports a CHINS finding, or on the view that when a parent is
    5
    There is a distinction between physical dependence and addiction. Nat’l Inst. on Drug
    Abuse, NIH Pub. No. 12–418 Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment: A Research-Based Guide
    24-25 (3d ed. 2012), https://www.drugabuse.gov/sites/default/files/podat_1.pdf. Physical
    dependence occurs when the user’s body has physically adapted to the drug, “requiring more of
    it to achieve a certain effect (tolerance) and eliciting drug-specific physical or mental symptoms
    if drug use is abruptly ceased (withdrawal).” 
    Id. at 24.
    Addiction is “compulsive drug use
    despite harmful consequences . . . characterized by an inability to stop using a drug [and] failure
    to meet work, social, or family obligations.” 
    Id. “Thus, physical
    dependence in and of itself
    does not constitute addiction, but it often accompanies addiction.” 
    Id. at 25.
    See also R.
    Portenoy, Acute and Chronic Pain, in Lowinson and Ruiz’s Substance Abuse: A Comprehensive
    Textbook 699 (P. Ruiz & E. Strain eds., 5th ed. 2011) (“Use of the term addiction as a synonym
    for physical dependence appears to be entrenched in the U.S. medical culture. This unfortunate
    practice reinforces the stigma associated with opioid therapy and should be rejected. The term
    addiction should only be applied to a specific syndrome characterized by a highly maladaptive
    pattern of drug use. If the clinician wishes to characterize the potential for withdrawal, the term
    physical dependence must be used.”). I agree with the majority that the trial court’s use of the
    term “addicted” rather than “dependent” in describing C.M.’s condition is not itself reversible
    error, ante, ¶ 15, but I would not affirmatively endorse the trial court’s imprecise use of
    terminology. For purposes of this opinion, I refer to C.M.’s condition at birth as one of opioid
    dependence, rather than addiction. I use both terms in reference to mother, as the trial court’s
    findings suggest both that mother was addicted to opioids and that her addiction was
    accompanied by a physical dependence.
    6
    I set aside for a moment the trial court’s findings that mother drove while intoxicated
    with L.M. unsecured in the car; she ingested alcohol on one occasion after that; and L.M. had
    dental issues that mother addressed only after DCF raised its concerns. These findings are not
    central to the majority’s and trial court’s analysis with respect to C.M.
    12
    opioid-dependent and has not been in treatment for very long, the child is CHINS. Each of these
    analytic paths is fraught. Neither can support the majority’s affirmance of the court’s CHINS
    decision.
    I.
    ¶ 30.   I consider first the primary path: mother consumed opioids during her pregnancy,
    C.M. was born opioid-dependent and required medical treatment, and therefore C.M. is CHINS.
    I cannot agree that the fact that C.M. required medical treatment after birth on account of
    mother’s conduct while pregnant is a sufficient basis for finding that C.M. is CHINS. I suspect
    that most parents whose children are born opioid-dependent are demonstrably unable to provide
    adequate care for those children once they are born. See infra, ¶¶ 49-50. But we should not
    presume that every child born opioid-dependent is by definition CHINS on account of the fact
    that the child developed an opioid dependence in utero.
    ¶ 31.   I note at the outset that the current standard of care for pregnant women with
    opioid dependence is opioid-assisted therapy with methadone, although emerging evidence
    suggests that buprenorphine also should be considered.7 “Abrupt discontinuation of opioids in
    an opioid-dependent pregnant woman can result in preterm labor, fetal distress, or fetal demise.”
    ACOG Comm. Op., at 1. Opioid-assisted therapy during pregnancy can “prevent complications
    of illicit opioid use and narcotic withdrawal, encourage prenatal care and drug treatment, reduce
    criminal activity, and avoid risks to the patient of associating with a drug culture.” 
    Id. at 3.
    7
    Am. Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynecologists & Am. Soc’y of Addiction Med., Comm.
    on Health Care for Underserved Women, Comm. Op. No. 524, Opioid Abuse, Dependence, and
    Addiction in Pregnancy (May 2012, reaffirmed 2014), [hereinafter ACOG Comm. Op.] at
    1, http://www.acog.org/Resources-And-Publications/Committee-Opinions/Committee-on-
    Health-Care-for-Underserved-Women/Opioid-Abuse-Dependence-and-Addiction-in-
    Pregnancy [http://perma.cc/FS7R96QT]; see also Vt. Dep’t of Health, Div. of Alcohol and Subst
    ance Abuse Programs & Dep’t of Vt. Health Access, Vermont Guidelines for Medication Assiste
    d Treatment (MAT) for Pregnant Women, http://www.uvm.edu/medicine/vchip/documents/VCH
    IP_4MAT_GUIDELINES.pdf, at 1 (recommending, based on studies of impact of methadone
    maintenance during pregnancy, that pregnant opioid-dependent women undergo opioid agonist
    maintenance).
    13
    Accordingly, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends against
    withdrawal—even medically supervised withdrawal—from opioids in opioid-dependent women
    during pregnancy. 
    Id. at 4;
    see also W. Kraft & J. van den Anker, Pharmacologic Management
    of the Opioid Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome, 59 Ped. Clinics of N. Am. 1147, 1150 (2012)
    (“[F]or newborns, the benefits of maternal opioid therapy during pregnancy using methadone in
    a structured program clearly outweigh no therapy.”).
    ¶ 32.   Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) “is an expected and treatable condition that
    follows prenatal exposure to opioid agonists.” ACOG Comm. Op. at 1. NAS is characterized by
    hyperactivity of the central and autonomic nervous systems. 
