JOSEPHINE LINKER HART, Judge.
Appellant, Latrice Gilmore, is the mother of R.S., born on August 30, 1997. The circuit court terminated her parental rights to her son on December 22, 2009, after the child had been out of the home since July 22, 2008. The trial court found that Gilmore had not remedied the conditions that caused removal. We affirm.
Gilmore, who had legal custody, left R.S. with his father, Robert Stevenson, her erstwhile husband, when she moved to Dallas to attend beauty school. DHS exercised an emergency hold on the child on July 22, 2008, after an allegation of physical abuse was made against the father. The affidavit supporting the petition for emergency custody stated that the father had choked and hit R.S., had thrown him head-first into a couch, and had struck him with a belt. According to the affidavit, when the family-service worker contacted Gilmore about her son having been taken into emergency custody, Gilmore stated that the child could either go to foster care or to the father. She further remarked that
Refusing to give her address, she hung up on the family-service worker, but then called several more times, each time uttering profanities.
On September 16, 2008, the trial court held an adjudication hearing, found the child dependent-neglected, and granted supervised visitation to Gilmore. The court found that Robert had abused R.S. and observed as follows:
Establishing a goal of reunification of the child with the mother, the court ordered Gilmore to submit to a psychological evaluation, random drug screens, and recommended family therapy. The court also noted that if Gilmore continued to harass DHS staff, the agency could discontinue contact.
Dr. Paul Deyoub performed a psychological evaluation on Gilmore on April 17, 2009. Dr. Deyoub stated that he had seen Gilmore when she was fifteen years old and in juvenile detention and that he had diagnosed her with a conduct disorder. Dr. Deyoub diagnosed Gilmore with poly-substance dependency and a personality disorder and explained that
The court held another permanency-planning hearing on May 26, 2009, and continued the goal of reunification.
The court held another permanency-planning hearing on August 25, 2009. The court stated that there were no compelling reasons to continue the goal of reunification and changed it to termination, explaining that
The court found that DHS had made reasonable efforts to provide services to achieve the goal of reunification.
After R.S. was taken into DHS's custody and placed in foster care, he had two acute-care psychiatric hospitalizations. He was admitted to Youth Home on November 24, 2008, and was discharged on September 30, 2009, to the Second Chance Ranch. While at Youth Home, he was found to be a victim of abuse and neglect and diagnosed with major depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, oppositional-defiant disorder, and parent-child relational problems. The Youth Home discharge report
The August 25, 2009 court report prepared by Sheila Conroy, R.S.'s therapist at Youth Home, stated that Gilmore was not capable of raising her son and had not shown a consistent desire to do so. She explained that
Gilmore tested positive for THC on both September 28 and October 22, 2009. In November 2009, Romulus Henry, a social worker, sent a letter to DHS stating that, although DHS had attempted to set up individual counseling for Gilmore in March 2009, Gilmore had advised him that he should not call her again; nevertheless, Henry and DHS made further efforts to bring Gilmore in for therapy from April through the end of September 2009. Henry wrote that on October 7, 2009, Gilmore showed up for her first therapy appointment and after that, attended five additional appointments. Henry concluded as follows:
At the termination hearing held November 16, 2009, Dr. Deyoub testified that Gilmore did not have the ability at that time to be a parent to R.S. and would not acquire that ability in the future. He said that he did not believe that she had much regard for R.S. and that even with therapy, it would be difficult to change her lack of attachment to the child. He said that she would have to receive therapy, substance-abuse and anger-management counseling, and demonstrate that she had significantly changed. He stated that since she was a teenager she had major behavior and personal problems, and he described her as antisocial, hostile, and short-tempered. He said that because she was thirty years old, her borderline personality disorder had become ingrained and would be harder to change as time went on.
Sheila Conroy, R.S.'s therapist at Youth Home, testified that she had not immediately pursued family therapy, as Gilmore had not been motivated to begin or to follow the plan, and Gilmore began family therapy after the June 2009 hearing and met with R.S. about five times. Conroy said that Gilmore's behavior was very inconsistent. At times, she would be loving to R.S., but at other times, she would ridicule him. She said that Gilmore's attendance was inconsistent and that she often did not return R.S.'s phone calls. Conroy said the last family session was before the August 25, 2009 court date. She stated that Gilmore focused on what "R.S. needed to do" instead of "what she needed to do" as a parent. Conroy said that after August 2009, she decided that they would no longer continue with meetings between R.S. and his mother because he deteriorated after each contact.
At that point in the hearing, Gilmore asked to be excused from the hearing. The court stated that Gilmore had the right to leave if she wished to do so. She remained. Conroy further testified that she did not believe that Gilmore was stable enough or sufficiently consistent to be a parent to R.S. She said that R.S. did not trust his mother because she frequently criticized him and was inconsistent with her approach. At this point, the court again addressed Gilmore and warned her to stop muttering in court. Conroy concluded that she did not believe that Gilmore would be able to improve.
Romulus Henry testified about Gilmore's counseling over the past month. He noted Gilmore's reluctance to begin therapy and reported that according to Gilmore, she was not the one who had abused her son but was having to answer for it. He said that she blamed the "system," including DHS, the court, and her family members. Nevertheless, she had indicated that she was willing to work on those issues and to comply with what was expected of her. He opined that she had very little insight at that point and that he was unsure whether she would ever acquire it. He stated that she had begun to develop a relationship with him to facilitate counseling and that he had seen a change for the better. He said, however, that Gilmore's wanting to walk out of the hearing was not an encouraging sign.
Tabitha Watson, the family-service worker, testified that Gilmore did not attend parenting classes and had in September begun to participate in services such as drug screens, supervised visitation, and individual counseling. Watson said that Gilmore had gone to Youth Home for family sessions in the summer but had not done so consistently, and when she sat in on a visit between Gilmore and R.S. at Youth Home, she found Gilmore's interaction with R.S. to be inappropriate. She
Gilmore testified that, after living in Dallas throughout the case, she had obtained her hair stylist's license in May or June 2009, that she had moved to Arkansas, and that she was in a position to take R.S. back. She also testified about having worked at Chili's, as a stylist, and as a tax preparer. She stated that she was grossing between $2000 and $3500 a month and was still on unemployment. She said that she did not believe that R.S.'s father had abused him, nor did she believe that she had emotionally abused R.S.
Gilmore argues on appeal that the trial court erred because she was not provided with meaningful reunification services, given her psychological impairment (borderline personality disorder with anti-social features of long-standing), as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101.
We affirm the trial court's refusal to give appellant more time to work on reunification, even though she made some minor progress in the two months before the termination hearing. Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-27-341(a)(4)(A) (Repl. 2009) provides: "A parent's resumption of contact or overtures toward participating in the case plan or following the orders of the court following the permanency planning hearing and preceding the termination of parental rights hearing is an insufficient reason to not terminate parental rights." Moreover, there was little indication that Gilmore would ever become an adequate parent to R.S. She never acknowledged that R.S.'s father had abused him, that she had placed him in a vulnerable situation, that she had emotionally abused him, or that she needed to change.
Affirmed.
VAUGHT, C.J., and PITTMAN J., agree.