                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                   No. 16-1237
                             Filed November 9, 2016


IN THE INTEREST OF C.B. and J.C.,
Minor children,

M.G., Mother,
      Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, Nancy S.

Tabor, Judge.



       A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her children.

AFFIRMED.



       Sara Strain Linder of Bray & Klockau, Iowa City, for appellant mother.

       Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Kathrine S. Miller-Todd, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee State.

       Christine E. Boyer, Iowa City, guardian ad litem for minor children.



       Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and Bower, JJ. Tabor,

J., takes no part.
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VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.

       A mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her children,

born in 2011 and 2013. She contends (1) the record lacks clear and convincing

evidence to support one of the grounds for termination cited by the district court,

(2) the district court should have granted her additional time to work towards

reunification, and (3) termination was not in the children’s best interests.

I.     The district court terminated the mother’s parental rights on several

grounds. See Iowa Code § 232.116(1)(f) (2015) (child four or older cannot be

returned to parent’s custody); (h) (child three or younger cannot be returned to

parent’s custody); (l) (parent has severe substance-related disorder and parent’s

prognosis indicates child cannot be returned to parent’s custody within a

reasonable period of time). The mother only challenges the evidence supporting

subsection (l). Accordingly, she has waived error on the other grounds, which

would allow us to affirm on those grounds. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(g); see

also In re K.S., No. 10-1183, 2010 WL 3504038, at *5 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 9,

2010). However, we elect to proceed to the merits of the challenged provision.

       The child-in-need-of-assistance proceeding underlying this termination

action was the third involving these children.       All three were based on the

mother’s substance abuse and the adverse effects on the children. At the time of

the termination hearing, the mother was jailed on a complaint of a probation

violation. The children had been out of her care for fourteen months.

       A department of human services case manager who worked with the

family over the course of all three proceedings testified the mother had “a severe

and chronic addiction to methamphetamine, and . . . received almost three years’
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worth of services . . . to try and treat her addiction,” without success. She opined

the children could not be returned to the mother’s care within the next six

months.    A service provider who also spent extensive time with the family

seconded this opinion, noting the mother’s struggles “to participate in treatment”

notwithstanding “many opportunities to plug herself into inpatient treatment”

before her incarceration.

       The mother acknowledged she would need time to become independent.

She testified that she was looking into sixty or seventy-day halfway house

programs depending on the outcome of the probation violation hearing.

However, she had yet to investigate the programs and she was “pretty sure” she

would have to wait for available space.

       On our de novo review, we conclude the State proved by clear and

convincing evidence that termination was warranted under Iowa Code section

232.116(1)(l).

II.    The court may grant a parent additional time to reunify.         Iowa Code

§ 232.104(2)(b). Additional time was not warranted in this case. As the district

court stated, “These children have been languishing in foster and other out of

home placements for 14 months this most recent time and many months in prior

cases. The mother has been given ample opportunities and time to remedy this

situation and has chosen not to do so.” We concur in this assessment.

III.   Termination must be in the children’s best interests. See In re M.W., 876

N.W.2d 212, 224 (Iowa 2016). In this case it was. The mother admitted she was

incarcerated for almost eight of the fourteen months preceding the termination

hearing. Although the children were slated to be moved to another foster home,
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this disruption did not change the fact that the mother was in no position to

assume their care.

      We affirm the termination of the mother’s parental rights to her children.

      AFFIRMED.