    Id. at 5.
    The syndrome may cause
    the infant to become irritable, to have “uncoordinated sucking reflexes leading to poor feeding,”
    and to voice a high-pitched cry. 
    Id. These symptoms
    generally develop within twelve to forty-
    eight hours of birth, peak at seventy-two to ninety-six hours, and generally resolve within seven
    days. 
    Id. NAS symptoms
    severe enough to require pharmacologic treatment occur in 55-94% of
    infants born to opioid-dependent mothers. See Kraft & 
    Anker, supra, at 1148
    .8
    ¶ 33.   In short, late in her pregnancy, but before C.M. was born, mother—who had
    struggled with opioid addiction before and during her pregnancy—took the very steps she should
    have taken to treat her own addiction and provide the best outcome for C.M. upon birth.
    ¶ 34.   The majority does not deny this, but essentially argues that the child is CHINS
    because the choices mother made before the child’s birth—in fact, prior to the child’s conception
    insofar as mother was addicted from the outset—led the child to be born with physical opioid
    dependency that required medical treatment after birth. The majority places great weight on the
    8
    NAS is a substantial short-term consequence of in utero opioid exposure for many
    infants. With respect to longer-term impacts, studies have documented effects of prenatal opioid
    exposure on infant neurobehavior and long-term behavior, but there is currently no consensus as
    to the effects of prenatal opioid exposure on cognition, and few data are available regarding
    language achievement. M. Behnke & V. Smith, Am. Academy of Pediatrics, Technical Report,
    Prenatal Substance Abuse: Short- and Long-term Effects on the Exposed Fetus, 1313 Pediatrics
    1009, 1016 (2013).
    14
    harm inflicted on the fetus before birth, and the risk to which mother exposed the fetus, as
    grounds for concluding that the child, once born, is CHINS. I am extremely wary of relying on
    the fact that mother’s prepartum conduct caused the fetus to become opioid-dependent as the
    basis for a CHINS finding. Although a parent’s conduct prior to a child’s birth may support
    inferences about the parent’s ability to care for the child upon birth, I do not believe that we can
    predicate a CHINS finding on harm inflicted on a fetus before birth.
    ¶ 35.   I reach this conclusion for several reasons. First, the statutes governing child
    abuse and neglect cases, are forward-looking. They are to be construed to “provide for the care,
    protection, education, and healthy mental, physical, and social development of children.” 33
    V.S.A. § 5101(a). Although a parent’s prepartum conduct—like other past behavior, such as
    conduct toward a child’s sibling—may be relevant insofar as it supports an inference that the
    child, once born, is at risk of neglect or abuse, the civil child-protection statutes are not designed
    to punish prepartum conduct. As one commentator explained,
    Removal of a child from parental custody or otherwise intervening
    in the child’s and parent’s family life must be accomplished to
    keep the child safe, not to punish a parent for her evil deeds.
    Punishment of a parent’s actions towards a child ought to be left
    strictly to the criminal law.
    L. Nelson & M. Marshall, Ethical and Legal Analyses of Three Coercive Policies Aimed at
    Substance Abuse by Pregnant Women 106-07 (1998). As another has elaborated:
    Past parental conduct will support a finding of neglect or abuse
    only if a court determines that a child is likely to face future harm.
    It is the prediction that a child is likely to come to harm in the
    future that underlies the decision to intervene, not the past parental
    conduct itself. Thus, state intervention is appropriate only when
    the likelihood of future harm to the child is great—that is, when
    past parental conduct correlates strongly with future conduct that is
    likely to cause specific harm to the child . . . . Whether prior
    parental conduct is blameworthy or repulsive should not be of
    concern to the child welfare system.
    15
    C. A. Clarke, FINS, PINS, CHIPS & CHINS: A Reasoned Approach to the Problem of Drug Use
    During Pregnancy, 29 Seton Hall L. Rev. 634, 668 (1998).
    ¶ 36.   Accordingly, “while it should be acknowledged that a woman’s prenatal use of
    drugs, alcohol, or other substances might affect the child’s health and development or make her
    care more challenging and difficult, ‘only drug or alcohol use after the child’s birth will affect
    the mother’s ability to provide appropriate care.’ ” Nelson & 
    Marshall, supra, at 104
    (citing New
    York Legal Aid Soc’y, Juvenile Rights Div., Position Paper, Governmental Action in Cases of In
    Utero Drug or Alcohol Exposure: The Role and Responsibilities of Child Protective Authorities
    and the Family Court [hereinafter Juvenile Rights Div. Position Paper] (Dec. 1997) at 8. As the
    Juvenile Rights Division of the Legal Aid Society of New York9 explained in a 1997 position
    paper:
    Drug and alcohol abuse during pregnancy is insupportable
    behavior because of its potential for harming the developing fetus.
    Yet, in a child-protective context, the salient characteristic of drug
    or alcohol use is its effect on the parent’s ability to provide
    adequate care for the child after birth.
    Juvenile Rights Div. Position Paper at 1. See also B. Robin-Vergeer, Note, The Problem of the
    Drug-Exposed Newborn: A Return to Principled Intervention, 42 Stan. L. Rev. 745, 761, 774-75
    (1990) (“Given . . . that the child welfare system is currently concerned with dealing with the
    drug-exposed infant after [birth], the focus on the harm inflicted upon the child in utero, as if the
    child had been battered, is clearly misplaced, except as it bears on the mother’s ability to care for
    her child in the future.”) (emphasis added).
