Filed 5/13/13 In re C.R. CA2/6
                   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.


               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                    DIVISION SIX


In re C.R. et al., Persons Coming Under the                                2d Juv. No. B245355
Juvenile Court Law.                                                (Super. Ct. Nos. J1395601, J1395602)
                                                                          (Santa Barbara County)

SANTA BARBARA COUNTY CHILD
WELFARE SERVICES,

     Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

A.W.,

     Defendant and Appellant.


                   A.W., the mother of C.R. and M.A., appeals an order of the juvenile court
terminating her visitation rights with her children after the juvenile court terminated her
family reunification services. The Santa Barbara County Child Welfare Services (CWS)
filed a juvenile dependency petition (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300) on October 11, 2011.1
We conclude, among other things, that the court did not abuse its discretion in terminating
visitation. We affirm.
                                                          FACTS
                   On October 6, 2011, a motorist saw M.A., A.W.'s two-year-old son, on a
sidewalk wearing only a diaper "near a busy traffic road." A.W. had left him in the care of

1
    All statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.
C.R., her 10-year-old daughter, at a motel. After A.W. left the children unattended, C.R.
fell asleep and M.A. left the motel and went outside near traffic.
              A law enforcement officer contacted A.W. and asked her to "return to the
motel." A.W. responded she "could not return immediately." She "did not appear to be
concerned and did not seem to think there was a problem with the arrangements she made
for the children."
              The conditions in the motel room where the children had been living were
"deplorable." A 30-gallon "bag of garbage" was near one of the beds, the children were
"unkempt" and had "no clean clothes." The clothes they had were "moist" and contained
"mold." C.R., a fifth grader, had not attended school regularly and had been "discharged
from the school due to absences . . . ." A.W. had not taken C.R. or M.A. to any medical
examinations since they arrived in Santa Barbara County. When asked if the children "are
up to date on their immunizations," A.W. responded that she "cannot remember."
              CWS determined that "[a]lthough transitional housing has been available and
offered to the family, the mother's lack of cooperation and unwillingness to follow [the]
shelters' rules has led to the termination of services." CWS placed the children in a
"confidential licensed shelter home." The juvenile court found that the children were
persons who came within Welfare and Institutions Code section 300 and "[c]ontinuance
in" A.W.'s home was "contrary" to the children's welfare.
              On November 17, 2011, CWS filed a jurisdiction/disposition report stating
that the children should be declared "dependents" of the court, and A.W. should be offered
family reunification services. It prepared a case plan requiring A.W. to, among other
things: 1) "obtain and maintain the resources necessary to provide her children with a safe
and stable living environment," 2) demonstrate her ability to "adequately parent her
children," and 3) "address her mental health needs" and attend therapy sessions.
              After a jurisdiction hearing, the juvenile court found the allegations of child
neglect by A.W. as alleged in the dependency petition were true. It declared the children
to be dependents of the court, and it found CWS had prepared a reasonable case plan. It
ordered CWS to provide family reunification services to A.W.

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                In a May 2012 status review report, CWS requested the juvenile court to
terminate family reunification services. It said A.W. did not complete her case plan
requirements. A.W. failed to find employment and did not "pursue employment." She did
not complete her parenting classes and did not comply with CWS's direction to attend
therapy sessions. She did not find housing. She was asked to leave a shelter because "she
was involved in an altercation with another resident." CWS said A.W. did not show an
ability "to adequately supervise and protect her children from harm, and provide for their
basic needs."
                On June 28, 2012, the juvenile court terminated family reunification
services. It found the "current situation" is "essentially the same as when the children were
removed." There was no showing A.W. made progress in obtaining a stable home
environment for the children. It noted she made some efforts to obtain counseling, but
progress in that area "was not significant." In reviewing the services provided to A.W., the
court found CWS used "their best efforts to help" her.
                In October 2012, CWS submitted an addendum report requesting the
juvenile court to terminate A.W.'s visits with the children because it was not in the
children's "best interest."
                After an evidentiary hearing, the juvenile court found, "[T]here is clear and
convincing evidence that visitation between the mother and children is contrary to the
children's safety and well-being. The Court orders that pending the 366.26 hearing . . .
there shall be no further visitation."2
                                          DISCUSSION
                                     Substantial Evidence
                A.W. contends the juvenile court erred because there is no substantial
evidence to support the court's findings on terminating visitation. We disagree.
                We view the record in the light most favorable to the challenged order. We
must draw all reasonable inferences from the record in support of it. We do not weigh the


