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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Native Village of Kwinhagak v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS (2/9/2024) sp-7684

Native Village of Kwinhagak v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS (2/9/2024) sp-7684

        Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

        Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

        303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

        corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                   THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  



NATIVE VILLAGE OF                                            )     

KWINHAGAK,                                                   )   Supreme Court No. S-18481  

  

                                                             )     

                             Appellant,                      )   Superior Court No. 4BE-19-00046 CN  

  

                                                             )     

          v.                                                 )   O P I N I O N  

                                                             )     

STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT  )                                   No. 7684 - February 9, 2024  

OF HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES,                                 )  

OFFICE OF CHILDREN'S                                         ) 

SERVICES; MIRA J.; and ELAINE G.,  ) 

                                                             ) 

                             Appellees.                      )  

                                                             )  

                    

                  Appeal  from  the  Superior  Court  of  the  State  of  Alaska,  

                  Fourth Judicial District, Bethel, Terrence P. Haas, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:    Pearl  E.  Pickett,  Alaska  Legal  Services  

                  Corporation, Anchorage, for Appellant.  Laura Fox, Senior  

                  Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor,  

                  Attorney  General,  Juneau,  for  State  of  Alaska.    Katie  

                  Stephenson, Assistant Public Advocate, and James Stinson,  

                  Public  Advocate,  Anchorage,  for  Mira  J.    Justin  Gillette,  

                  Assistant  Public  Defender,  and  Samantha  Cherot,  Public  

                  Defender, Anchorage, for Elaine G.  

  

                  Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                  Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                    

                  BORGHESAN, Justice.  

  



  



  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

  



        INTRODUCTION  



                 This  case  is  about  the  legal  process  that  applies  when  the  Office  of  



Children's  Services  (OCS)  seeks  to  admit  a  child  in  its  custody  to  the  hospital  for  



psychiatric  care.    The  teenaged  child  at  the  center  of  this  case  was  hospitalized  



continuously for 46 days - first at a local hospital, then at North Star Hospital, an acute  



psychiatric hospital for minors - before the court held a hearing to decide whether her  



hospitalization was justified.    



                 The statutes governing child in need of aid (CINA) proceedings give OCS  



the duty and authority to seek emergency medical care for the children in its custody.   



One statute in particular, AS 47.10.087, requires judicial review when OCS seeks to  



place a child at a secure residential psychiatric treatment facility.  But the facilities to  



which OCS brought the child in this case do not meet that definition.  And there is no  



other provision of the CINA statutes that limits OCS's authority to  seek admission of  



children to the hospital for psychiatric care.  OCS is subject only to an injunction that  



requires an "AS 47.10.087-type hearing" to be held within 30 days after it admits a  



child to North Star.    



                 The child's tribe argues that a different statutory framework governed the  



child's hospitalization:   the  civil commitment statutes.  The Tribe also argues, in the  



alternative, that the constitution  did  not permit OCS to hospitalize a child for such a  



long time without a court hearing to determine whether the hospitalization was justified.    



                 We reject the Tribe's statutory argument.  OCS was not required to follow  



the civil commitment statutes when admitting the child to either hospital.  However,  



when OCS sought to admit the child to the hospital for psychiatric care, the due process  



clause of the Alaska Constitution required  OCS to promptly notify the parties to the  



CINA case.  Due process also required the court to hold a hearing as soon as reasonably  



possible  to  determine  whether  the  hospitalization  was  justified .    The  46-day  wait  



between the child's first admission to the hospital and the hearing held in this case was  



                                                -2-                                                    7684  


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far too long to satisfy due process.  We therefore reverse the court's order authorizing  



the child's continued hospitalization.   



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.       Mira's Hospitalization  



                 Mira J.,  a member of the Native Village of Kwinhagak (the Tribe), was  



                                                                                            1 

adjudicated a child in need of aid and placed in OCS custody in late 2019.   She was 14  



years old at the time.  The Tribe intervened as a party in the CINA case.  OCS placed  



Mira in foster care in Sitka.   



                 Mira's foster parent brought her to Sitka Community Hospital (Sitka) on  



December 3, 2021, after Mira consumed alcohol and her foster parent's prescription  



medication.  Ten days later OCS issued a "delayed notice of change of placement" to  



the parties to the CINA case to inform them that it had "placed" Mira at Sitka.   



                 Within a few hours of Mira's admission to Sitka, a clinician advised that  



Mira did not require "24/7 supervision[,] just ongoing counseling and support ."   But  



Mira's previous foster family refused to accept her back into their home  due to  her  



behaviors.  While OCS looked for another foster home, Mira "opened up about her past  



                                                                 2 

trauma" to the Sitka clinician and experienced ataxia  symptoms and a panic attack that  



caused her to struggle "to move her limbs and to breathe."   These events caused the  



clinician  to  recommend  "acute  residential  treatment,"  and  OCS  transferred  Mira  to  



North Star Hospital (North Star), a psychiatric hospital in Anchorage.  The record does  



not  specify  when  the  Sitka  clinician  changed  her  recommendation,  although  OCS  



                                                                                                              

        1        A pseudonym is used to protect her privacy.  



        2        "An inability to coordinate muscle activity during voluntary movement;  

most often results from disorders of the cerebellum or the posterior columns of the  

spinal cord; may involve the limbs, head, or trunk."  A taxia,  STEDMAN'S MEDICAL  

DICTIONARY, Westlaw (database updated Nov. 2014).  



                                                -3-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

  



                                                                                         3 

apparently decided to transfer Mira to North Star by December 14.   Mira was moved  



                                                                     

directly from Sitka to North Star on December 20 or 21.   OCS notified the parties on  



December 22 that Mira had been moved to North Star, only after the Tribe requested  



an update on Mira's status.   



         B.       Legal Proceedings  



                  On   December   22   the   Tribe   moved   for   a   hearing   and   expedited  



consideration under the civil commitment statutes  (AS 47.30.700 -  47.30.815).   This  



was the first request for judicial review of Mira's inpatient psychiatric treatment by any  



party.  OCS did not oppose the Tribe's request for a hearing or expedited consideration,  



but  OCS  did  not  agree  that  the  superior  court  should  apply  the  civil  commitment  



statutes.  The superior court issued an order appointing counsel for Mira and scheduling  



a hearing for December 30, 2021 - 27 days after Mira had first been hospitalized and  



8 days after OCS had transferred her to North Star.   



                  The  superior  court  repeatedly  rescheduled  that  hearing  to  ensure  that  



counsel could represent Mira and that a key witness from North Star could attend.  The  



court finally considered the Tribe's motion at a hearing on January 18, 2021 - 46 days  



after Mira had been initially hospitalized at Sitka and 29 days after OCS transferred her  



to North Star.   



                  During these proceedings the parties advanced different positions on the  



legal  framework  applicable  to  Mira's  case.    OCS  asserted  that  because  it  had  legal  



custody of Mira under the CINA statutes, it had authority to admit her to the hospital  



for psychiatric care, subject only to a permanent injunction issued by the superior court  



                                                         4 

in Native Village of Hooper Bay v. Lawton.   In that case the superior court considered  



                                                                                                                    

         3        The assigned  OCS caseworker was on leave when Mira's foster parent  

brought her to Sitka and was not part of the decision to transfer Mira to North Star.  The  

decision  to  transfer  Mira  to  North  Star  had  already  been  made  by  the  time  the  

caseworker returned to the office on December 14.   

         4        No. 3AN-14-5238 CI (Alaska Super., Feb. 12, 2015).  



                                                   -4-                                                        7684  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

  



whether AS 47.10.087, which governs OCS's authority to place children in its custody  



                                                                                                    5 

in a "secure residential psychiatric treatment center," applied to North Star.   The court  



held  that  North  Star  did  not  meet  the  statutory  definition,  so  the  standards  of  



                                                           6 

AS 47.10.087  were  not  directly  applicable.     But  it  concluded  that  the  constitution  



required  some  judicial  oversight  of  OCS's  decision  to  admit  a  child  to  an  acute  



                                                  7 

psychiatric  hospital  like  North  Star.     Accordingly  the  court  enjoined  OCS  "from  



holding any child under the care of OCS for longer than 30 days at North Star Hospital  



                                                                              8 

without  conducting  an  AS 47.10.087-type  of  hearing."     In  the  January  hearing  



regarding  Mira's  hospitalization,  OCS  maintained  that  the  Hooper  Bay  injunction  



established the correct procedure for Mira's admission to North Star.   



                  The   Tribe   countered   that   the   court   must              instead   review   Mira's  



hospitalization according to the civil commitment  statutes.    Those statutes authorize  



any person to petition for the evaluation and involuntary psychiatric hospitalization of  



                           9 

an  adult  or  minor.     When  a  petition  for  civil  commitment  is  filed,  the  court's  



                                                                                                                     

         5        Id. at 7.  



         6        Id. at 9-10.  



         7        Id. at 16-18.  



         8        Under AS 47.10.087, OCS may place a child in  its custody in a "secure  

residential psychiatric treatment center" if a court finds, "based on the testimony of a  

mental health professional, that (1) the child is gravely disabled or  is  suffering from  

mental illness and, as a result, is likely to cause serious harm to the child or to another  

person; (2) there is no reasonably available, appropriate, and less restrictive alternative  

for the child's treatment or that less restrictive alternatives have been tried and  have  

failed;  and  (3)  there  is  reason  to  believe  that  the  child's  mental  condition  could  be  

improved by the course of treatment or would deteriorate if untreated."    