    ¶ 37.   The question is not what harm mother’s prepartum consumption of opioids caused
    to the developing fetus; instead, the question is what her conduct tells us about her ability to
    9
    The Juvenile Rights Division’s 1997 position paper reflects the view of the
    organization that represented virtually all children on whose behalf neglect or abuse petitions
    were brought in New York City family courts. Juvenile Rights Div. Position Paper at i.
    16
    adequately care for the child after birth. Our own case law buttresses this understanding. As we
    have explained:
    “The issue before the family court at the merits stage of a CHINS
    proceeding is a determination of whether, at the time of the filing
    of the petition, the juvenile is a child in need of care and
    supervision.” This does not mean that the court’s analysis is
    limited only to the child’s well-being on the precise day that the
    CHINS petition was filed. Obviously, the circumstances leading
    up to the filing of the CHINS petition are relevant in the court’s
    assessment. This allows the court to have a full picture of the
    child’s well-being and to base its decision on all relevant
    information; it promotes the care and protection of the child, while
    not unfairly undermining parents’ interest in maintaining family
    integrity.
    In re L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 20, 
    195 Vt. 637
    , 
    93 A.3d 553
    (emphasis added and footnote omitted)
    (quoting In re D.T., 
    170 Vt. 148
    , 156, 
    743 A.2d 1077
    , 1084 (1999)).
    ¶ 38.   To the extent that the majority focuses on the postpartum consequences of the
    harm experienced by the fetus in utero, it departs from the purpose of our child-protection laws,
    and substitutes a judgment about mother’s opioid consumption and her delay in seeking
    treatment for her addiction for an evidence-based analysis of the prospective risk of harm faced
    by C.M.
    ¶ 39.   A second reason that I do not believe a CHINS determination can be based on
    prepartum harm inflicted on a fetus by mother is that our CHINS statute, on its face, is limited to
    protecting children, not fetuses in utero. A “child in need of care or supervision (CHINS)” is, by
    definition, a child. 33 V.S.A. § 5102(3). A “child,” in turn, is defined as an individual of a
    specified age for specified purposes. 
    Id. § 5102(2).
    The statute does not contemplate inclusion
    of fetuses as in need of care or supervision. Any act or risk of abuse or neglect must exist
    postpartum to be recognized as such by our statutes. For similar reasons, other courts have
    refused to apply state child abuse and neglect laws to harms inflicted on a fetus prepartum. For
    example, in declining to affirm the termination of a mother’s parental rights based on her
    17
    injection of cocaine shortly before she went to the hospital to give birth to the child in question,
    the Connecticut Supreme Court explained:
    We also note that we do not endorse the moral quality of the
    conduct of the respondent in this case. Certainly no one approves
    of the intravenous injection of cocaine by a pregnant woman, who
    had been warned of the risks to her fetus, at any time during her
    pregnancy let alone just before the onset of labor. Nor, on the
    other hand, are we here to condemn her for succumbing to what
    may well have been the unyielding demands of her addiction. Our
    task, rather, is to determine whether the legislature, in enacting [the
    termination of parental rights statute], intended it to apply in a case
    such as this. We do not believe that it did.
    In re Valerie D., 
    613 A.2d 748
    , 759 (Conn. 1992).
    ¶ 40.   The court went on to examine the applicable child-protection statute:
    “ ‘Child’ means any person under sixteen years of age.” The
    ordinary usage of the term “parent,” insofar as it applies to the
    female, suggests that, unless the context requires otherwise, it
    means “one [who] . . . brings forth offspring.” Thus, in ordinary
    parlance, until the child in this case was born, or was “brought
    forth,” the respondent was not her “parent” and the conduct of the
    respondent with respect to her was not “parental” conduct.
    Similarly, the definition of “child” as a person “under sixteen years
    of age” suggests a limitation on the applicability of that definition
    to a person who has been born, since that is the ordinary beginning
    point of one’s “age.” Thus, until the moment of birth, Valerie was
    not a “child” within the meaning of [the applicable statute] and,
    therefore, the “act . . . of parental commission” that took place
    before that moment cannot be considered to be parental conduct
    that “denied [her] . . . the care . . . necessary for [her] physical . . .
    well-being.
    
    Id. at 760
    (citations omitted).10
    10
    Although criminal-abuse statutes concededly implicate different considerations,
    especially constitutional concerns, I note that courts have applied similar textual analysis in
    overturning criminal abuse convictions of mothers for consuming drugs during pregnancy. See,
    e.g., State v. Clemons, 2013-Ohio-3415, ¶ 12, 
    996 N.E.2d 507
    (Ct. App.) (reversing conviction
    for corrupting another with drugs based on mother’s prenatal drug use and explaining, “the
    statutory and regulatory scheme in Ohio strongly indicates that where the concerns of the unborn
    are at issue, the legislature and administrative bodies have referred to the unborn specifically.”
    (citation omitted)); State v. Martinez, 2006 NMCA 068, ¶ 13, 
    137 P.3d 1195
    (Ct. App.) (“We
    hold that the Legislature did not intend for a viable fetus to be included within the statutory
    definition of a child for the purposes of the child abuse statute.”); Sheriff, Washoe Cty., Nev. v.
    Encoe, 
    885 P.2d 596
    , 598 (Nev. 1994) (per curiam) (“To interpret [our child-endangerment
    18
    ¶ 41.   Some courts have concluded otherwise—authorizing state intervention to protect
    a newborn child pursuant to general child protection statutes based solely on prior prepartum
    injury to a developing fetus. For example, in In re Baby Boy Blackshear, a divided Ohio
    Supreme Court concluded that “when a newborn child’s toxicology screen yields a positive
    result for an illegal drug due to prenatal maternal drug abuse, the newborn is, for purposes of
    [the applicable child protection statute] per se an abused child.” 
