Washington_Child Abuse Reporting Statute
REVISED CODE OF WAHSINGTON
Title 26. Domestic Relations
Chapter 26.44. Abuse of Children
26.44.030. Reports--Duty and authority
to make--Duty of receiving agency--Duty to notify--Case
planning and consultation--Penalty for unauthorized exchange
of information--Filing dependency petitions--Investigations--Interviews
of children--Records--Risk assessment process
(1)(a) When any practitioner, county
coroner or medical examiner, law enforcement officer,
professional school personnel, registered or licensed
nurse, social service counselor, psychologist, pharmacist,
employee of the department of early learning, licensed
or certified child care providers or their employees,
employee of the department, juvenile probation officer,
placement and liaison specialist, responsible living skills
program staff, HOPE center staff, or state family and
children's ombudsman or any volunteer in the ombudsman's
office has reasonable cause to believe that a child has
suffered abuse or neglect, he or she shall report such
incident, or cause a report to be made, to the proper
law enforcement agency or to the department as provided
in RCW 26.44.040.
(b) When any person, in his or her official
supervisory capacity with a nonprofit or for-profit organization,
has reasonable cause to believe that a child has suffered
abuse or neglect caused by a person over whom he or she
regularly exercises supervisory authority, he or she shall
report such incident, or cause a report to be made, to
the proper law enforcement agency, provided that the person
alleged to have caused the abuse or neglect is employed
by, contracted by, or volunteers with the organization
and coaches, trains, educates, or counsels a child or
children or regularly has unsupervised access to a child
or children as part of the employment, contract, or voluntary
service. No one shall be required to report under this
section when he or she obtains the information solely
as a result of a privileged communication as provided
in RCW 5.60.060.
Nothing in this subsection (1)(b) shall
limit a person's duty to report under (a) of this subsection.
For the purposes of this subsection,
the following definitions apply:
(i) "Official supervisory capacity" means
a position, status, or role created, recognized, or designated
by any nonprofit or for-profit organization, either for
financial gain or without financial gain, whose scope
includes, but is not limited to, overseeing, directing,
or managing another person who is employed by, contracted
by, or volunteers with the nonprofit or for-profit organization.
(ii) "Regularly exercises supervisory
authority" means to act in his or her official supervisory
capacity on an ongoing or continuing basis with regards
to a particular person.
(c) The reporting requirement also applies
to department of corrections personnel who, in the course
of their employment, observe offenders or the children
with whom the offenders are in contact. If, as a result
of observations or information received in the course
of his or her employment, any department of corrections
personnel has reasonable cause to believe that a child
has suffered abuse or neglect, he or she shall report
the incident, or cause a report to be made, to the proper
law enforcement agency or to the department as provided
in RCW 26.44.040.
(d) The reporting requirement shall
also apply to any adult who has reasonable cause to believe
that a child who resides with them, has suffered severe
abuse, and is able or capable of making a report. For
the purposes of this subsection, "severe abuse" means
any of the following: Any single act of abuse that causes
physical trauma of sufficient severity that, if left untreated,
could cause death; any single act of sexual abuse that
causes significant bleeding, deep bruising, or significant
external or internal swelling; or more than one act of
physical abuse, each of which causes bleeding, deep bruising,
significant external or internal swelling, bone fracture,
or unconsciousness.
(e) The reporting requirement also applies
to guardians ad litem, including court-appointed special
advocates, appointed under Titles 11, 13, and 26 RCW,
who in the course of their representation of children
in these actions have reasonable cause to believe a child
has been abused or neglected.
(f) The report must be made at the first
opportunity, but in no case longer than forty-eight hours
after there is reasonable cause to believe that the child
has suffered abuse or neglect. The report must include
the identity of the accused if known.
(2) The reporting requirement of subsection
(1) of this section does not apply to the discovery of
abuse or neglect that occurred during childhood if it
is discovered after the child has become an adult. However,
if there is reasonable cause to believe other children
are or may be at risk of abuse or neglect by the accused,
the reporting requirement of subsection (1) of this section
does apply.
(3) Any other person who has reasonable
cause to believe that a child has suffered abuse or neglect
may report such incident to the proper law enforcement
agency or to the department of social and health services
as provided in RCW 26.44.040.
(4) The department, upon receiving a
report of an incident of alleged abuse or neglect pursuant
to this chapter, involving a child who has died or has
had physical injury or injuries inflicted upon him or
her other than by accidental means or who has been subjected
to alleged sexual abuse, shall report such incident to
the proper law enforcement agency. In emergency cases,
where the child's welfare is endangered, the department
shall notify the proper law enforcement agency within
twenty-four hours after a report is received by the department.
In all other cases, the department shall notify the law
enforcement agency within seventy-two hours after a report
is received by the department. If the department makes
an oral report, a written report must also be made to
the proper law enforcement agency within five days thereafter.
(5) Any law enforcement agency receiving
a report of an incident of alleged abuse or neglect pursuant
to this chapter, involving a child who has died or has
had physical injury or injuries inflicted upon him or
her other than by accidental means, or who has been subjected
to alleged sexual abuse, shall report such incident in
writing as provided in RCW 26.44.040 to the proper county
prosecutor or city attorney for appropriate action whenever
the law enforcement agency's investigation reveals that
a crime may have been committed. The law enforcement agency
shall also notify the department of all reports received
and the law enforcement agency's disposition of them.