         9        AS 47.30.700         (authorizing       "any     adult"     to   petition     for   screening  

investigation  and  judicial  determination  within  48  hours  whether  "there  is  probable  

cause to believe the respondent is mentally ill and that condition causes the respondent  

to be gravely disabled or to present a likelihood of serious harm to self or others"); see  

also  AS 47.30.705  and  AS 47.30.707(a)  (authorizing  peace  officer,  mental  health  

  



                                                   -5-                                                         7684  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

  



involvement  is  triggered  almost  immediately,  and  a  contested hearing  must be held  

within a matter of days to review whether involuntary hospitalization is justified .10  



                 The  parties  also  disagreed  over  whether  the  evidence  justified  Mira's  



hospitalization under either legal framework.  OCS and Mira's guardian ad litem (GAL)  



argued, pursuant to AS 47.10.087, that Mira suffered from mental illness, was likely to  



cause serious harm to herself or others, and should remain at North Star until accepted  



into a less restrictive facility.    OCS presented the testimony of North Star's clinical  



director.  The director testified that Mira's psychiatrist had diagnosed her with various  



mental health conditions.  The director opined that those conditions, paired with Mira's  



verbal  aggression  toward  peers  and  suicidal  thoughts,  suggested  that  Mira  would  



deteriorate  if  untreated  and  was  likely  to  harm  herself  or  others.    Under  cross- 



examination,  the  director  recounted  an  episode  in  which  Mira  had  consumed  hand  



sanitizer.  When asked about less restrictive alternatives, the director explained that she  



had sent referrals to several in-state residential facilities a week prior and had not yet  



heard  back  from  any  of  them.    OCS  also  presented  testimony  by  the  assigned  



caseworker, who confirmed that Mira had "very clearly stated that she is not happy  



being there, that she does not want to be at North Star."   



                 Mira and her mother argued that OCS did not prove that Mira was likely  



to harm herself or others and that OCS had not met its burden to show that there was  



no less restrictive alternative  to her placement at North Star.   The Tribe joined these  



arguments, adding that OCS had transferred Mira to North Star "without giving [Mira]  



any sort of hope of due process."  The Tribe also asked the court to "rule on whether or  



not  this  is,  in  fact,  an  [AS 47.10.087]  proceeding"  or  "a  continuation  of  a  civil  



commitment that should have been initiated at the beginning of December."   



                                                                                                                



officer, or other medical professional to take person into custody for evaluation starting  

within 24 hours of arrival).  

         10      See AS 47.30.700-.730.  



                                                 -6-                                                      7684  


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                  The  superior  court  entered  an  oral  ruling.    It  ruled  that  AS 47.10.087  



applied to Mira's proceedings and that the civil commitment statutes did not (the court  



did  not  mention  the Hooper  Bay  injunction).    Yet  the  court  expressed  ambivalence  



about its decision.  It drew comparisons between Mira's case and our decision in In re  



Hospitalization  of  April  S .,  which  concerned  OCS's  attempt  to  rely  on  the  civil  

commitment statutes to admit a minor to a state-run psychiatric facility.11   The court  



stated that in both cases, "you have a child who's been admitted to a facility, whether  



it's admitted with [or without] consent of a parent, and then it's . . . at the hands of OCS  



to, if it's under a .087, to get the ball rolling to find a less restrictive facility."  But the  



court  observed  that  if  the  minor's  admission  was  pursuant  to  the  civil  commitment  



statutes,  "much  more  rights  are  entitled  to  the  minor."    The  court  questioned  "why  



somebody  in  OCS  custody  would  be  entitled  to  less  rights,"  but  concluded  "that's  



clearly  what  47.10.087  does."    Although  the  court  determined  that  AS 47.10.087  



applied to Mira's proceedings, it expressed reservations about this result and suggested  



that parties' actual practice should be closer to what is required by civil commitment  



statues, which the court opined were "not a great burden on anybody."   



                  The court then found that the criteria of AS 47.10.087 had been met.  It  



determined that although Mira was "not intending to overdose" on the substances that  



brought her to Sitka, she was "getting close to that, an attempt to kill herself."  The hand  



sanitizer incident suggested to the court that "she's continuing to engage in this type of  



behavior."  The court therefore concluded that Mira was suffering from mental illness  



"and as a result, is likely to cause serious harm to herself."   



                  The superior court rebuked North Star and OCS for failing to apply to less  



restrictive facilities until a few days before the hearing, characterizing this failure as "a  



lack  of  planning  and  foresight."    But  it  nonetheless  found  that  no  less  restrictive  



                                                                                                                   

         11      499 P.3d 1011, 1012 (Alaska 2021).  



                                                  -7-                                                        7684  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

  



alternative  was  available  at  that  time.    Finally,  the  court  expressed  skepticism  that  



Mira's condition would improve at North Star,  but  found that "her condition would  



deteriorate if . . . untreated."  The court authorized Mira's continued placement at North  

Star for 90 days12 but set another hearing three weeks later to review placement options.   



                 The  Tribe  appeals.    It  challenges  the  superior  court's  ruling  on  the  



applicable legal framework but not the court's factual findings.   



         STANDARDS OF REVIEW  



                 Because the Tribe asks this court only to interpret statutes and the Alaska  

Constitution, de novo review applies.13  We adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive  



in light of precedent, reason, and policy.14  



                  Questions  of  standing  and  mootness  "are  questions  of  law  involving  



matters  of  judicial  policy,"  so  we  use  our  independent  judgment  when  answering  

them.15  



                 We review issues raised for the first time on appeal for plain error.16  Plain  



error  exists if  an "obvious mistake"17  is "so prejudicial that failure to correct it will  



perpetuate a manifest injustice."18    



                                                                                                                   

         12      See  AS 47.10.087 (instructing courts to  review placements made under  

the statute "at least once every 90 days").  

         13      Petrolane Inc. v. Robles , 154 P.3d 1014, 1018 (Alaska 2007).  



         14      Id.  



         15      Fairbanks Fire Fighters Ass 'n, Loc. 1324 v. City of Fairbanks, 48 P.3d  

1165, 1167 (Alaska 2002).  

         16      In re Hospitalization  of Connor J., 440 P.3d 159, 163 (Alaska 2019).  



         17      In re Hospitalization of Gabriel C., 324 P.3d 835, 838 (Alaska 2014).  



         18      Donahue  v.  Ledgends,  Inc. ,  331  P.3d  342,  356  n.75  (Alaska  2014)  

(quoting Forshee v. Forshee, 145 P.3d 492, 500 n.36 (Alaska 2006)).  Although  the  

Tribe  argues  that  the  plain  error  standard  is  more  permissive  in  the  constitutional  

context, the case it cites discusses the criminal plain error rule, which arises from Alaska  

  



                                                  -8-                                                        7684  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

  



        DISCUSSION  



        A.       We  Consider  Most  Issues  Raised  By  The  Tribe  Under  The  Public  

                 Interest Exception To The Mootness Doctrine.  



                 This  case  presents  several  statutory  and  constitutional  questions:    (1)  



whether OCS must follow civil commitment procedures when admitting children in its  



custody to  a hospital for psychiatric treatment; (2) whether the Tribe has standing to  



assert Mira's constitutional rights; and (3) whether  the lengthy period that Mira was  



hospitalized   at   OCS's   direction   before   a   hearing   was   held            satisfies   Alaska's  



constitutional guarantees of equal protection and due process.  All of these questions  



are moot because Mira was discharged from psychiatric hospitalization long ago.  But  



with one  exception, we decide these issues under the public interest exception to the  



mootness doctrine.    



                 We  consider  three  factors  when  deciding  to  apply  the  public  interest  



exception to the mootness doctrine:   "(1) whether the disputed issues are capable of  



repetition, (2) whether the mootness doctrine, if applied, may cause review of the issues  



to be repeatedly circumvented, and (3) whether the issues presented are so important to  

the public interest as to justify overriding the mootness doctrine."19    



                 These factors  support addressing most of the issues raised by the Tribe.   



Although  the  superior  court's  order  has  long  expired,  the  State  concedes  that  most  



issues   the   Tribe   raises   will   recur   and,   due   to   the   typically   short   periods   of  



hospitalization,  will  repeatedly  evade review.    Clarifying  the  legal  protections for  a  



                                                                                                              



Criminal Rule 47(b) and does not apply here.  See Adams v. State, 261 P.3d 758, 770- 

71 (Alaska 2011).   

        19       Blythe P. v.  State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child. 's Servs.,  

524 P.3d 238, 244 (Alaska 2023) (quoting In re Off. of Pub. Advoc ., 514 P.3d 1281,  

1285 (Alaska 2022)); id. (noting "no one factor is dispositive").  



                                                -9-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

  



vulnerable population of children in state custody is of utmost public importance.20  We  



must  therefore  determine  which  statutory  framework  governs  the  acute  psychiatric  



hospitalization  of  minors  in  OCS  custody  and  whether  that  framework  satisfies  



constitutional requirements.    



                 However, we agree with the State that the public interest exception to the  



mootness doctrine does not extend to one aspect of the Tribe's statutory argument :  the  



definition of "evaluation facilities."  In the period following Mira's hospitalization the  



legislature modified the statutory definition of "evaluation facility" so that it no longer  



includes "a medical facility licensed under AS 47.32" - the language that  seemingly  

included  both  Sitka  and  North  Star.21    Whether  these  facilities  were  "evaluation  



facilities" under an old version of the statute, and whether their status as "evaluation  



facilities" required the superior court to apply AS 47.30.700 et seq., are no longer issues  

that could recur in future cases.22  We decline to consider this moot issue.  



         B.      The     Civil    Commitment           Statutes     Did     Not     Apply     To     Mira's  

                 Hospitalization.    



                 The  parties  disagree  over  the  correct  statutory  framework  governing  



OCS's authority to admit Mira to a hospital for inpatient psychiatric care.  In our recent  



decision in Tuluksak Native Community v. Department of Health & Social Services, we  



held that the superior court did not err by applying AS 47.10.087 to evaluate a child's  



admission to North Star, rejecting a different tribe's argument that that the admission  



                                                                                                                

        20       See, e.g., id. (citing Jennifer L. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., 357  

P.3d 110, 114 (Alaska 2015); Peter A. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  

Child. 's Servs., 146 P.3d 991, 996 & n.30 (Alaska 2006)).  

        21       See Ch. 41 § 28, SLA 2002.  



        22       Cf. Akpik v. State, Off. of Mgmt. & Budget , 115 P.3d 532, 535 (Alaska  

2005) (declining to apply the public interest exception to mootness where the relevant  

statutes had been changed).   