2
    We have granted A.W.'s request to augment the record.
                                             3
evidence, assess credibility or resolve conflicts on factual issues, as that is exclusively the
domain of the juvenile court. (In re Alexis E. (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 438, 450-451.)
              "Once reunification services are ordered terminated, the focus shifts to the
needs of the child for permanency and stability." (In re Marilyn H. (1993) 5 Cal.4th 295,
309.) After the termination of reunification services, the court must set a hearing
(§ 366.26) to "implement a permanent plan for the children." (Marilyn H., at p. 309) "The
court shall continue to permit the parent . . . to visit the child pending the hearing unless it
finds that visitation would be detrimental to the child." (§ 366.21, subd. (h).)
              A.W. claims the record does not support findings that visitation would be
detrimental or contrary to the children's best interests. We disagree.
              CWS noted that it had provided "thirty-nine twice a week two-hour visits"
for A.W. with her children. But she missed 10 visits, and for each missed visit, the
children were transported to the area and "were left waiting for [A.W.] to arrive to a visit
that was not going to happen." A.W. was "over forty minutes late" to four visits and 15
minutes late to five other visits. For these supervised visits, the CWS case aide "went out
of her way to help [A.W.] by picking her up at different bus stops" to "help facilitate the
visits." In April 2012, A.W. requested the visits be reduced to only once a week even
though her CWS case worker advised her this reduction would be "detrimental to her and
her children." In May, A.W. requested twice a week visits.
              After the juvenile court terminated family reunification services, the court
reduced the visits to once a month. A.W. went to three visits, but cancelled her October
12, 2012, visit. C.R. "expressed disappointment" and told the CWS worker that she was
"sad" A.W. "did not come for the visit."
              The CWS case aide documented that the visits "were often chaotic" and
A.W. "did not always come prepared." A.W. disobeyed instructions by her CWS worker
and the case aide. They told her not to bring "sugary drinks, cookies, and candy." But
A.W. brought these prohibited foods to the visits. She also was not prepared and forgot to
"bring items to the visits." As a result, the case aide had to drive A.W. to a market "which
decreased her visitation time." A.W. asked the CWS case aide to watch M.A. while she

                                                4
shopped. The aide had to "continually" remind her that she needed "to include both
children during her visit time." At various times, A.W. "expected" C.R. "to supervise her
brother." CWS noted that by doing this, A.W. was "re-enforcing the parenting role" she
had previously imposed on C.R. During most visits, she spent time with C.R. "and
ignored" M.A.
              CWS noted that A.W. "was unable to provide appropriate supervision for
three-year old [M.A.] during almost all of the visits." (Italics added.) On "more than one
occasion," she allowed M.A. "to run off towards busy streets, without trying to stop him."
This placed the child "at imminent risk of being hit by a car or truck." (Italics added.) She
allowed M.A. to be "alone in a shopping cart at Wal-Mart" while she was two aisles away,
"placing him at imminent risk of either hurting himself, or allowing a stranger to abduct or
hurt her child." She did not intervene when M.A. was playing "alone" too close to a "duck
pond at the park," which "could have resulted in drowning." She allowed M.A. "to play
out of her sight on different playgrounds without checking on him, placing him at risk of
being hurt or abducted." She did not follow the recommendations of the CWS case aide on
how to control M.A.'s "frequent tantrums." She ignored M.A. "when entering elevators or
escalators." On one occasion, after hearing M.A. cry, she had to "'jerk him by his
sweatshirt hood' to prevent him from falling."
              CWS said M.A. has "emotional dysregulation." After "visits with [A.W.], he
regresses, and throws tantrums . . . ." But "[a]fter a few days, these behaviors decrease."
C.R. "began to appear withdrawn during visits with [A.W.]." She was "emotionally shut
down during visits, and crying silently" because A.W. did "not address her . . . emotional
needs." CWS said that A.W.'s "inconsistent visits throughout the past twelve months . . .
[have] affected both children emotionally." After a visit with A.W., M.A. "will spend an
entire weekend screaming, kicking, and tantruming. His current home wants to provide
[M.A.] with stability . . . ." CWS determined that A.W.'s "inability to provide consistent
and stable parenting during visits is detrimental to [the children's] emotional stability" and
does "not benefit either child."


                                               5
              A.W. contends the juvenile court should have ordered psychological
counseling. But CWS referred M.A. to a counseling program. It attached a report from a
"staff clinician" of the Great Beginnings Program at "CALM" who confirmed that M.A.
had "difficulty regulating emotional states" after "visitations with" A.W. The court could
reasonably infer this was consistent with CWS's determination about the impact of the
visits on the child's emotional stability.
              A.W. notes that she testified that she missed visits because of transportation
problems and C.R. "was fine" during visits. But the issue is not whether some evidence
supports her position, it is whether substantial evidence supports the judgment. Only the
trial judge may decide A.W.'s credibility. (Lohman v. Lohman (1946) 29 Cal.2d 144, 149
["a trial judge is not required to accept as true the sworn testimony of a witness, even in the
absence of evidence directly contradicting it"].) The juvenile court's finding that "clear
and convincing evidence" showed that continued visitation "is contrary to" the children's
"safety and well-being" was a rejection of A.W.'s testimony. The evidence is sufficient.
              We have reviewed A.W.'s remaining contentions and we conclude she has
not shown error.
              The order is affirmed.
              NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.




                                             GILBERT, P.J.
We concur:



              YEGAN, J.



              PERREN, J.



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                                    Arthur J. Garcia, Judge

                            Superior Court County of Santa Barbara

                             ______________________________


             David A. Hamilton, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant.


             Dennis A. Marshall, County Counsel, Maria Salido Novatt, Sr. Deputy, for
Plaintiff and Respondent.




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