80-4-502.  Safe relinquishment of a newborn childTermination of parental rights — Affirmative defense.

(1) 

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Terms Used In Utah Code 80-4-502

  • Abuse: means :
(i) 
(A) nonaccidental harm of a child;
(B) threatened harm of a child;
(C) sexual exploitation;
(D) sexual abuse; or
(E) human trafficking of a child in violation of Section 76-5-308. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Child: means , except as provided in Section 80-2-905, an individual who is under 18 years old. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Child-placing agency: means the same as that term is defined in Section 26B-2-101. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Department: means the Department of Health and Human Services created in Section 26B-1-201. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • dependency: means a child who is without proper care through no fault of the child's parent, guardian, or custodian. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Division: means the Division of Child and Family Services created in Section 80-2-201. See Utah Code 80-4-102
  • Hospital: means a general acute hospital, as that term is defined in Section 26B-2-201, that is:
    (a) equipped with an emergency room;
    (b) open 24 hours a day, seven days a week; and
    (c) employs full-time health care professionals who have emergency medical services training. See Utah Code 80-4-501
  • Neglect: means action or inaction causing:
    (i) abandonment of a child, except as provided in 5;
    (ii) lack of proper parental care of a child by reason of the fault or habits of the parent, guardian, or custodian;
    (iii) failure or refusal of a parent, guardian, or custodian to provide proper or necessary subsistence or medical care, or any other care necessary for the child's health, safety, morals, or well-being;
    (iv) a child to be at risk of being neglected or abused because another child in the same home is neglected or abused;
    (v) abandonment of a child through an unregulated child custody transfer under Section 78B-24-203; or
    (vi) educational neglect. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Neglected child: means a child who has been subjected to neglect. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Newborn child: means a child who is approximately 30 days old or younger, as determined within a reasonable degree of medical certainty. See Utah Code 80-4-501
  • Person: means :Utah Code 68-3-12.5
  • Petition for termination of parental rights: means a petition filed in accordance with this chapter to terminate the parental rights of a parent. See Utah Code 80-4-102
  • Protective custody: means the shelter of a child by the Division of Child and Family Services from the time the child is removed from the home until the earlier of:
    (a) the day on which the shelter hearing is held under Section 80-3-301; or
    (b) the day on which the child is returned home. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • Termination of parental rights: means the permanent elimination of all parental rights and duties, including residual parental rights and duties, by court order. See Utah Code 80-1-102
  • (a)  A parent or a parent’s designee may safely relinquish a newborn child at a hospital in accordance with this part and retain complete anonymity, so long as the newborn child has not been subject to abuse or neglect.

    (b)  Safe relinquishment of a newborn child who has not otherwise been subject to abuse or neglect shall not, in and of itself, constitute neglect, and the newborn child may not be considered a neglected child so long as the relinquishment is carried out in substantial compliance with this part.
  • (2) 

    (a)  Personnel employed by a hospital shall accept a newborn child who is relinquished under this part, and may presume that the individual relinquishing is the newborn child’s parent or the parent’s designee.

    (b)  The person receiving the newborn child may request information regarding the parent and newborn child’s medical histories, and identifying information regarding the nonrelinquishing parent of the newborn child.

    (c)  If the newborn child’s parent or the parent’s designee provides the person receiving the newborn child with any of the information described in Subsection (2)(b) or any other personal items, the person shall provide the information or personal items to the division.

    (d)  Personnel employed by the hospital shall:

    (i)  provide any necessary medical care to the newborn child;

    (ii)  notify the division of receipt of the newborn child as soon as possible, but no later than 24 hours after receipt of the newborn child; and

    (iii)  prepare a birth certificate or foundling birth certificate if parentage is unknown for the newborn child and file the certificate with the Office of Vital Records and Statistics within the Department of Health.

    (e)  A hospital and personnel employed by a hospital are immune from any civil or criminal liability arising from accepting a newborn child if the personnel employed by the hospital substantially comply with the provisions of this part and medical treatment is administered according to standard medical practice.

    (3)  The division shall assume care and protective custody of the newborn child immediately upon notice from the hospital.

    (4)  So long as the division determines there is no abuse or neglect of the newborn child, neither the newborn child nor the child’s parents are subject to:

    (a)  the investigation provisions contained in Section 80-2-701; or

    (b)  the provisions of Chapter 3, Abuse, Neglect, and Dependency Proceedings.

    (5) 

    (a)  Unless identifying information relating to the nonrelinquishing parent of the newborn child is provided, the division shall:

    (i)  work with local law enforcement and the Bureau of Criminal Identification within the Department of Public Safety in an effort to ensure that the newborn child has not been identified as a missing child;

    (ii)  immediately place or contract for placement of the newborn child in a potential adoptive home and, within 10 days after the day on which the child is received, file a petition for termination of parental rights in accordance with this chapter;

    (iii)  direct the Office of Vital Records and Statistics within the Department of Health to conduct a search for:

    (A)  a birth certificate for the newborn child; and

    (B)  unmarried biological fathers in the registry maintained by the Office of Vital Records and Statistics in accordance with 4; and

    (iv)  provide notice to each potential father identified on the registry described in Subsection (5)(a)(iii) in accordance with 4.

    (b) 

    (i)  If no individual has affirmatively identified himself or herself within two weeks after the day on which notice under Subsection (5)(a)(iv) is complete and established paternity by scientific testing within as expeditious a time frame as practicable, a hearing on the petition for termination of parental rights shall be scheduled and notice provided in accordance with this chapter.

    (ii)  If a nonrelinquishing parent is not identified, relinquishment of a newborn child under this part is considered grounds for termination of parental rights of both the relinquishing and nonrelinquishing parents under Section 80-4-301.

    (6)  If at any time before the day on which the newborn child is adopted, the juvenile court finds it is in the best interest of the newborn child, the court shall deny the petition for termination of parental rights.

    (7)  The division shall provide for, or contract with a child-placing agency to provide for expeditious adoption of the newborn child.

    (8)  So long as the individual relinquishing a newborn child is the newborn child’s parent or designee, and there is no abuse or neglect, safe relinquishment of a newborn child in substantial compliance with this part is an affirmative defense to any potential criminal liability for abandonment or neglect relating to the relinquishment.

    Amended by Chapter 139, 2023 General Session