    736 N.E.2d 462
    , 465 (Ohio
    2000). The court concluded that once born, the child fit within the abuse and neglect statute, and
    that the mother’s actions caused the child to experience injury both before and after birth. 
    Id. at 464-65.
    It also stated that “there can be no more sacred or precious right of a newborn infant
    than the right to life and to begin that life, where medically possible, healthy, and uninjured.” 
    Id. at 465;
    see also Matter of Baby X, 
    293 N.W.2d 736
    , 738-39 (Mich. Ct. App. 1980) (noting that,
    “[w]hile there is no wholesale recognition of fetuses as persons, fetuses have been accorded
    rights under certain limited circumstances . . . . when it is for the child’s best interest,” and
    concluding that “a newborn suffering narcotics withdrawal symptoms as a consequence of
    prenatal maternal drug addiction may properly be considered a neglected child” (citations
    omitted)); In re U.P., 
    105 S.W.3d 222
    , 234-36 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003) (affirming termination of
    parental rights of father who, among other things, provided illegal drugs to mother during her
    pregnancy, thereby endangering the child, and explaining, “Under the Texas Family Code, a
    ‘child’ is defined as a person under 18 years of age . . . . However, harm done to a child in utero
    has generally been recognized in Texas when the child has been born alive.”).
    ¶ 42.   Other states have enacted statutes expressly extending the protections of the child
    abuse and neglect statutes to infants who were exposed to alcohol or controlled substances in
    utero. See, e.g., Fla. Stat. Ann. § 39.01(30)(g) (defining “harm [to child’s health],” for purposes
    statute] to cover a mother’s ingestion of illegal substances prior to the birth of her child would be
    a radical incursion upon existing law.”).
    19
    of neglect or abuse finding, to include newborn infant’s physical dependency on a controlled
    drug); Ga. Code Ann. § 15-11-2(2), (56) (including “prenatal abuse” in definition of abuse and
    defining “prenatal abuse” to include prenatal exposure to chronic or severe use of alcohol or
    controlled substances resulting in specified harms or consequences); 750 Ill. Comp. Stat.
    50/1(D)(t) (defining “unfit person” to include biological mother of a child born “with any
    amount of a controlled substance” in his or her blood, urine, or meconium, if biological mother
    had at least one other child previously adjudicated as a neglected minor and an opportunity to
    enroll in treatment); La. Child. Code Ann. art. 603(18), (24) (providing that “[n]eglect includes
    prenatal neglect” and defining “prenatal neglect” as “the unlawful use by a mother during
    pregnancy of a controlled dangerous substance . . . which results in symptoms of withdrawal in
    the infant or the presence of a controlled substance in the infant’s body”); Minn. Stat. § 626.556
    subdiv. 2(g)(6) (defining “neglect” to include “prenatal exposure to a controlled substance
    . . . used by the mother for a nonmedical purpose, as evidenced by withdrawal symptoms in the
    child at birth, [or] results of a toxicology test performed on the mother at delivery or the child at
    birth”).
    ¶ 43.   Given the Vermont Legislature’s recent focus on the epidemic of opioid addiction
    in Vermont and its impact on Vermont families, see, e.g., An Act Relating to Strengthening
    Vermont’s Response to Opioid Addiction and Methamphetamine Abuse, 2013, No. 75 (eff. July
    1, 2013), as well as its recent attention to Vermont’s response to child abuse and neglect, see,
    e.g., An Act Relating to Improving Vermont’s System for Protecting Children from Abuse and
    Neglect, 2015, No. 60 (eff. July 1, 2015), the Legislature is well-positioned to determine, within
    constitutional limitations, the best approach to addressing the serious problems afflicting children
    born with conditions arising from in utero exposure to alcohol, nicotine, and controlled
    substances. I would not preempt that conversation by holding that an infant who is suffering as a
    result of harms in utero is, on that basis alone, CHINS. See Med. Ctr. Hosp. of Vt. v. Lorrain,
    20
    
    165 Vt. 12
    , 16, 
    675 A.2d 1326
    , 1329 (1996) (“The Legislature, not this Court, is better equipped
    to assemble the facts and determine the appropriate remedies in an arena fraught with social
    policy . . . .”); see also Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton, 
    413 U.S. 49
    , 64 (1973) (“We do not sit as
    a super-legislature to determine the wisdom, need, and propriety of laws that touch . . . social
    conditions.” (quotation omitted)).
    ¶ 44.   Another reason that I resist the inference that a child born with NAS is
    presumptively CHINS is that such a policy would deter pregnant opioid-addicted women from
    taking the steps best calculated to protect their own health and that of their children. An
    approach that incentivized pregnant women to attempt an abrupt opioid withdrawal in order to
    avoid the birth of a child with a physical opioid dependence would fly in the face of ACOG’s
    recommended course for pregnant opioid-addicted women. Moreover, studies have shown that
    fear of punitive responses and loss of custody is a deterrent to pregnant women seeking treatment
    for drug addiction. See, e.g., M. Jessup et al., Extrinsic Barriers to Substance Abuse Treatment
    Among Pregnant Drug Dependent Women, 33 J. Drug Issues 285, 291-92 (2003) (identifying
    fear of detection and prosecution or loss of custody as a major barrier to pregnant and parenting
    women seeking treatment for drug addiction). An approach that focuses on a forward-looking
    analysis of the risks a born child faces would incentivize opioid-addicted pregnant mothers to
    seek treatment, rather than avoid it.11
    ¶ 45.   Finally, I am concerned about the breadth of an approach that relies on harms
    sustained by a fetus in utero to support a CHINS determination. Although the majority asserts
    11
    The majority distinguishes this case from New Jersey Division of Child Protection v.
