This chapter provides a process for empowering a person who is not a child’s parent to perform the duties of a primary caregiver, without terminating the parental rights of the parent. It has long been the custom of the Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe that a child may be cared for by persons other than a parent, without excluding the parent from the youth’s life. It is intended that this chapter be applied with flexibility for a variety of family situations and problems.
For example, guardianship may be used to give a child’s grandparents authority to enroll a child in school and obtain medical care for him or her. A young mother may wish to use guardianship rather than give a child up for adoption. Foster families may petition for guardianship if it appears the child will not be returning to the parent in the near future. A guardianship may be desirable if a child’s parents are dead or have abandoned the child. Another jurisdiction may have terminated the parental rights of the parents but have not arranged for or completed an adoption. This list is by way of example only and is not intended to limit the uses of guardianship.
Guardianship for adult persons will be treated elsewhere in the Port Gamble S'Klallam Law and Order Code.
(Res. 90 A 35, 5/8/1990)