                                                -10-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

  



was subject to the civil commitment statutes.23  But the issues in that case were framed  



differently  than  they are  in  this  case,  so  that  decision  does not  control  our  analysis  

here.24   



                 In this case the Tribe argues that OCS was required to petition for Mira's  



involuntary commitment under AS 47.30.700  and that the superior court erred by not  



applying the strict timelines and procedural safeguards of the commitment  statutes to  



Mira's hospitalization.   If those statutes applied,  OCS would have had to petition for  



Mira's hospitalization when it took her to Sitka, and the superior court would have had  



to  hold  a  hearing  on  whether  Mira's  hospitalization  was  justified  within  just  a  few  

days.25   



                 OCS counters that it had authority by virtue of its legal custody under the  



CINA statutes to bring Mira to the hospital to receive psychiatric care.  OCS takes the  



position that because it has this separate source of authority, it did not have to petition  



for Mira's involuntary commitment, and therefore was not subject to the procedures  



that apply to petitions for involuntary commitment.  We agree with OCS's interpretation  



of the statutory framework.    



                                                                                                                

         23      530 P.3d 359, 368-69 (Alaska 2023).  



         24      For example, in  Tuluksak the parties did not take the position that North  

Star is not a secure residential psychiatric treatment facility admission for purposes of  

AS 47.10.087.    

         25      AS 47.30.700        (authorizing      "any     adult"    to   petition     for   screening  

investigation and judicial determination within 48 whether "there is probable cause to  

believe the respondent is mentally ill and that condition causes the respondent to be  

gravely disabled or to present a likelihood of serious harm to self or others"); see also  

AS 47.30.705  (authorizing  peace  officer,  mental  health  officer,  or  other  medical  

professional  to  take  person  into  custody  for  evaluation  starting  within  24  hours  of  

arrival);  AS 47.30.715  (setting  forth  procedures  for  evaluation  facilities  to  conduct  

evaluations following receipt of evaluation orders, as well as procedures for court to set  

30-day commitment hearing); AS 47.30.730 (establishing procedural and substantive  

requirements for petition for 30-day commitment).   



                                                -11-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

  



                 OCS has the power to take a child to the hospital in a medical emergency.   



When a child is placed in OCS's custody, "a relationship of legal custody exists" that  

gives OCS authority and responsibility to make decisions about the child's welfare.26   



This authority includes, among other things, "the duty of providing the child with food,  

shelter, education, and medical care."27  In this way OCS stands largely in the shoes of  



the child's parent.  Like a parent, OCS can seek treatment for psychiatric emergencies.    



                 Of course, OCS's authority is more limited than that of a parent.  OCS has  

the power to decide "where and with whom the child shall live,"28 but a parent can ask  



the superior court to review OCS's decision.29   Although OCS has a duty to provide  



medical care to a child in its custody, the child's parent still retains the right to consent,  

or to withhold consent, to "major medical treatment."30  And though OCS may seek to  



place a child in a "secure residential psychiatric treatment facility," it must prove to the  



court by clear and convincing evidence that the child's condition is serious enough and  



that the treatment is likely to help the child or prevent the child's condition from getting  



         31 

worse.         



                 None of those limits on OCS authority applied in this case.  The Tribe and  



OCS agree that AS 47.10.087, which limits OCS's authority to place children at "secure  



residential  psychiatric  treatment  centers,"  does  not  apply  to  Mira's  hospitalizations  



                                                                                                                  

         26      AS 47.10.084(a).  



         27      Id.  



         28      Id.  



         29      AS 47.10.080(s) (providing for judicial review of OCS decision to transfer  

child from one placement to another).   

         30      AS 47.10.084(c).  



         31      AS 47.10.087;  Tuluksak Native Cmty. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc.  

Servs.,  530  P.3d  359,  373  (Alaska  2023)  (holding  that  a  court's  findings  under  

AS 47.10.087 "must be made by clear and convincing evidence").  



                                                 -12-                                                       7684  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

  



because neither Sitka nor North Star meets the definition for such a facility.32  Nor has  



any party argued that inpatient psychiatric hospitalization alone, without involuntary  



medication, is "major medical treatment" that requires parental consent under the CINA  

statutes.33  In short, nothing in the CINA statutes prohibited OCS from taking Mira to  



Sitka or North Star to receive inpatient psychiatric care.  Doing so was consistent with  

its "duty of providing the child with . . . medical care" required by AS 47.10.084.34  



                 Although the Tribe argues that OCS cannot exercise this authority without  



invoking the  civil  commitment statutes, those statutes do not purport  to  limit OCS's  



legal custody and authority under AS 47.10.084.  The civil commitment statutes (with  



one exception we will address shortly) do not mention those with parental or other legal  



authority  over  others.    They  do  not  mention  children  in  state  custody  or  reference  



AS 47.10 at all.  The civil commitment statutes create a legal mechanism for "any adult"  



- relative, colleague, neighbor - to have another person committed to a  state-run or  

state-designated psychiatric hospital.35   When this mechanism is used, the attendant  



protections apply.   But  OCS does not have to use this mechanism.  It has a separate  



basis of authority under the CINA statutes to seek emergency medical care, including  



                                                                                                                

         32      See  AS  47.32.900  (defining  "secure  residential  psychiatric  treatment  

center" as "a secure or semi-secure facility, or an inpatient program in another facility,  

that provides, under the direction of a physician, psychiatric diagnostic, evaluation, and  

treatment  services  on  a  24-hour-a-day  basis  to  children  with  severe  emotional  or  

behavioral disorders").    

         33      See AS 47.10.084(b)-(c) (describing residual rights of parents of children  

in  OCS  custody,  including  "consenting  to  major  medical  treatment"  and  defining  

"major  medical  treatment"  to  include  "administration  of  medication  used  to  treat  a  

mental health disorder");  cf. Kiva O.  v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off.  of  

Child. 's  Servs.,  408  P.3d  1181  (Alaska  2018)  (establishing  standard  for  overruling  

parent's  unwillingness  to  give  consent  for  involuntary  medication  of  child  in  OCS  

custody).  

         34      AS 47.10.084(a).  



         35      AS 47.30.700.  



                                                -13-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

  



psychiatric care, for the children in its custody .  This authority is not expressly subject  



to the procedures in the civil commitment statutes.   



                 The Tribe  argues that the legislature could not have intended OCS to be  



exempt from oversight when admitting children in its custody to a psychiatric hospital.   



This argument rests largely on two statutes.  First, the Tribe points to AS 47.10.087 's  



judicial  review  process  when   OCS  seeks  to  place  children  in  secure  residential  



psychiatric treatment facilities.  The Tribe contends that it would be inconsistent with  



the legislature's protective intent to allow OCS to admit children to  other, more acute  



psychiatric   facilities   without   oversight.           Second,   the   Tribe   argues   that   under  



AS 47.30.690  the  legislature  has  limited  even  parents'  authority to  admit  their  own  



children to a psychiatric hospital.  Therefore, the Tribe argues, it would be absurd to  



interpret the law so that OCS  has more authority  to hospitalize a child  than parents  



possess.    The  Tribe  bolsters  its  argument  under  AS 47.30.690  by  pointing  to  our  



decision in In re April S. , which held that OCS cannot rely on that statute to  admit a  

child to a psychiatric hospital.36  We stated in that case that OCS could instead petition  



for  the  child's  involuntary  commitment  under  AS 47.30.700.37    The  Tribe  argues  it  



would be inconsistent with April S. to hold that OCS was not required to petition for  



Mira's involuntary commitment to Sitka and North Star.   



                 The problem with the  Tribe's  first argument is that we cannot interpret  

statutes to include things the legislature has  failed to include.38  Under AS 47.10.087,  



OCS's decision to place a child in a "secure residential psychiatric treatment facility"  



                                                                                                                

         36      499 P.3d 1011, 1019-20 (Alaska 2021).  



         37      Id. at 1020.  



         38      See State v. Fyfe, 370 P.3d 1092, 1100 (Alaska 2016) (explaining that we  

must assume "the legislature chose its words deliberately, avoided  redundancies, and  

omitted words it intended to omit"); State, Div. of Workers' Comp. v. Titan Enters.,  

LLC,  338 P.3d 316, 321 (Alaska 2014)  ("We do not rewrite statutes even when the  

legislative history suggests that the legislature may have made a mistake in drafting.").  



                                                -14-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

  



is subject to judicial review.39   The superior court may permit this placement only if  



OCS proves by clear and convincing evidence that the severity of the child's condition  

warrants it.40  This requirement does not apply to other classes of psychiatric facilities.   



The Tribe argues it would be absurd not to subject OCS's decision to admit a child in  



its  custody  to  a  psychiatric  hospital  (rather  than  a  secure  residential  psychiatric  



treatment  facility)  to  the  same  kind  of  judicial  review.    But  the  legislature  could  



plausibly have intended to allow judicial review for long-term "residential placements"  



of youth in OCS custody but not for admission to a psychiatric hospital for acute care,  

which is often of much shorter duration.41  More fundamentally, we as a court cannot  



rewrite the law to include what the legislature has omitted.42   



                 The Tribe's second argument rests on a mistaken premise.  The law does  



not limit parents' authority to admit children to all psychiatric hospitals, only to those  



designated by the State to hold people involuntarily.  Under AS 47.30.690, a parent or  



guardian may sign a child into a "designated treatment facility" for psychiatric care if  



the child meets the criteria for admission, but the admission is limited to 30 days, and  

the  child  is  assigned  a  GAL  who  can  seek  judicial  review  of  the  admission.43    A  



"designated treatment facility" is defined as  "a hospital, clinic, institution, center, or  



                                                                                                                

         39      AS 47.10.087(a).  



         40      Tuluksak Native Cmty. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs. , 530 P.3d  

359, 373 (Alaska 2023).  

         41      See  AS  47.10.087(b)  (providing  that  court  shall  review  placement  at  

secure residential psychiatric treatment facility every 90 days).  

         42      "The  separation  of  powers  doctrine  'prohibits  this  court  from  enacting  

legislation or redrafting defective statutes.' "  Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Darrow , 403 P.3d  

1116, 1131 (Alaska 2017) (quoting State v. Campbell, 536 P.2d 105, 111 (Alaska 1975)  

(citing  Alaska  Const.  art.  II,  §  1,  &  art.  IV,  §  1),  overruled  on  other  grounds  by  

Kimoktoak v. State, 584 P.2d 25 (Alaska 1978)).   