    Y.N., 
    104 A.3d 244
    (N.J. 2014), by pointing to differences in the respective state statutes and to
    the fact that mother in this case began medically supervised treatment in the last month of her
    pregnancy. While the New Jersey statutory framework may be different from Vermont’s, the
    court’s lengthy discussion of the potentially perverse incentives for opioid-addicted pregnant
    mothers that would arise from a rule that equates the presence of NAS with abuse or neglect is as
    apt here as in New Jersey. See 
    id. at 255
    -56.
    21
    that the fact that a child is born dependent on opioids, standing alone, does not necessarily
    require a finding of CHINS where the mother consistently and fully followed a bona fide
    treatment program, ante, ¶ 21, the majority’s reasoning suggests otherwise. To the extent the
    child’s in utero exposure to opioids and ensuing physical dependence is a basis for a CHINS
    finding, that exposure and dependence exists whether or not the mother is in medically
    supervised treatment, and regardless of the duration of that treatment.12 Our judgments about the
    mother’s conduct may differ depending on how long it took her to seek medical care, but there is
    no finding that mother’s reliance on non-prescription buprenorphrine for much of her pregnancy,
    as opposed to prescribed buprenorphine for the last month, impacted the extent of C.M.’s
    physical dependence at birth. I believe the majority’s reasoning—that the harm to the fetus in
    utero can support a CHINS determination at birth—applies in virtually every case in which a
    child is born with an opioid dependency.
    ¶ 46.   Moreover, the court’s approach has ramifications far beyond the use of opioids.
    Medical research has established that prenatal alcohol abuse has strong effects on fetal growth
    and anomalies, as well as on long-term growth, behavior, cognition, and achievement. Behnke
    & 
    Smith, supra, at 1016
    . That nicotine has long-term effects on behavior, cognition, language
    and achievement is likewise well-established. 
    Id. If harm
    sustained by a fetus in utero can
    support a CHINS finding upon birth, then children born to mothers who smoke cigarettes or
    drink during pregnancy are similarly subject to a CHINS finding. In the United States, about
    15.4% of pregnant women reported cigarette smoking, 9.4% reported current consumption of
    alcohol, and 2.3% reported binge drinking. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Srvs. et al., NSDUH
    Series H-48, HHS Pub. No. (SMA) 14863, Results from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use
    12
    Likewise, the trial court’s emphasis that C.M. was suffering as a result of “substances
    coursing through his tiny veins—substances that were there because of his mother’s addiction”—
    does not support a distinction between a child born with NAS as a result of the mother’s steady
    participation in medically supervised opioid-assisted therapy throughout her pregnancy and one
    born with NAS as a result of the mother’s use of non-prescription opioids.
    22
    and     Health:     Summary        of     National     Findings,     at     37,        51     (2014),
    http://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUHresultsPDFWHTML2013/Web/NSDUHr
    esults2013.pdf [perma.cc/7BTH-FV2J].
    ¶ 47.   Reliance on prenatal injury as a basis for a CHINS finding after birth could have
    consequences outside of the realm of substance abuse as well. Conduct that is ill-advised for a
    pregnant woman, but that tells us little about her ability to safely parent postpartum, could
    likewise support a CHINS finding. As the Kentucky Supreme Court noted in concluding that the
    criminal child abuse statute did not extend to the self-abuse of the pregnant-mother-to-be:
    The mother was a drug addict. But, for that matter, she could
    have been a pregnant alcoholic, causing fetal alcohol syndrome; or
    she could have been addicted to self abuse by smoking, or by
    abusing prescription painkillers, or over-the-counter medicine; or
    for that matter she could have been addicted to downhill skiing or
    some other sport creating serious risk of prenatal injury, risk which
    the mother wantonly disregarded as a matter of self-indulgence.
    What if a pregnant woman drives over the speed limit, or as a
    matter of vanity doesn’t wear the prescription lenses she knows she
    needs to see the dangers of the road?
    Commonwealth v. Welch, 
    864 S.W.2d 280
    , 283 (Ky. 1993).
    ¶ 48.   As I did at the outset, I emphasize that I am not arguing that a pregnant mother’s
    consumption of opioids during pregnancy is not relevant in a CHINS case. Combined with
    evidence of how the mother’s opioid consumption affects her ability to parent, the evidence may
    be highly relevant.     But I am arguing against a particular analytical path to a CHINS
    determination—one that relies on the harm to a fetus in utero, and does not focus on the harm or
    risk of harm experienced by the child after birth.
    II.
    ¶ 49.   A second way to interpret the majority’s opinion is that mother’s addiction,
    untreated until near the end of her pregnancy, renders her incapable of providing adequate care to
    C.M. after birth. An opioid-addicted parent may well be unable to adequately care for a child,
    23
    especially a newborn, but I do not believe that identifying a caregiving parent as opioid-addicted
    alone establishes that a child is CHINS.        This is especially true when a parent’s opioid
    dependence is being successfully managed through medically supervised treatment.13
    ¶ 50.   But even if a parent is not in treatment, or has not been in treatment for a long
    enough time that his or her condition is stable, I do not believe that identifying that parent as
    opioid-dependent, without more, is sufficient to support a CHINS order. See In re B.R., 
    2014 VT 37
    , ¶ 35, 
    196 Vt. 304
    , 
    97 A.3d 867
    (Robinson, J., dissenting) (presumption that one drug-
    addicted parent in the household is sufficient to render the child CHINS “is way overbroad and
    cannot substitute for actual evidence that . . . as a result of that parent’s addiction, the child’s
    needs are not being met”); In re L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 39 (Robinson, J., dissenting) (“[I]f the State
    is to take the awesome step of interposing itself into the parent-child relationship, it cannot rely
    on broad generalizations or per se rules; it must have some individualized evidence that a child is
    without proper parental care necessary for the child’s well-being.”).