In emergency cases, where the child's welfare is endangered,
the law enforcement agency shall notify the department
within twenty-four hours. In all other cases, the law
enforcement agency shall notify the department within
seventy-two hours after a report is received by the law
enforcement agency.
(6) Any county prosecutor or city attorney
receiving a report under subsection (5) of this section
shall notify the victim, any persons the victim requests,
and the local office of the department, of the decision
to charge or decline to charge a crime, within five days
of making the decision.
(7) The department may conduct ongoing
case planning and consultation with those persons or agencies
required to report under this section, with consultants
designated by the department, and with designated representatives
of Washington Indian tribes if the client information
exchanged is pertinent to cases currently receiving child
protective services. Upon request, the department shall
conduct such planning and consultation with those persons
required to report under this section if the department
determines it is in the best interests of the child. Information
considered privileged by statute and not directly related
to reports required by this section must not be divulged
without a valid written waiver of the privilege.
(8) Any case referred to the department
by a physician licensed under chapter 18.57 or 18.71 RCW
on the basis of an expert medical opinion that child abuse,
neglect, or sexual assault has occurred and that the child's
safety will be seriously endangered if returned home,
the department shall file a dependency petition unless
a second licensed physician of the parents' choice believes
that such expert medical opinion is incorrect. If the
parents fail to designate a second physician, the department
may make the selection. If a physician finds that a child
has suffered abuse or neglect but that such abuse or neglect
does not constitute imminent danger to the child's health
or safety, and the department agrees with the physician's
assessment, the child may be left in the parents' home
while the department proceeds with reasonable efforts
to remedy parenting deficiencies.
(9) Persons or agencies exchanging information
under subsection (7) of this section shall not further
disseminate or release the information except as authorized
by state or federal statute. Violation of this subsection
is a misdemeanor.
(10) Upon receiving a report of alleged
abuse or neglect, the department shall make reasonable
efforts to learn the name, address, and telephone number
of each person making a report of abuse or neglect under
this section. The department shall provide assurances
of appropriate confidentiality of the identification of
persons reporting under this section. If the department
is unable to learn the information required under this
subsection, the department shall only investigate cases
in which:
(a) The department believes there is
a serious threat of substantial harm to the child;
(b) The report indicates conduct involving
a criminal offense that has, or is about to occur, in
which the child is the victim; or
(c) The department has a prior founded
report of abuse or neglect with regard to a member of
the household that is within three years of receipt of
the referral.
(11)(a) For reports of alleged abuse
or neglect that are accepted for investigation by the
department, the investigation shall be conducted within
time frames established by the department in rule. In
no case shall the investigation extend longer than ninety
days from the date the report is received, unless the
investigation is being conducted under a written protocol
pursuant to RCW 26.44.180 and a law enforcement agency
or prosecuting attorney has determined that a longer investigation
period is necessary. At the completion of the investigation,
the department shall make a finding that the report of
child abuse or neglect is founded or unfounded.
(b) If a court in a civil or criminal
proceeding, considering the same facts or circumstances
as are contained in the report being investigated by the
department, makes a judicial finding by a preponderance
of the evidence or higher that the subject of the pending
investigation has abused or neglected the child, the department
shall adopt the finding in its investigation.
(12) In conducting an investigation of
alleged abuse or neglect, the department or law enforcement
agency:
(a) May interview children. The interviews
may be conducted on school premises, at day-care facilities,
at the child's home, or at other suitable locations outside
of the presence of parents. Parental notification of the
interview must occur at the earliest possible point in
the investigation that will not jeopardize the safety
or protection of the child or the course of the investigation.
Prior to commencing the interview the department or law
enforcement agency shall determine whether the child wishes
a third party to be present for the interview and, if
so, shall make reasonable efforts to accommodate the child's
wishes. Unless the child objects, the department or law
enforcement agency shall make reasonable efforts to include
a third party in any interview so long as the presence
of the third party will not jeopardize the course of the
investigation; and
(b) Shall have access to all relevant
records of the child in the possession of mandated reporters
and their employees.
(13) If a report of alleged abuse or
neglect is founded and constitutes the third founded report
received by the department within the last twelve months
involving the same child or family, the department shall
promptly notify the office of the family and children's
ombudsman of the contents of the report. The department
shall also notify the ombudsman of the disposition of
the report.
(14) In investigating and responding
to allegations of child abuse and neglect, the department
may conduct background checks as authorized by state and
federal law.
(15) The department shall maintain investigation
records and conduct timely and periodic reviews of all
founded cases of abuse and neglect. The department shall
maintain a log of screened-out nonabusive cases.
(16) The department shall use a risk
assessment process when investigating alleged child abuse
and neglect referrals. The department shall present the
risk factors at all hearings in which the placement of
a dependent child is an issue. Substance abuse must be
a risk factor. The department shall, within funds appropriated
for this purpose, offer enhanced community-based services
to persons who are determined not to require further state
intervention.
(17) Upon receipt of a report of alleged
abuse or neglect the law enforcement agency may arrange
to interview the person making the report and any collateral
sources to determine if any malice is involved in the
reporting.
(18) Upon receiving a report of alleged
abuse or neglect involving a child under the court's jurisdiction
under chapter 13.34 RCW, the department shall promptly
notify the child's guardian ad litem of the report's contents.
The department shall also notify the guardian ad litem
of the disposition of the report. For purposes of this
subsection, "guardian ad litem" has the meaning provided
in RCW 13.34.030.