         43      AS 47.30.690(a)-(b).  



                                                -15-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

  



other health care facility that has been designated by the department for the treatment  

or rehabilitation of mentally ill persons under AS 47.30.670 - 47.30.915."44    



                 In other words, a parent's authority to admit a child for psychiatric care at  



a state-designated facility is subject to the statutory restrictions detailed above.  But the  



statute does not apply when a parent takes a child to  a psychiatric hospital that is not  

designated  for  the  purpose  of  involuntarily  hospitalizing  patients  under  AS 47.30.45   



Therefore a parent may admit their child to a non-designated psychiatric hospital for  



inpatient care free from the restrictions of AS 47.30.690.  Because the legislature did  



not  restrict  parents'  authority  to  admit  their  children  to  non-designated  psychiatric  



facilities, the absurdity posited by the Tribe - parents being subject to more restrictions  



than OCS - does not exist.      



                                                                                                                

         44      AS 47.30.915 (emphasis added).  



         45      At first blush, it seems strange that the legislature would create procedures  

for judicial review when a parent admits a child to a psychiatric hospital but extend that  

protection  only  to  some  psychiatric  hospitals.    The  Tribe  argues  this  reading  of  

AS 47.30.690 creates an absurd and glaring gap in the statute, undermining the apparent  

legislative goal of protecting children's liberty from their parents' decisions.  But the  

Tribe may be misreading the underlying legislative policy of AS 47.30.690.  Because  

the  statute  applies  only  to  hospitalization  at  facilities  designated  by  the  State  to  

involuntarily hold someone, it appears that the legislative purpose  was  not to restrict  

parents' ability to obtain medical care that they believe their children need.  Instead the  

apparent purpose was to provide the due process that the U.S. Supreme Court held is  

constitutionally  required  when  a  state  operates  or  designates  a  facility  to  restrain  a  

minor's liberty at the direction of a parent.  See Parham v. J.R. , 442 U.S. 584, 591, 600  

(1979)  (examining whether Georgia statute authorizing child's admission to state-run  

mental hospital at parent's behest so long as staff physician found child met admission  

criteria  satisfied  due  process  because  "the  state's  involvement  in  the  commitment  

decision  constitutes  state  action  under  the  Fourteenth  Amendment");  id.  at  633-34  

(Brennan, J., concurring in part and  dissenting in part) (maintaining that due process  

entitles child who objects to hospitalization to a "reasonably prompt" post-admission  

judicial hearing) .  For that reason, it is not absurd that the statute's protections apply  

only to facilities "designated by the department."  AS 47.30.690; AS 47.30.915(7).  



                                                 -16-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

  



                 Neither Sitka nor North Star was a  "designated treatment facility" at the  



time of Mira's admission, so the restrictions in AS 47.30.690 did not apply.  The Tribe  



maintains that these facilities were designated.  Its argument relies on a Department of  



Health  Care  Services  regulation,  7 Alaska  Administrative  Code  12.215(d)(2),  which  



provides that "[a] psychiatric hospital must have policies and procedures which require  



that it admit and discharge patients in accordance with AS 47.30."  The Tribe  argues  



that  because  a  licensed  psychiatric  hospital  (which  includes  North  Star)  must  have  



policies and procedures that comply with AS 47.30, all such hospitals are "designated  



by  the  department  for  the  treatment  or  rehabilitation  of  mentally  ill  persons  under  



AS 47.30.670  -  47.30.915."    This  argument  has  two  problems.    First,  undisputed  



evidence  establishes  that  the  State  has  not  designated  Sitka  or  North  Star  for  this  

purpose.46    Second, a different set of regulations  expressly describes  the process  for  



designating  treatment  facilities  for  civil  commitment  purposes.47    For  example,  



7 AAC 72.040   describes   the   Department's   procedure   for   reviewing   designation  

applications,48  and 7 AAC 72.050 describes the reporting obligations that designated  



facilities  incur.49    Therefore  the  Tribe's  argument  that  North  Star  and  Sitka  were  



"designated" by operation of 7 AAC  12.215 is unavailing.   



                 Finally,  the  Tribe's  reliance  on  April  S.  is  unavailing  too.    That  case  



presented a different question than the one currently before us.  There the child was  

hospitalized at Alaska Psychiatric Institute (API),50 a "designated treatment facility" for  



                                                                                                                

         46      In the superior court the State presented an affidavit from a Department of  

Health  Care  Services  official  identifying   Fairbanks  Memorial  Hospital,  Bartlett  

Regional Hospital, Mat-Su Regional Health Center, and Alaska Psychiatric Institute  

(API) as the only designated treatment facilities in Alaska.    

         47      7 Alaska Administrative Code 72.012-.070.  



         48      7 AAC 72.040.  



         49      7 AAC 72.050.  



         50      In re Hospitalization of April S. , 499 P.3d 1011, 1012-13 (Alaska 2021).  



                                                -17-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

  



purposes of AS 47.30.690 because it is state-run.51  OCS argued that it was a "guardian"  



for purposes of AS 47.30.690, and therefore eligible to "voluntarily" admit a child to  



API  under  that  statute's  procedures.    Analyzing  the  statutory  definition  of  the  term  



"guardian" in the CINA and civil commitment statutes, we held that OCS was not the  



child's guardian and therefore could not admit the child to API without filing a petition  

for  civil  commitment.52    But  we  were  not  presented  with  the  question  of  OCS's  



authority to admit a child to a hospital that is not a "designated treatment facility" for  

purposes  of  AS 47.30.690.53    The April  S.  decision  focused  on  the  narrow  issue  of  



whether OCS could use AS 47.30.690.  It did not resolve broader questions of OCS's  



authority to provide emergency medical care to children in its custody.     



                 To summarize:  OCS has authority under AS 47.10.084 to seek emergency  



medical care, including acute psychiatric care, for children in its legal custody.  The  



civil commitment statutes under AS 47.30 create a separate authority for any person to  



petition to have another  person admitted to a psychiatric hospital for evaluation and  



treatment, but these statutes do not expressly limit OCS's authority under AS 47.10.   



Although the legislature did limit OCS's authority to place a child in a secure residential  



psychiatric treatment facility, the statute contains no similar limitation on OCS's ability  



to  admit  a  child  to  a  psychiatric  hospital  for  acute  care,  and  the  legislature  could  



plausibly have intended that distinction.  And although the legislature restricted parents'  



ability to admit their children to psychiatric hospitals that have been designated by the  



State to involuntarily detain people, it did not restrict parents' authority to admit their  



children to other psychiatric hospitals.  There is nothing absurd about a statutory scheme  



that gives OCS the same authority as a parent when OCS has legal custody of a child,  



                                                                                                                  

         51      AS 47.30.915(7).  The affidavit mentioned above, supra note 46, attests  

that API is a designated treatment facility.   

         52      April S. , 499 P.3d at 1019-20.  



         53      Id.  



                                                 -18-                                                       7684  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

  



so we cannot assume the legislature meant to impose restrictions on OCS that it did not  



set forth in statute.  For these reasons, we conclude that OCS was not required by statute  



to use the civil commitment procedures outlined in AS 47.30 to have Mira admitted to  



Sitka and North Star (which are not designated treatment facilities for purposes of civil  



commitment) for inpatient psychiatric care.    



                 The Tribe's core concern that the statutory scheme has a gap in oversight  



is not unfounded.  OCS candidly acknowledges that "the statutes contain what might  



be  perceived  as  a  gap  because  they  restrict  OCS's  ability  to  admit  a  child  to  a  



'designated  treatment  facility'  under  AS 47.30  or  a  'secure  residential  psychiatric  



treatment  center'  under  AS 47.10.087,  but  place  no  explicit  restrictions  for  a  non- 



designated acute psychiatric hospital like North Star that is neither of these things."  It  



is this seeming gap that led the superior court to issue an injunction in the Hooper Bay  



case.  The court ordered that, as a matter of procedural due process, OCS may not hold  



a child for longer than 30 days at North Star without "conducting an AS 47.10.087-type  



of hearing."   That order is not before us on appeal, and we do not directly review it .   



But  we  agree  with  that  court's  conclusion  that  due  process  requires  some  kind  of  



procedural oversight of OCS's decision to admit a child to a psychiatric hospital for a  



lengthy period of time.  We address the requirements of procedural due process in more  



detail below.    



                 Nevertheless,  when interpreting statutes, we are bound to give effect to  



the  legislative  intent  discerned  from  the  text,  legislative  history,  and  underlying  

statutory purpose.54  Those factors lead us to conclude that the legislature did not intend  



to restrict OCS from admitting a child in its custody to a psychiatric hospital that is not  



designated  for  purposes  of  involuntary  hospitalization  -  either  for  specific  policy  



                                                                                                                

         54      State v. Planned Parenthood of the Great Nw., 436 P.3d 984, 992 (Alaska  

2019)  (quoting Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. DeShong , 77 P.3d 1227, 1234 (Alaska  

2003)).  



                                                -19-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

  



reasons or because the legislature  simply did not consider the scenario.  Whether the  



statutory  "gap"  is  due  to  intention  or  oversight,  we  have  no  authority  to  rewrite  

statutes.55  The legislature is the branch of government with the authority to fill gaps in  



a statutory scheme.56  



         C.      Mira's Constitutional Rights Were Violated By The Lack Of Timely  

                 Notice And Hearing.    



                 The Tribe argues that the superior court violated Mira's rights to equal  



protection,  substantive  due  process,  and  procedural  due  process  by  permitting  her  



prolonged hospitalization without a prompt hearing on whether the hospitalization was  



justified.  The Tribe argues that the Alaska Constitution requires the courts to apply the  



civil  commitment  procedures  (or  their  substantial  equivalent)  whenever  OCS  seeks  



inpatient psychiatric hospitalization for a child in its care.    As threshold matters,  we  



first determine that (1) the Tribe has standing to raise these constitutional arguments on  



Mira's behalf and (2) the Tribe's constitutional arguments must be reviewed for plain  



error because they were not adequately raised below .   



                 1.      The Tribe  has  standing to assert Mira's constitutional rights  

                         under the doctrine.   