    ¶ 51.   This is a closer question. I suspect that in the vast majority of cases, children in
    the sole care of an opioid-addicted parent or parents likely are CHINS. See L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    ,
    ¶ 38 (Robinson, J., dissenting) (“[A]n active opiate addiction can cloud even the most caring and
    thoughtful parent’s judgment and capacity to properly care for his or her child.”). In these cases,
    13
    Medication-assisted treatment is often the best choice for opioid addiction, and allows
    the patient to “regain a normal state of mind, free of drug-induced highs and lows.” U.S. Dep’t
    of Health & Human Srvs. et al., HHS Publication No. (SMA) 09-444, Medication-Assisted
    Treatment for Opioid Addiction: Facts for Families and Friends (2009), at 5,
    http://store.samhsa.gov/shin/content/SMA09-4443/SMA09-4443.pdf              [http://perma.cc/5RV6-
    93FT]. Methadone and buprenorphine “trick the brain into thinking it is still getting the problem
    opioid” so that withdrawal does not occur and cravings are reduced, but these medications do not
    produce a high. 
    Id. For this
    reason, “Taking medication for opioid addiction is like taking
    medication to control heart disease or diabetes. It is NOT the same as substituting one addictive
    drug for another. Used properly, the medication does NOT create a new addiction. It helps
    people manage their addiction so that the benefits of recovery can be maintained.” 
    Id. For these
    reasons, I cannot support the inference that the children of individuals who are successfully
    managing their opioid addictions with medically supervised medication-assisted treatment, along
    with other modalities, are at greater risk of abuse or neglect.
    24
    I expect the State can muster evidence that the opioid addiction has interfered with the parent or
    parents’ ability to make safe and healthy choices for the child in question, other children, or even
    for the parent’s own self-care. The State can present evidence of the parent’s behavior arising
    from or related to the opioid dependence to provide a sense of the impact on that parent of the
    addiction, whether manifested in an inability to hold a job, to provide safe housing for himself or
    herself and the child, to feed and clothe the child and ensure minimum standards of hygiene, to
    get the child to school, to ensure that the child receives age-appropriate attention and care, or
    some other evidence. But I do believe this added component of evidence, and associated
    findings—relating not just to the fact of a parent’s opioid dependence or drug addiction, but to
    the impact of that condition on the safety and well-being of the child—is necessary. I hold this
    view for several reasons.
    ¶ 52.   First, I believe a presumption that the child of an opioid-addicted parent is CHINS
    shifts the focus from the well-being of the child to the status of the parent. This Court has
    emphasized that “the focus of a CHINS proceeding is on the child’s welfare.” In re B.R., 
    2014 VT 37
    , ¶ 20 (quotation omitted); see also L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 19 (noting that the focus at
    CHINS merit hearing is on whether child is “without proper parental care or subsistence,
    education, medical or other care necessary for his or her well-being,” and that parental unfitness
    is an issue to be resolved at the disposition stage); In re S.G., 
    153 Vt. 466
    , 472, 
    571 A.2d 677
    ,
    682 (1990) (“[T]he issue in juvenile proceedings is not whether the parent did a particular act or
    acted in conformity with a particular character trait but instead whether the child has proper care
    and his or her well-being is protected.”).
    ¶ 53.   The connection between the parent’s opioid addiction and the child’s health and
    safety depends on the inference that a child of an opioid addicted parent is without proper
    parental care or subsistence, education, medical or other care necessary for his or her well-
    being.” 33 V.S.A. § 5102(3)(B). It does not rest on any direct consideration of the subsistence,
    25
    education, medical or other care provided or available to the child, harm suffered by the child, or
    risk of harm—except to the extent the risk is inferred from the fact of the parent’s addiction.
    ¶ 54.   That takes me to my second, and closely related, concern about the conclusion
    that the child of an opioid-addicted parent is necessarily CHINS.            It rests on the kind of
    presumption disfavored in the law. The United States Supreme Court considered a due-process
    challenge to a more obviously antiquated state-law presumption that unmarried fathers are not fit
    to raise their children. Stanley v. Illinois, 
    405 U.S. 645
    (1972). In striking down the statute that
    made children of an unwed mother wards of the state upon the death of the mother, the Court
    explained:
    It may be, as the State insists, that most unmarried fathers are
    unsuitable and neglectful parents. It also may be that Stanley is
    such a parent and that his children should be placed in other hands.
    But all unmarried fathers are not in this category; some are wholly
    suited to have custody of their children.
    
    Id. at 654
    (footnotes omitted). The Court acknowledged that “[p]rocedure by presumption is
    always cheaper and easier than individualized determination,” but concluded that the
    presumption “foreclose[d] the determinative issues of competence and care.” 
    Id. at 656-57.
