The legislature finds that

(1) parents have the following rights and responsibilities relating to the care and control of their child while the child is a minor:

Terms Used In Alaska Statutes 47.06.025

  • Attachment: A procedure by which a person's property is seized to pay judgments levied by the court.
  • Guardian: A person legally empowered and charged with the duty of taking care of and managing the property of another person who because of age, intellect, or health, is incapable of managing his (her) own affairs.
  • state: means the State of Alaska unless applied to the different parts of the United States and in the latter case it includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See Alaska Statutes 01.10.060
(A) the responsibility to provide the child with food, clothing, shelter, education, and medical care;
(B) the right and responsibility to protect, nurture, train, and discipline the child, including the right to direct the child’s medical care and the right to exercise reasonable corporal discipline;
(C) the right to determine where and with whom the child shall live;
(D) the right and responsibility to make decisions of legal or financial significance concerning the child;
(E) the right to obtain representation for the child in legal actions; and
(F) the responsibility to provide special safeguards and care, including appropriate prenatal and postnatal protection for the child;
(2) it is the policy of the state to strengthen families and to protect children from child abuse and neglect; the state recognizes that, in some cases, protection of a child may require removal of the child from the child’s home; however,

(A) except in those cases involving serious risk to a child’s health or safety, the Department of Family and Community Services and the Department of Health should provide time-limited family support services to the child and the child’s family in order to offer parents the opportunity to remedy parental conduct or conditions in the home that placed the child at risk of harm so that a child may return home safely and permanently; and
(B) the state also recognizes that when a child is removed from the home, visitation between the child and the child’s parents or guardian and family members reduces the trauma for the child and enhances the likelihood that the child will be able to return home; therefore, whenever a child is removed from the parental home, the Department of Family and Community Services should encourage frequent, regular, and reasonable visitation of the child with the child’s parent or guardian and family members;
(3) it is the policy of the state to recognize that, when a child is a ward of the state, the child is entitled to reasonable safety, adequate care, and adequate treatment and that the Department of Family and Community Services as legal custodian and the child’s guardian ad litem as guardian of the child’s best interests and their agents and assignees, each should make reasonable efforts to ensure that the child is provided with reasonable safety, adequate care, and adequate treatment for the duration of time that the child is a ward of the state;
(4) it is in the best interests of a child who has been removed from the child’s own home for the state to apply the following principles in resolving the situation:

(A) the child should be placed in a safe, secure, and stable environment;
(B) the child should not be moved unnecessarily;
(C) a planning process should be followed to lead to permanent placement of the child;
(D) every effort should be made to encourage psychological attachment between the adult caregiver and the child;
(E) frequent, regular, and reasonable visitation with the parent or guardian and family members should be encouraged;
(F) parents and guardians must actively participate in family support services so as to facilitate the child’s being able to remain in the home; when children are removed from the home, the parents and guardians must actively participate in family support services to make return of their children to the home possible; and
(G) to the extent practicable, the Department of Family and Community Services should enable a child’s contact with previous out-of-home caregivers when appropriate and in the best interests of the child;
(5) numerous studies establish that

(A) children undergo a critical attachment process before the time they reach six years of age;
(B) a child who has not attached with an adult caregiver during this critical stage will suffer significant emotional damage that frequently leads to chronic psychological problems and antisocial behavior when the child reaches adolescence and adulthood; and
(C) it is important to provide for an expedited placement procedure to ensure that all children, especially those under the age of six years, who have been removed from their homes are placed in permanent homes expeditiously.