                 The State concedes that  the Tribe has standing to challenge the proper  



statutory framework for Mira's placement because it was a party to the CINA case .  But  



                                                                                                               

         55      State, Div. of Workers' Comp. v. Titan Enters., LLC, 338 P.3d 316, 321  

(Alaska 2014).  

         56      "The  Alaska  Constitution  vests  legislative  power  in  the  legislature;  

executive power in the governor; and judicial power in the supreme court, the superior  

court, and additional courts as established by the legislature.  The separation of powers  

doctrine limits the authority of each branch to interfere in the powers that have been  

delegated to the other branches.  The purposes of the separation of powers doctrine are  

to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power and to safeguard the independence of each  

branch  of  the  government."    Alaska  Pub.  Int.  Rsch.  Grp.  v.  State ,  167  P.3d  27,  35  

(Alaska 2007).  



                                                -20-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

  



the State also points out that the Tribe's status as a CINA intervenor does not establish  



standing with respect to all issues.    



                 "Standing is a  'rule of judicial self-restraint based on the principle that  

courts should not resolve abstract questions or issue advisory opinions. ' "57   Because  



we may not issue advisory opinions, we cannot allow  a parent to raise  constitutional  



arguments on behalf of a child in a CINA case absent a "persuasive showing of potential  

prejudice to  [the parent]."58    



                 However, the Tribe asserts that the parens patri ae  doctrine permits it to  

bring constitutional claims on Mira's behalf.  59   The parens patri ae  doctrine allows a  



sovereign  "to  bring  suit  to  protect  its  interest  in  matters  of  public  concern."60    We  



distinguish   sovereign,   non-sovereign,   and   quasi-sovereign   interests;   only   quasi- 

sovereign interests may form the basis for parens patri ae claims.61  "Sovereign interests  



include  'the  exercise  of  sovereign  power  over  individuals  and  entities  within  the  

relevant jurisdiction,' as well as 'the demand for recognition from other sovereigns. ' "62   



"Non-sovereign  interests  include  a  [sovereign's]  proprietary  interests  as  well  as  the  



                                                                                                                  

         57      See Native Vill. of Chignik Lagoon v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs.,  

Off. of Child . 's Servs., 518 P.3d 708, 717 (Alaska 2022) (quoting Keller v. French , 205  

P.3d 299, 302 (Alaska 2009)).  

         58      R.J.M. v. State, 946 P.2d 855, 871 (Alaska 1997).   



         59      In Tuluksak Native Cmty. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs. we ruled  

that  a tribe  lacked standing to assert a minor's constitutional rights because that tribe  

failed to make any arguments establishing its standing.    530 P.3d 359, 380 (Alaska  

2023).  But in this case the Tribe thoroughly explains its standing argument and presents  

an opportunity for this court to address the issue.    

         60      State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Div. of Fam. & Youth Servs. v. Native  

Vill. of Curyung, 151 P.3d 388, 399 (Alaska 2006) (citing Georgia v. Pa. R. Co., 324  

U.S. 439, 449-51 (1945)).  

         61      Id. (citing Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto Rico , 458 U.S. 592, 600- 

02 (1982)).   

         62      Id. (quoting Snapp , 458 U.S. at 601-02).  



                                                 -21-                                                       7684  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

  



interests a [sovereign] protects when, acting as  'no more than a nominal party, ' it seeks  

to protect the interests of private parties in court."63  



                  Quasi-sovereign interests, which may form the basis for parens patriae   

actions, are a sovereign's interests in "the well-being of its populace."64  A sovereign  



may  not  create  a parens  patr iae  claim  by  aggregating  the  claims  of  its  citizens.65   



Rather, the sovereign must "articulate an injury to the well-being of the [sovereign] as  



a whole or to a sufficiently large segment of its population, and the overall injury must  

be more than the mere sum of its parts."66  "[T]he fact that individual parties could have  



brought suit to vindicate their rights does not deprive a [sovereign] of parens patriae  

standing";67  "[i]n  such  actions,  the  [sovereign]  merely  asserts  that  in  addition  to  



harming its  citizens individually, the offending party has harmed the overall interests  

of the [sovereign]."68  



                  In State  v. Native Village of Curyung, the Native Village of Kwinhagak  



(and several other tribes) sought to enforce the rights of its children in OCS custody  

under the due process clauses of the federal and state constitutions .69  We held that the  



Tribes'  quasi-sovereign  interests  formed  the  basis  for  valid parens  patriae   claims  



because "the villages' interest in their children and in preserving their traditions through  



those children was  'inherently linked to the health, safety, and welfare of the Village's  



                                                                                                                    

         63      Id. (quoting Snapp , 458 U.S. at 601-02).  



         64      Id. (quoting Snapp, 458 U.S. at 602).  



         65      Id.   



         66      Id.  



         67      Id.  at 399-400 (citing People v. Peter & John 's Pump House, Inc., 914 F.  

Supp. 809, 813 (N.D.N.Y. 1996)).  

         68      Id. at 400.  



         69      Id. at 392.  



                                                  -22-                                                        7684  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

  



members. ' "70  Although OCS's actions directly impacted a relatively small number of  



children,  we  determined  that  "the  well-being  of  individual  families  and  children  is  



inextricably bound up with the villages' ability to maintain their integrity, which is  

'something that can only occur through the children of the Village.' "71    



                 The same principle applies here.  Mira is not the only tribal child in OCS  



custody at risk of unnecessary or overly lengthy psychiatric hospitalization.  The Tribe  



has  an  undeniable  quasi-sovereign  interest  in  ensuring  that  its  children  are  not  



needlessly  institutionalized  -   a  traumatic  experience  that  may  have  long-term  



consequences for the child and her community.  The parens patriae  doctrine gives the  



Tribe standing to assert constitutional claims on Mira's behalf.   



                 2.       We review the Tribe's constitutional arguments for plain error  

                          because  it  did  not  clearly  raise  these  arguments  in  superior  

                          court.  



                 The  Tribe  concedes  that  it  did  not  raise  Mira's  equal  protection  rights  



before the superior court.   The parties agree that we  should review the Tribe's equal  



protection argument for plain error.   



                 But the Tribe maintains  that it  preserved its due process arguments by  



mentioning "due process" three times over the course of the continued hearings.  During  



the January 7 hearing, the Tribe criticized OCS for failing to provide updates on Mira's  



status and suggested that doing so "would ensure at least that the CINA proceedings  



would provide her with some level of support and due process."  This statement did not  



preserve  the  Tribe's  argument  on  appeal  that  the  due  process  clause  of  the  Alaska  



Constitution required the court to apply the civil commitment statutes to review Mira's  



hospitalization.    



                                                                                                                 

         70      Id. at 393 (approvingly quoting the superior court).  



         71      Id . at 402.  



                                                 -23-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

  



                 During the final hearing on January 18, the Tribe expressed frustration  



that OCS and North Star had sent referral applications to less restrictive environments  



only a week prior and had not  asked Mira which residential facilities she would be  



willing to accept.  The Tribe characterized OCS's unilateral decision to transfer Mira  



from Sitka to North Star as a failure to give Mira any "hope of due process, without . . .  



any sort of sense of advocacy on her behalf."  The Tribe went on to ask the court to rule  



on  whether  the  hearing  would  proceed  under  the  AS 47.10.087  framework  or  the  



AS 47.30.700 et seq. procedures, stating that " [t]he civil commitment statutes require,  



at the very least, that a facility explore with the subject of the petition what they might  



be willing to engage in, not just because of due process rights, but because that's the  



way to actually get individuals healthy, to have them be willing to engage in a treatment  

program.  [Mira] hasn't been given that opportunity to date."72   



                 Although  these statements suggest that the Tribe harbored due process  



concerns during the superior court hearings, they are not clear enough to preserve this  



argument for appeal.  A "terse and undeveloped mention of due process in the superior  

court"  does  not  preserve  the  argument  for  appeal.73    In  this  case  the  Tribe's  brief  



mention  of  due  process  failed  to  alert  the  superior  court  that  the  Tribe  intended  to  



present a constitutional challenge to the statutory scheme .  We  therefore  review  the  



Tribe's constitutional arguments for plain error.    Plain error  exists when there is  an  



                                                                                                                 

         72      See  AS  47.30.825(b)  ("The  patient  . . .  [is]  entitled  to  participate  in  

formulating  the  patient's  individualized  treatment  plan  and  to  participate  in  the  

evaluation process as much as possible, at minimum to the extent of requesting specific  

forms  of  therapy,  inquiring  why  specific  therapies  are  or  are  not  included  in  the  

treatment  program,  and  being  informed  as  to  the  patient's  present  medical  and  

psychological condition and prognosis . . . .").   

         73      Best v. Fairbanks North Star Borough, 493 P.3d 868, 876 (Alaska 2021).   



                                                 -24-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

  



"obvious mistake"74  that is "so prejudicial that failure to correct it will perpetuate a  



manifest injustice."75   



                 3.       The superior court did not plainly violate Mira's right to equal  

                          protection by declining to apply the civil commitment statutes  

                          to her hospitalization.   



                 The Tribe did not raise an equal protection argument before the superior  



court, and the superior court did not issue an equal protection ruling.  But the court did  



contemplate   that   foster   children   receive   different   treatment   during   involuntary  



hospitalization than children not in OCS custody.  "I don't know why somebody in OCS  



custody would be entitled to less rights," the superior court  stated,  "but that's clearly  



what 47.10.087 does."  The Tribe adopts this position on appeal, arguing that children  



in OCS custody are given fewer protections than children in their parents' custody.  But  



this is not so.  Under the statutory scheme described  above,  foster children  in OCS  



custody receive no fewer protections than children in the custody of their parents.    



                 The Alaska Constitution provides that "all persons are . . . entitled to equal  

rights,  opportunities,  and  protection  under  the  law."76    This  clause  protects  "those  



similarly situated from disparate treatment."77  When assessing equal protection claims,  



we  generally "decide which classes are to be compared and determine whether those  



classes are similarly situated or whether differences between the classes justify different  

treatment."78    



                                                                                                                

         74      In re Hospitalization of Gabriel C., 324 P.3d 835, 838 (Alaska 2014).  



         75      Donahue  v.  Ledgends,  Inc. ,  331  P.3d  342,  356  n.75  (Alaska  2014)  

(quoting Forshee v. Forshee, 145 P.3d 492, 500 n.36 (Alaska 2006)).    