    See
    L.M., 
    2014 VT 17
    , ¶ 41 (Robinson, J., dissenting) (“[F]ather’s untreated longstanding opiate
    addiction is undoubtedly a red flag. But without more, I cannot tell whether and how it put the
    child at risk . . . . [I]t cannot be that the child of every parent with an admitted opiate addiction is
    presumed CHINS without any individualized showing.”); B.C. v. Dep’t of Children & Families,
    
    846 So. 2d 1273
    , 1275 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2003) (reversing adjudication of dependency on basis
    of father’s drug and alcohol abuse where there was “no testimony that the father failed to meet
    the child’s needs while the child was in his care, no testimony that physical harm had come to
    the child while in the father’s care, and no testimony that the child had been emotionally or
    mentally harmed by his father’s drinking and drug use”).
    26
    ¶ 55.   Just as I suspect that most children of opioid-addicted parents lack adequate
    parental care necessary for their well-being, I suspect that some opioid-addicted parents are able
    to provide adequate care. See, e.g., S. Boyd, Mothers and Illicit Drugs: Transcending the Myths
    14-17 (1999) (reviewing fifteen studies demonstrating that women who use illegal drugs can be
    fit parents); Juvenile Rights Div. Position Paper at 14 (“Many children are apparently unaffected
    by their pre-natal exposure to drugs or alcohol, and some mothers are able to provide an
    adequate environment for their drug/alcohol-exposed children, especially if a solid support
    system is available to them.”); B. Smith & M. Testa, The Risk of Subsequent Maltreatment
    Allegations in Families with Substance-exposed Infants, 26 Child Abuse & Neglect 97, 97
    (2002) (“Parents in the [substance-exposed-infant] group are not more likely to incur other types
    of allegations such as physical abuse or lack of supervision.”).
    ¶ 56.   In the end, my personal suspicion is an inadequate foundation to support either
    proposition. I have no basis for assessing the scientific soundness of the presumption that the
    child of an opioid-addicted parent is CHINS. Are all individuals diagnosed as opioid-addicted so
    impaired by the addiction that they cannot adequately parent? Does it matter whether the opioid
    in question generates a “high,” like heroin, or merely dulls the cravings, like buprenorphrine?
    Does it matter how frequently a person uses, or the amount of the doses? Does it matter how
    long the individual has been afflicted by addiction? In developing the record in this case, the
    parties, reasonably, did not purport to address these fundamental and weighty issues. Nor have
    we squarely considered such issues in a case on appeal, informed by thorough briefing on the
    scientific literature. I am unwilling to yield to general assertions of “common sense,” even my
    own, with respect to a disease—drug addiction—that has historically been stigmatized and has in
    some cases given rise to reflexive and less-than-fully-informed reactions.
    ¶ 57.   That leads to my third point. At least in recent years, the policy of the State of
    Vermont, as articulated by the Legislature, has been to treat opioid addiction as, first and
    27
    foremost, a disease, rather than a moral failing or an indication of a criminal disposition. See,
    e.g. 2013, No. 75, § 1(a) (eff. July 1, 2013) (“This act is intended to provide a comprehensive
    approach to combating opioid addiction and methamphetamine abuse in Vermont through
    strategies that address prevention, treatment, and recovery, and increase community safety by
    reducing drug-related crime.”); 
    id. § 1(b)
    (directing that legislative initiatives concerning
    methamphetamine abuse and opioid addiction “be integrated to the extent possible with the
    Blueprint for Health and Vermont’s health care system and health care reform initiatives”).
    ¶ 58.   I cannot think of any other disease afflicting a parent that we have identified, or
    would identify, as per se evidence that a child is CHINS. I can think of plenty of medical and
    psychological conditions that may cause a parent to be unable to care for a child properly, but
    would expect individualized evidence of the effect of any of those conditions on a particular
    parent before concluding that the parent’s child is CHINS. In re G.C., 
    170 Vt. 329
    , 334-35, 
    49 A.2d 28
    , 33 (2000) (“[T]he fact [of] mother’s mental illness . . . does not necessarily, in and of
    itself, satisfy the State’s burden in the disposition phase of the dependency proceedings.”); In re
    B.S., 
    166 Vt. 345
    , 352, 
    693 A.2d 716
    , 720 (1997) (“Mental retardation is not, by itself, a ground
    for terminating parental rights.”). If we are to be true to the understanding of opioid addiction as
    a disease, then we ought to treat it as such. Moreover, an across-the-board presumption that a
    child in the care of an opioid-addicted parent is CHINS would create a tremendous disincentive
    for all such parents—not just pregnant mothers—to seek the medical treatment that can help
    them heal and become better parents.
    ¶ 59.   The absence of state intervention when a child is at risk can lead to unacceptable
    consequences for the children that our child-protection laws are designed to protect. But state
    interference where it is not warranted itself poses risks to those same children. In my view, the
    best way to walk the difficult tightrope between these two realities is to base CHINS decisions
    on individualized evidence concerning an opioid-addicted parent’s conduct and capabilities,
    28
    rather than rely solely on broad generalizations about the conduct and capabilities of opioid-
    addicted individuals—even generalizations that may be, generally, grounded in experience. If a
    blanket presumption that opioid-addicted individuals cannot adequately parent is well-founded,
    the State should not have difficulty mustering specific evidence demonstrating that a child in the
    care of a particular opioid-addicted parent is in need of care or supervision. Evidence of and
    findings concerning a parent’s abusive conduct toward a child; an unmitigated course of
    neglectful conduct with respect to other children; neglect of a parent’s own self-care; inability to
    meet basic needs like safe housing or nourishment; exposure of himself or herself, or children, to
    violence or danger; or erratic behavior are all examples of conduct that may be fueled by
    addiction that directly bears on the well-being of a child in that parent’s care.
