Current through L. 2024, c. 185.
Section 5903 - [See Note] Conditions for placement(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this section, this Compact shall apply to: (1) the interstate placement of a child subject to ongoing court jurisdiction in the sending state, due to allegations or findings that the child has been abused, neglected, or deprived as defined by the laws of the sending state; provided, however, that the placement of such a child into a residential facility shall only require notice of residential placement to the receiving state prior to placement;(2) the interstate placement of a child adjudicated delinquent or unmanageable based on the laws of the sending state and subject to ongoing court jurisdiction of the sending state if: (A) the child is being placed in a residential facility in another member state and is not covered under another compact; or(B) the child is being placed in another member state and the determination of safety and suitability of the placement and services required is not provided through another compact; and(3) the interstate placement of any child by a public child placing agency or private child placing agency as defined in this Compact as a preliminary step to a possible adoption.(b) The provisions of this Compact shall not apply to: (1) the interstate placement of a child in a custody proceeding in which a public child placing agency is not a party; provided, however, that the placement is not intended to effectuate an adoption;(2) the interstate placement of a child with a non-relative in a receiving state by a parent with the legal authority to make such a placement; provided, however, that the placement is not intended to effectuate an adoption;(3) the interstate placement of a child by one relative with the lawful authority to make such a placement directly with a relative in a receiving state;(4) the placement of a child, not subject to section 5903 of this title, into a residential facility by the child's parent;(5) the placement of a child with a noncustodial parent, provided that:(A) the noncustodial parent proves to the satisfaction of a court in the sending state a substantial relationship with the child; and(B) the court in the sending state makes a written finding that placement with the noncustodial parent is in the best interests of the child; and(C) the court in the sending state dismisses its jurisdiction in interstate placements in which the public child placing agency is a party to the proceeding;(6) a child entering the United States from a foreign country for the purpose of adoption or leaving the United States to go to a foreign country for the purpose of adoption in that country;(7) cases in which a U.S. citizen child living overseas with family, at least one of whom is in the U.S. Armed Forces and is stationed overseas, is removed and placed in a state; or(8) the sending of a child by a public child placing agency or a private child placing agency for a visit as defined by the rules of the Interstate Commission.(c) For purposes of determining the applicability of this Compact to the placement of a child with a family in the U.S. Armed Forces, the public child placing agency or private child placing agency may choose the state of the service member's permanent duty station or the service member's declared legal residence.(d) Nothing in this Compact shall be construed to prohibit the concurrent application of the provisions of this Compact with other applicable interstate compacts, including the Interstate Compact for Juveniles and the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance. The Interstate Commission may in cooperation with other interstate compact commissions having responsibility for the interstate movement, placement, or transfer of children, promulgate like rules to ensure the coordination of services, timely placement of children, and the reduction of unnecessary or duplicative administrative or procedural requirements.Added by 2022 , No. 101, § 2, eff. 18 months from the date on which the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children as described in Section 2 of Act 101 of the 2021-2022 Legislative Session is enacted into law by 35 states.