         76      Alaska Const. art. I, § 1.   



         77      Premera Blue Cross v. State, Dep't of Com., Cmty. & Econ. Dev., Div. of  

Ins. , 171 P.3d 1110, 1121 (Alaska 2007).   

         78      State v. Schmidt, 323 P.3d 647, 660 (Alaska 2014).   



                                                -25-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 26-----------------------

  



                 The Tribe's equal protection claim fails at the first step because there is  



no unequal treatment.  The Tribe has not shown that children in OCS custody receive  



less protection than children in the custody of their parents.  The Tribe's argument rests  



on the idea that when parents admit their child to Sitka or North Star, the protections of  



AS 47.30.690  apply.    But  these  protections,  which  include  limiting  admission  to  



30 days and appointing a GAL to seek judicial review, do not apply in those scenarios  



because neither hospital is a "designated treatment facility" under AS 47.30.690 for the  



reasons explained above.  Therefore the statute does not give children admitted to Sitka  



by their parents any more process than children admitted to that hospital by OCS.  The  

same is true of admission to North Star.79  Because the statutory scheme does not give  



children in OCS custody fewer rights than children in their parents' custody, the Tribe's  



equal protection claim fails.   



                 4.      Mira's extended stay at Sitka Community Hospital and North  

                         Star Hospital did not plainly violate her right to substantive due  

                         process.   



                 Substantive due process "  'focuses on the result of governmental action,  



not its procedures, ' meaning that it  'imposes limits on what a state may do regardless  

of  what  procedural  protection  is  provided. ' "80    Under  both  the  state  and  federal  



constitutions,  substantive  due  process  "requires  that  the  nature  and  duration  of  



commitment bear some reasonable relation to the purpose for which the  individual is  

committed."81  The parties agree that the nature and duration of Mira's hospital stays  



should bear  a reasonable relation to the purposes for which she was there.    Because  



                                                                                                               

        79       In fact, because of the Hooper Bay  injunction, children in OCS custody  

who   are     admitted     to   North     Star   receive   more   procedural         protection      -    an  

"AS 47.10.087-type of hearing" within 30 days of admission - than children whose  

parents admit them to North Star.   

        80       In  re  Hospitalization  of Mabel B., 485 P.3d 1018, 1024 (Alaska 2021)  

(quoting 16C C.J.S. Constitutional Law § 1821 (2020)).  

        81       Id. at 1025 (quoting Jackson v. Indiana , 406 U.S. 715, 738 (1972)).  



                                                -26-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 27-----------------------

  



Mira's  18-day stay at Sitka and her 29-day stay at North Star had different purposes,  



we  analyze them separately.  We  conclude that it was not plain error for the superior  



court to find no substantive due process violations in Mira's detentions at Sitka or North  



Star.    



                 Sitka.   Mira's foster parent  brought  her to Sitka  for  medical care after  



Mira consumed alcohol and prescription drugs.  A clinician cleared Mira for discharge  



after a few hours of observation and stated that Mira did not need "24/7 supervision[,]  



just ongoing counseling and support."   Yet Mira remained at Sitka for many more days,  



not because she was receiving care, but because OCS struggled to find another foster  

home for her.82  During this time Mira "opened up about her past trauma" to a clinician  



at Sitka and experienced ataxia symptoms and a panic attack.  These events caused the  



clinician to recommend acute psychiatric care, and Mira waited at Sitka for additional  



time before OCS transferred her to North Star.   



                 Mira's experience bears some similarity to the facts of another case:  In re  



Hospitalization of Mabel B .  In that case we held that the State violated the substantive  



due  process  rights  of  two  women  who  experienced  lengthy  detentions  at  the  pre- 



evaluation stage of involuntary civil commitment procedures.  Although judges had  



issued orders authorizing their "immediate delivery" to  API  for 72-hour evaluations,  



the women were detained at medical hospitals for more than two weeks before beds  

became available at API.83  We held that the lack of capacity at API was an "insufficient  



justification"  for  detaining  the women  against  their will:     "[l]ack of funds,  staff, or  



facilities cannot justify the State's failure to provide [such persons] with [the] treatment  



                                                                                                                

         82      The  record  does  not  specify  when  the  Sitka  clinician  changed  her  

recommendation, although OCS apparently decided to transfer Mira to North Star by  

December 14.    

         83      In re Mabel B. , 485 P.3d at  1026.  



                                                -27-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 28-----------------------

  



necessary for rehabilitation."84  Similarly, in this case OCS kept Mira at a hospital that  



was not adequate for her needs  for more than two weeks, largely because it struggled  

to find a place for her to go .85   



                 But gaps in the record lead us to conclude the superior court did not plainly  



err by  failing to find a substantive due process violation.   There were three distinct  



purposes for Mira's stay at Sitka:  (1) acute medical treatment for an alcohol and drug  



overdose; (2) OCS's search for a new foster home; and (3) awaiting transfer to North  



Star for acute psychiatric care.  We know that Mira's emergency medical treatment at  



Sitka concluded within a few hours.    But the record does not  tell us how long Mira  



waited at Sitka for a new foster home before it was determined she needed to go to  



North Star.  Because we do not know how long Mira waited for each reason, we cannot  



evaluate whether there was a reasonable relation between the length of Mira's stay at  



Sitka and her reasons for being there.  The lengths of time that Mira spent waiting for a  



new  foster  home  and  a  transfer  to  North  Star  may have  each  been  shorter  than  the  



unacceptable detention period in Mabel B.  And because there was no argument before  



the superior court on this matter, we lack the facts necessary to determine the length of  



time required for OCS to complete either task.   



                                                                                                               

        84       Id. at  1026, n.56 (quoting Or. Advoc. Ctr. v. Mink, 322 F.3d 1101, 1121  

(9th Cir. 2003)).  In another recent case we held that a four-day confinement before a  

72-hour evaluation does not necessarily violate a detainee's substantive due process  

rights.  In re Hospitalization of  Vern H., 486 P.3d 1123, 1132 (Alaska 2021) ("Vern  

was held awaiting transport for approximately four days, and we see no substantive due  

process violation under the facts and circumstances of his detention.").  

        85       The record does not explicitly state that Mira objected to her detainment  

at Sitka.   But OCS did not promptly notify the parties of Mira's hospitalization and  

Mira did not have access to her own attorney who could have helped her express her  

desire to leave.  We therefore place no weight on Mira's failure to affirmatively object  

to her confinement.  



                                                -28-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 29-----------------------

  



                 OCS's poor communication with the parties is largely responsible for this  



gap in the record.  But given the inadequate record, we cannot conclude that Mira's  



extended stay at Sitka was an "obvious" substantive due process violation .    



                 North Star.   In Mabel B.  we ruled there was  a substantive due process  



violation when two women were detained for weeks, receiving only limited preliminary  

treatment while awaiting evaluation at API.86  By contrast, Mira did receive psychiatric  



care at North Star.  Mira had the opportunity there to participate in individual and group  



therapy,  although  she  sometimes  refused  this  care.    The  civil  commitment  statues  



contemplate  an  initial  stay  of  30  days,  which  suggests  that  the  Alaska  legislature  

considers a stay of that length to be appropriate for psychiatric treatment.87  Keeping  



Mira  at  North  Star  for  29  days  was  therefore  reasonably  related  to  the  purpose  of  



providing her with acute psychiatric care.    



                 5.       Mira's  hospitalization  for   emergency  psychiatric   care   for  

                          46 days without timely notice and a hearing plainly violated her  

                          right to procedural due process.  



                 The Tribe argues that Mira's extended hospitalization without a hearing  



violated  her  right  to procedural due process.    Procedural  due process  "requires  that  



adequate and fair procedures be employed when state action threatens protected life,  

liberty,  or  property  interests."88    Involuntarily  confining  an  adult  to  a  hospital  



"implicates  Alaska's  constitutional  guarantees  of  individual  liberty  and  privacy  and  

therefore entitles [that person] to due process protections."89  Mira's case requires us to  



                                                                                                                 

         86      In re Mabel B. , 485 P.3d at 1026.  



         87      See AS 47.30.730(a) (permitting an initial commitment period of 30 days).  



         88      In re 2021 Redistricting Cases,  528 P.3d 40, 58 (Alaska 2023)  (quoting  

Doe v. State, Dep 't of Pub. Safety, 444 P.3d 116, 124 (Alaska 2019)).  

         89       Wetherhorn v. Alaska Psychiatric Inst., 156 P.3d 371, 379 (Alaska 2007)  

(citing Foucha v. Louisiana , 504 U.S. 71, 80 (1992)), overruled on other grounds by In  

  



                                                 -29-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 30-----------------------

  



determine what protections apply when OCS admits a child in its custody to the hospital  



for psychiatric care.  

                  The U.S. Supreme Court considered similar issues in  Parham v. J.R .90   



The Court held that Georgia laws authorizing parents to admit their children to a state- 



run mental hospital satisfied due process under the federal constitution, even though the  

statute did not provide for judicial review of the parents' decision.91  The Court reasoned  



that "the risk of error inherent in the parental decision to have a child institutionalized  



for mental health care is sufficiently great that some kind of inquiry should be made by  



a 'neutral factfinder ' to determine whether the statutory requirements for admission are  

satisfied."92  It concluded that the Georgia system met this standard because it required  



a clinical team to make an informed diagnosis before admitting a child and because it  



provided for periodic review of the child's need for hospitalization by an independent  

medical  group.93    Particularly  relevant  to  Mira's  case,  the  Court  reasoned  that  "the  



determination of what process is due varies somewhat when the state, rather than a  

natural parent, makes the request for a commitment."94  It suggested, but did not decide,  



that  "[i]t  is  possible  that  the  procedures  required  in  reviewing  a  ward's  need  for  



                                                                                                                   



re Hospitalization of Naomi B., 435 P.3d 918 (Alaska 2019); see also id.  at 379 n.48  

("Freedom from bodily restraint has always been at the core of the liberty protected by  

the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental action.  It is clear that commitment  

for any purpose constitutes a deprivation of liberty that requires due process protection."  