    ¶ 60.   For these reasons, I cannot affirm the trial court’s CHINS determination based on
    its finding that mother has a history of opioid addiction, and has only been in treatment for a
    month, without some findings that move the conversation beyond mother’s diagnosis to the
    impact of her opioid use on her ability to parent C.M.
    III.
    ¶ 61.   In this case, once you strip away the findings that C.M. was born opioid-
    dependent, and the corollary that mother was addicted to opioids before and during her
    pregnancy with C.M., and had only been in treatment a short time before the CHINS petition, we
    are left with findings that mother required prompting to address her older daughter’s dental
    problems more than a year before the petition; drove while highly intoxicated with her then-
    seven-year-old daughter in the car more than eight months before the petition; had, prior to that,
    been warned for allowing the older daughter to ride without proper restraints; and had two cans
    of Twisted Tea alcoholic beverage while five months pregnant with C.M. I don’t purport to
    address the question whether these findings would be sufficient to support a CHINS
    determination with respect to C.M., and the subsidiary question of whether the probative value of
    29
    any of these incidents had receded by virtue of the passage of time before the State’s CHINS
    petition. It is clear that the trial court’s CHINS determination with respect to C.M. rested almost
    entirely on its findings that C.M. developed an opioid dependence in utero as a result of mother’s
    prenatal conduct, and that mother was addicted to opioids and had been in medically supervised
    treatment for only a month prior to C.M.’s birth. For the above reasons, I believe these findings
    alone are insufficient to support a CHINS determination with respect to C.M., and I respectfully
    dissent from the majority’s judgment with respect to C.M.14
    ¶ 62.     Diligence in ensuring that CHINS determinations are based on careful,
    individualized determinations is especially vital in these times. The current opioid epidemic in
    Vermont is real, and its consequences for many Vermont children are tragic. See 2014 Vermont
    State   of      the     State   Address   (Jan.   8,   2014),   C-SPAN/WCAX-TV,        http://www.c-
    span.org/video/?317076-1/vermont-state-state-address (“In every corner of our state, . . . opiate
    drug addiction threatens us. . . . When parents struggle, children suffer, and we all pay the price
    for years to come.”). DCF child abuse and neglect caseloads have skyrocketed in recent years.
    Vt. Dep’t for Children & Families, Family Serv. Div., 2014 Report on Child Protection in
    Vermont (2015), at 5, http://dcf.vermont.gov/sites/dcf/files/pdf/fsd/2014-CP-Report.pdf
    (reporting that in 2014, DCF “received a record number of child abuse and neglect reports”—a
    nearly 33% increase from the previous year, with more than two-thirds of the increase involving
    children under six—“and substance abuse was a factor in about one‐third of them”); Casey
    Family Programs, Assessment of Family Services Division Safety Decision Making: Final
    Report to the Vermont Department for Children and Families, at 4-5 (Dec. 2014) [hereinafter
    Casey        Report],      http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/vpr/files/201412/Casey-Report-Full-
    VPR.pdf (Vermont’s “struggle with a large increase in opioid abuse cases” has led to an
    14
    I concur in the judgment affirming the CHINS determination with respect to L.M.,
    although do not join in the majority’s opinion.
    30
    “increase in reports of serious child maltreatment,” which “is challenging the service capacity of
    [DCF] and other agencies in Vermont”).
    ¶ 63.     Increasing caseloads have seriously strained the docket of the family division of
    the    superior     court. See   Vermont     Judiciary   Annual    Statistical   Report    for   FY
    2014, at 5, https://www.vermontjudiciary.org/jbn/Shared%20Documents/Annual%20Statistical%
    20Report%20for%20FY%202014.pdf (reporting that “[t]he increase in CHINS filings over the
    past few years has been fueled primarily by a dramatic growth in abuse/neglect cases,” with a
    62% increase between fiscal years 2010 and 2015, “the largest increase in any case type in any
    division of the superior court”). The labor-intensive nature of such cases, combined with the
    “dramatic rise” in their volume, has “put a significant strain on the resources of the trial courts.”
    
    Id. at 4.
    ¶ 64.     Exploding caseloads and public scrutiny in the wake of high-profile tragedies
    have increased the pressure on already overworked and overwhelmed child protection personnel.
    See, e.g., Casey Report at 10-11 (“Many [DCF] social workers have caseloads and workloads
    which make it difficult or impossible to complete job tasks on time while doing good quality
    casework,” and “Many [DCF] social workers feel isolated and unsupported”); A. Burbank & P.
    Achen, Child Protection Workers Face Danger, Criticism, Burlington Free Press, Aug. 17, 2015,
    http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/story/news/local/vermont/2015/08/12/vermont-social-
    workers-respond/31579459/ [http://perma.cc/E6DL-JS9H] (“[O]ne thing is constant: Vermont
    child welfare caseworkers always face scrutiny and criticism.”).
    ¶ 65.     These forces have given rise to a perfect storm, exacerbating the already
    Herculean challenge of determining which circumstances warrant state intervention in families
    for the protection of children, and which do not. By rejecting presumptions about the effects of
    opioid addiction on parents and calling for findings concerning the effects of a parent’s addiction
    in each case, I don’t seek to make the jobs of hard-working state child-protection workers and of
    31
    the equally hard-working trial courts even more challenging. But these are exactly the kinds of
    circumstances that require courts to be exceptionally diligent to ensure that, in every case, we
    ground our rulings in evidence and law, and not supposition and personal judgments.
    ¶ 66.                                   Associate Justice
    32