Julie Q. v. Dept. of Children & Family Servs.
Annotate this CaseIn 2009, Julie was reported to the Department of Children and Family Services by her estranged husband concerning events involving alcoholism. After an investigation, DCFS made an indicated finding of child neglect and an ALJ issued an opinion that the mother had created an environment injurious to the health and welfare of her minor daughter under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The circuit court upheld the results. The appellate court reversed and the supreme court agreed. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act permitted a finding of neglect, prior to 1980, based on placing a child in an environment injurious to the child’s welfare. The “injurious environment” language was deleted in 1980 and was not restored until 2012, after the events at issue. During that time DCFS had promulgated rules describing specific incidents of harm constituting abuse or neglect that included “Substantial Risk of Physical Injury/Environment Injurious to Health and Welfare;” the court held that, after the legislature specifically removed the injurious environment language from the Act, DCFS was without authority to reestablish an injurious-environment definition of neglect. The fact that the Juvenile Court Act, a different statute, includes injurious environment in its definition of neglect does not mandate a different result.
Court Description:
In 2009, Julie Q., was reported to the DCFS by her estranged husband concerning recent events involving alcoholism, and an investigation commenced. The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services made an indicated finding of child neglect and an administrative law judge issued a recommendation and opinion that the mother in this case, Julie Q., had created an environment injurious to the health and welfare of her minor daughter. All this took place under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. That act provides for DCFS’s receipt of reports of possible child abuse or neglect, directs the agency to protect children, and provides for a registry of those found to have abused or neglected a child.
Julie Q. filed a complaint for administrative review, challenging the administrative law judge’s conclusions and the Department’s indicated finding, but the circuit court upheld these results. The appellate court reversed and the supreme court, in this decision, agreed with that reversal.
The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act permitted a finding of neglect, prior to 1980, to be based on placing a child in an environment injurious to the child’s welfare. This “injurious environment” language was deleted in 1980 and was not restored until 2012, after the events at issue in this case.
However, pursuant to the DCFS’s authority to make rules necessary to carry out its duties, it had, as to the time period at issue here, promulgated rules describing specific incidents of harm constituting abuse or neglect and included among them “Substantial Risk of Physical Injury/Environment Injurious to Health and Welfare.”
In this decision, the Illinois Supreme Court held that, after the legislature specifically removed the injurious environment language from the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the DCFS was without authority to reestablish, in the Act, an injurious-environment definition of neglect. The regulatory language under which the agency proceeded here is, therefore, void. The fact that the Juvenile Court Act, a different statute, includes injurious environment in its definition of neglect does not call for a different result, because the Juvenile Court Act serves a different purpose.
The appellate court was affirmed in its reversal of the circuit court’s judgment.
Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.