(quoting Foucha, 504 U.S. at 80)).  

         90      442 U.S. 584 (1979).  



         91      Id.  



         92      Id. at 606.  



         93      Id. at 614-16.  



         94      Id. at 617.  



                                                  -30-                                                       7684  


----------------------- Page 31-----------------------

  



continuing care should be different from those used to review the need of a child with  

natural parents."95    



                 The State argues that the procedural protections alluded to in Parham are  



satisfied   by   compliance   with   the   Hooper   Bay    injunction,   which   requires   an  



"AS 47.10.087-type hearing" within 30 days of a child's arrival at North Star.    The  



Tribe  emphasizes  that  Alaska's  constitution  is  often  more  protective  of  liberty  and  

privacy than the federal constitution.96  Accordingly it argues that due process required  



OCS and the superior court to essentially  apply the procedures contained in the civil  



commitment statutes to Mira's hospitalization.   



                 To evaluate these procedural due process arguments, we use the Mathews  

v. Eldridge test,97 which requires balancing three factors:    



                 First, the private interest that will be affected by the official  

                 action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such  

                 interest through the procedures used, and the probable value,  

                 if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and  

                 finally,  the  Government's  interest,  including  the  function  

                 involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the  

                 additional   or   substitute   procedural   requirement   would  

                 entail.[98]  



Because the Alaska Constitution's guarantee of due process is more protective than that  



of the federal constitution, we are guided by, but not tethered to, the Parham decision.  



                                                                                                                 

         95      Id. at 619.  



         96      Myers v. Alaska Psychiatric Inst. , 138 P.3d 238, 245 (Alaska 2006).   



         97      Patrick v. Mun. of Anchorage, Anchorage Transp. Comm'n, 305 P.3d 292,  

299 (Alaska 2013) ("We look to the test set forth by the United States Supreme Court  

in Mathews v. Eldridge to determine the requirements of due process.").  

         98      Mathews v. Eldridge , 424 U.S. 319, 334-35 (1976).   



                                                 -31-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 32-----------------------

  



                         a.       Private interest  



                 We first consider the strength of minors' liberty interest in being free from  

forced  hospitalization.99      For   adults,  involuntary   hospitalization   is   "a   'massive  



curtailment  of  liberty'  that  cannot  be  accomplished without  due  process  of  law."100   



Adults therefore have "an interest in an accurate and expedited emergency evaluation  

and prompt judicial review of . . . emergency detention and evaluation."101    



                 The U.S.  Supreme Court held  in Parham that "a child, in common with  



adults, has a substantial liberty interest in not being confined unnecessarily for medical  

treatment."102   It reasoned that unnecessary commitment may also produce "adverse  



social consequences for the child because of the reaction of some to the discovery that  

the  child  has  received  psychiatric  care."103    The  Court  acknowledged  that  "[m]ost  



children, even in adolescence, simply are not able to make sound judgments concerning  



                                                                                                               

         99      In  In  re  Hospitalization  of  April  S.  we  cited  an  earlier  decision,  In  re  

Hospitalization of Daniel G. , for the proposition that held that minors have a strong  

liberty interest.  499 P.3d 1011, 1017 (Alaska 2021) (citing In re Daniel G. , 320 P.3d  

262,  271-72  (Alaska 2014)).  But  our  reliance  on  Daniel  G.  was  mistaken:    the  

respondent in that case was not a minor, and his case did not specifically address the  

standards  governing  minors.    See  In  re  Daniel  G. ,  320  P.3d  at  264-65,  271-73  

(evaluating respondent's procedural due process rights in the context of involuntary  

civil commitment procedures initiated by his father, rather than "voluntary" parental  

commitment   procedures   that   would   have   applied   under   AS 47.30.690   had   the  

respondent  been  a  minor).    Therefore  we  consider  the  strength  of  a  minor's  liberty  

interest in this context as a matter of first impression.  

         100     Wetherhorn v. Alaska Psychiatric Inst., 156 P.3d 371, 375 (Alaska 2007)  

(quoting Humphrey v. Cady, 405 U.S. 504, 509 (1972)).  

         101     In re Daniel G. , 320 P.3d at 272.  



         102     442 U.S.  584,  600 (1979) (citing Addington v . Texas, 441 U.S. 418, 425  

(1979)).   

         103     Id. ; see also Wetherhorn, 156 P.3d at 378 (explaining that the level of  

incapacity justifying an AS 47.30 civil commitment order "must be such so as to justify  

the social stigma that affects the social position and job prospects of persons who have  

been committed because of mental illness").   



                                                -32-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 33-----------------------

  



many  decisions,  including  their  need  for  medical  care  and  treatment."104    But  it  



concluded that a child "has a protectible interest not only in being free of unnecessary  



bodily restraints but also in not being labeled erroneously by some persons because of  

an improper decision" by a diagnosing clinician.105   



                 The State points out that children do not have the same presumption of  



complete autonomy as adults, and that caregivers - whether parents or OCS - must  

protect children from errors in judgment.106  That is true, but minors' interest in bodily  



autonomy is still significant and entitled to great weight.  We agree with the State that  



caregivers are entitled to deference in caring for children, but our deference to parental  



authority does not wholly extend to the State.  "The rule in favor of deference to parental  



authority   is   designed   to   shield   parental   control   of   child   rearing   from               state  

interference."107  Therefore "[t]he rule cannot be invoked . . . to immunize from review  



the decisions of state social workers."108   Parents have a special right to "direct the  



upbringing" of their children that warrants protection from judicial scrutiny.109   OCS  



does not have the same right.   



                                                                                                                 

         104     Parham, 442 U.S.  at 603; see also Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 634  

(1979) (listing "three reasons justifying the conclusion that the constitutional rights of  

children cannot be equated with those of adults:  the peculiar vulnerability of children;  

their  inability  to  make  critical  decisions  in  an  informed,  mature  manner;  and  the  

importance of the parental role in child rearing").   

         105     Parham, 442 U.S. at 601.  



         106     See  also  id.  at  602  ("The  law's  concept  of  the  family  rests  on  a  

presumption  that  parents  possess  what  a  child  lacks  in  maturity,  experience,  and  

capacity for judgment required for making life's difficult decisions.").  

         107     Parham,  442  U.S.  584  at  637  (Brennan,  J.,  concurring  in  part  and  

dissenting in part).  

         108     Id.  



         109     Pierce v. Soc 'y of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus & Mary , 268 U.S.  

510, 534-35 (1925).  



                                                 -33-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 34-----------------------

  



                         b.       Risk  of  erroneous  deprivation  and  value  of  additional  

                                  procedural safeguards   



                 It is important that all children, including those in OCS custody, receive  



the care that they need.  But it is also important to protect children from being placed  



in a psychiatric hospital when they do not need to be.  That kind of experience can cause  



harm too.  



                 There is no doubt that children in OCS custody are at substantial risk of  



being hospitalized for longer than they need, or when they do not need to be hospitalized  



at all.  Mira's case is an example.  The lack of available foster homes meant that Mira  



was forced to stay at Sitka for well over a week after she had been cleared to leave.   



Because  OCS  caseworkers  manage  large  caseloads,  children  are  at  risk  of  falling  



through the cracks, and the people who care about them are at risk of being left in the  



dark.  The assigned caseworker was out of the office for part of the time that Mira was  



at Sitka.  The parties to the case were notified of Mira's initial hospitalization ten days  



after it happened.  They were told of the plan to transfer Mira to North Star only after  



she had been transferred, even though the decision to move her had apparently been  



made days earlier.  And the assigned OCS caseworkers and North Star staff failed to  



apply to less restrictive facilities that would better serve Mira's needs until a few days  



before the superior court hearing - weeks after  Mira was first hospitalized  at North  



Star.  Overall, Mira spent 46 days in a hospital, and the record indicates that for much  



of that time she was not in a setting that was appropriate for her needs.   



                 The  Tribe  argues  that  when  OCS  seeks  to  hospitalize  a  child  for  



psychiatric  treatment,  the  constitution  requires  something  akin  to  the  protections  



contained in the civil commitment statutes.  Under the civil commitment framework,  



OCS would first have to file a petition to have the child screened to determine if she  

should  be  taken  to  the  hospital  for  evaluation,110  or  perhaps  have  a  peace  officer  



                                                                                                               

         110     AS 47.30.700.  



                                                -34-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 35-----------------------

  



transport  the  child  to  a  medical  facility  for  evaluation.111    The  applicable  statutes  



anticipate  fairly  immediate  initiation  and  completion  of  the  evaluation  to determine  

whether the child meets the criteria for civil commitment.112   A court hearing would  



have to be held  within 72 hours of the child's arrival  to determine whether the child  

should be hospitalized for treatment.113    



                 Adopting these procedures would certainly protect more children in OCS  



custody  from unnecessary hospitalization.  But the key question is whether  adopting  



these procedures would do more harm than good:  in other words, whether such rigorous  



procedures would result in children not getting the psychiatric care they need in a timely  



manner.  We must carefully weigh that risk to decide whether the Tribe's proposal to  



apply civil-commitment-like procedures to hospitalization of children in OCS custody  



strikes the right constitutional balance.   



                         c.       The  State's  interest  and  the  burden  of  more  stringent  

                                  procedures  



                 OCS is entrusted with caring for some of the most vulnerable people in  



Alaska:   children whose parents are unable to care for them.  Many of these children  



have mental health needs as a result of traumatic events they have gone through.  It is  

OCS's duty to get treatment for them.114    



                 OCS  argues  that  this  duty  would  be  frustrated  by  applying  the  civil  



commitment statutes to govern psychiatric hospitalization of the children in its custody.   



