Texas parents get custody of kids living in bus

 
No Author Published: January 22, 2013    Comment on this article Leave a comment

CONROE, Texas (AP) — Nearly a year after their two children were found living virtually unsupervised in an old school bus in Southeast Texas, the parents regained full custody of their kids Tuesday when a judge dismissed a child welfare case against them.

photo - Sherrie, second right, and Mark Shorten, right, pose for photos with their children, 12, left, and Chance, 6, in front of their home, a converted school bus, in Splendora, Texas on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013. Nearly a year after their two children were found living virtually unsupervised in the old school bus, the Shortens regained full custody of their kids Tuesday when a judge dismissed a child welfare case against them. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Karen Warren) MANDATORY CREDIT
Sherrie, second right, and Mark Shorten, right, pose for photos with their children, 12, left, and Chance, 6, in front of their home, a converted school bus, in Splendora, Texas on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013. Nearly a year after their two children were found living virtually unsupervised in the old school bus, the Shortens regained full custody of their kids Tuesday when a judge dismissed a child welfare case against them. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Karen Warren) MANDATORY CREDIT

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"It feels really good," said Sherrie Shorten, of Splendora, after she and her husband, Mark, stood before Judge Jerry Winfree at a hearing that lasted only a few minutes. "This is just one more thing we've gotten resolved."

"If you love your family, you never give up," Mark Shorten said outside the courtroom, standing close to his two children, Jessica, 12, and Chance, 6. "You do what it takes. ... It takes a lot of faith in God, belief in your family and a good attorney. You just work the problem, just don't give up, hunker down and work the problem."

The Shortens last March were serving 18-month federal prison terms for conspiracy to embezzle Hurricane Ike benefits in Louisiana when a postal worker repeatedly spotted the disheveled children in the Montgomery County neighborhood about 35 miles northeast of Houston. Child welfare officials were notified and took Jessica and Chance into foster custody.

There were no front wheels on the bus and the section of the vehicle from the windshield and engine firewall had been removed. Extensive media coverage of the case showed the bus sitting in a trash-filled yard.

Despite its worn appearance, the bus inside had been renovated, furnished, had hot and cold water and a bathroom, and was air-conditioned. The family moved it from Louisiana after their home there was flooded from Hurricane Ike. It was intended as a temporary home until they could build on the lot.

The Shortens had arranged with an aunt to care for the children while they were imprisoned but the woman told authorities her 12-hour workdays and caring for the children had overwhelmed her.

"CPS was absolutely right to take then kids when it did," the family's attorney, Chris Branson, said. "The aunt obviously dropped the ball and was neglecting these kids and it was the proper thing to take these kids into custody. However, the parents got out of jail, they fixed the problem, they cleaned up the property and the situation should have been over at that point."

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