Although  the  civil  commitment  statutes  can  be  applied  to  children,  the  typical  



                                                                                                               

         111     AS 47.30.705(a).  



         112     AS 47.30.710; AS 47.30.715.  



         113     AS 47.30.725; AS 47.30.730; AS 47.30.735.  



         114     AS 47.10.084(a).  



                                                -35-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 36-----------------------

  



respondent is an adult.115  As noted previously, adults enjoy a strong presumption of  



autonomy and are generally held responsible for their own welfare.116  Those societal  



values  are  reflected  in  the  civil  commitment  statutes'  stringent  protections  against  

involuntary hospitalization.117   OCS  argues  that the calculus should be different for  



children.  Children are generally not responsible for their own welfare, and they enjoy  

fewer  freedoms  than  adults.118    Accordingly  OCS  argues  that  applying  the  civil  



commitment  statutes  would  strike  the  wrong  balance  for  children:    the  extensive  



procedures  would unduly delay or prevent OCS from getting children the care they  



need.       OCS     maintains      that   the   Hooper      Bay     injunction,   which       requires    an  



"AS 47.10.087-type of hearing" within 30 days of a child's admission to North Star,  



strikes the right balance.   



                                                                                                               

         115     Because  most  minors  are  in  the  custody  of  a  parent  or  guardian,  it  is  

usually not necessary to file a petition for involuntary commitment to admit a minor to  

a  psychiatric  hospital,  even  against  the  minor's  will.    The  "voluntary"  admission  

process under AS 47.30.690 applies.    

         116     See Myers v.  Alaska Psychiatric Inst .,  138 P.3d 238, 247 n.61  (Alaska  

2006) ("It is a firmly established principle of the common law of New York that every  

individual 'of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done  

with his own body' and to control the course of his medical treatment." (citing Rivers  

v. Katz, 495 N.E.2d 337, 341 (N.Y.  1986))).  

         117     See, e.g., AS 47.30.700(a) (requiring -  upon petition by adult to have  

person involuntarily committed  -  immediate screening by judge or  state-employed  

mental health professional, as well as issuance of ex parte order showing probable cause  

that respondent has mental health condition that makes respondent "gravely disabled or  

. . .  present[s]  a  likelihood  of  serious  harm  to  self  or  others"  within  48  hours  of  

completing such investigation); see also AS 47.30.707 ("[W]hen a crisis stabilization  

center admits a respondent under AS 47.30.705[] the crisis stabilization center may hold  

the respondent at the center for a period not to exceed 23 hours and 59 minutes.  A  

mental health professional shall examine the respondent within three hours after the  

respondent arrives at the center.").  

         118     See Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 634 (1979).  



                                                -36-                                                     7684  


----------------------- Page 37-----------------------

  



                 It is important to note that the parties disagree only about procedure.  They  



do not appear to disagree about the substantive standards for psychiatric hospitalization  



of minors.  The civil commitment statutes favored by the Tribe and the standards from  



AS 47.10.087 incorporated in the Hooper Bay injunction both require the same proof  



by clear and convincing evidence:  mental illness; grave disability or risk of harm to  



self or others; lack of less restrictive alternatives; and the possibility of improvement or  

the  risk  of  deterioration  without  treatment.119    Where  the  parties  disagree  is  on  the  



timing and procedural mechanisms applicable to the minor's hospitalization.    



                 We conclude that the constitutionally required approach falls between the  



parties' positions.  Although the civil commitment statutes are not the measure of what  



due  process  requires,  the  process  that  Mira  received  in  this  case  fell  below  the  



constitutional line.    



                 On  the  one  hand,  we  agree  with  the  State  that  the  civil  commitment  



statutes are not the right framework to govern admission of minors in OCS custody to  



a  psychiatric  hospital.    Courts  will  struggle  to  hold  a  hearing  to  review  a  child's  



hospitalization within the time required by the civil commitment statutes.  Unlike civil  



commitment cases, which involve only the petitioner and the respondent, CINA cases  



often involve many parties:  the child, OCS, one or two parents, a GAL, and sometimes  



a tribe.  Each of these parties is entitled to present evidence and be heard on the child's  

hospitalization.120  Holding a meaningful hearing within the time required by the civil  



                                                                                                                 

         119     AS 47.10.087(a); AS 47.30.730(a); Tuluksak Native Cmty. v. State, Dep't  

of Health & Soc. Servs., 530 P.3d 359, 373 (Alaska 2023).  Under the civil commitment  

framework,  the  petitioner  need  only  show  the  possibility  of  improvement  if  the  

respondent is alleged to be gravely disabled, not when the respondent is alleged to be a  

danger to self or others.  AS 47.30.730(a).  

         120     In  these  proceedings,  most  children  will  have  their  own  attorney  to  

advocate  for  the  child's  desires.    CINA  Rule  12.1(b)  ("The  court  shall  appoint  an  

attorney  for  a  child  who  is  10  years  of  age  or  older  . . .  [and]  does  not  consent  to  

placement in a psychiatric hospital or residential treatment center.").  



                                                 -37-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 38-----------------------

  



commitment statutes will be challenging, as Mira's case shows.    The  superior court  



repeatedly rescheduled Mira's hearing in part to ensure that a key witness from North  



Star could attend.  If witnesses and parties cannot be made to appear within the 72-hour  



period set in the civil commitment statutes, the respondent must be released from the  

hospital.121  Although this strict result may be appropriate when  the respondent is an  



adult, society's greater interest in providing care for minors demands a more flexible  



process.   



                 On the other hand, we agree with the Tribe that the Hooper Bay injunction  



does not afford all the process that is due to minors in OCS custody.  That order enjoins  



OCS "from holding any child under the care of OCS for longer than 30 days at North  



Star Hospital without conducting an AS 47.10.087-type of hearing."  It does not cover  



other facilities.  As a result, the injunction did not prevent OCS from keeping Mira at  



Sitka for over two weeks and then  at North Star for  almost 30 days before a hearing  



was held to determine whether her hospitalization was justified.  When the State, acting  



as a child's custodian,  seeks the child's admission to a hospital for psychiatric care,  



forty-six days is far too long for the child to be held without judicial review.    



                 The Hooper Bay injunction is also silent on OCS's obligation to notify the  



child's  parents,  GAL,  and  tribe,  if  any.    But  the  State  must  provide  notice  when  it  

proposes to restrain a person's liberty.122    We agree with the U.S. Supreme Court's  



decision  in  Parham  that  the  court  need  not  hold  a  hearing  before  the  child  can  be  



                                                                                                                

         121     See AS 47.30.715 ("When an evaluation facility receives a proper order  

for evaluation, it shall accept the order and the respondent for an evaluation period not  

to exceed 72 hours."); see also AS 47.30.720 ("If at any time in the course of the 72- 

hour period the mental health professionals conducting the evaluation determine that  

the respondent does not meet the standards for commitment . . ., the respondent shall be  

discharged from the facility or the place of evaluation.").  

         122     Wetherhorn v. Alaska Psychiatric Inst.,  156 P.3d 371, 380 (Alaska 2007)  

(quoting Huntley v. N.C. State Bd. of Educ., 493 F.2d 1016, 1019 (4th Cir.  1974)).   



                                                -38-                                                      7684  


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admitted to the hospital for psychiatric care.123   Society's interest in ensuring proper  



treatment for children's psychiatric emergencies permits OCS to first take the child to  



the hospital, then notify the child's parents and the other parties to the CINA case who  



have a role in advocating for the child's best interests, and then present evidence at a  



hearing to determine whether the hospitalization is justified.  But notice should be given  



at the earliest possible moment.  Requiring immediate notice places little burden on  



OCS and reduces the risk that a child will spend a long time in a psychiatric hospital  



when it is not the appropriate place for her.    



                 In this case, OCS's failure to timely notify the parties of Mira's admission  



to the hospital worsened the deprivation of Mira's rights.  It  delayed appointment of  



counsel to advocate for Mira.  It likely contributed to the ultimate delay in holding the  



hearing.  And it may have delayed the search for less restrictive treatment alternatives.   



Mira  languished  at  North  Star  for  over  three  weeks  before  OCS  applied  for  her  



admission to less restrictive programs.  Unsurprisingly,  she had not yet been admitted  



to any residential programs at the time of the hearing, so the superior court was forced  



to  approve  her  continued  stay  at  North  Star  because  there  were  no  less  restrictive  



alternatives available  at that moment.  The limited record in this case does not tell us  



why OCS waited over three weeks after Mira's arrival at North Star before it began  



submitting  applications  for  less  restrictive  facilities.    Yet  it  stands  to  reason  that  



notifying the parties earlier would have resulted in an earlier search for solutions.  The  



untimely notice and 46-day wait for a hearing violated Mira's right to due process.  



                 Without  a  more  developed  record,  we  are  unable  to  fully  define  the  



contours  of  the process  Mira  was due.    But  we  identify  the  following  violations  of  



                                                                                                                

         123     Parham v. J.R. , 442 U.S. 584  at 620-21  (1979)  (holding that Georgia's  

"medical  factfinding  processes  [were]  reasonable  and  consistent  with  constitutional  

guarantees," when  state's voluntary admission statutes did not require hearing before  

parent admitted child to psychiatric hospital).   



                                                -39-                                                      7684  


----------------------- Page 40-----------------------

  



Mira's  procedural  due  process  rights:    (1)  OCS's  failure  to  immediately  notify  the  



parties to the CINA case that Mira was being held  at Sitka for mental health reasons;  



(2) OCS's failure to immediately notify the parties that it had decided to admit her to  



North Star; and (3) the superior court's failure to hold a hearing before Mira's 46th day  



of continuous hospitalization.  We conclude that the superior court's failure to hold an  



earlier hearing, at which time OCS's notice failures could have been recognized and  

corrected, was plain error.124  



         CONCLUSION  



                 We  REVERSE  the superior court's order authorizing Mira's continued  



placement at North Star . 



  



                                                                                                                 

         124     Because  we  reject  the  Tribe's  argument  that  due  process  requires  

adherence to the civil commitment statutes, and because we hold that the 46-day period  

Mira went without a hearing did not satisfy due process, we need not decide whether  

the 30-day hearing deadline contained in Hooper Bay is constitutionally adequate.  We  

observe only that the superior court set the 30-day deadline as an outer limit for holding  

a hearing, and that children's interests are best served by holding a hearing promptly  

after their admission to the hospital to confirm that the hospitalization is justified.  



                                                 -40-                                                      7684  

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