Why Support Adoption Reform in MT?
More to come! until then check out the American Adoption Congress pages linked below.
Myths
State Legislation
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Basic Q & A on MT Adoption Law Reform
Basic Q & A on MT Adoption Law Reform
What is the problem you want to
solve? Is it caused by existing law(s)?
Problem: Current state law causes
unnecessary hardship on adult adoptees seeking personal information.
Who is affected by the problem?
Adoptees born on or after July 1,
1967.
What result(s) do you want to
achieve with your bill?
I want adults adopted as children
treated the same as adults who were not adopted as children.
What is your proposed solution to
the problem?
Eliminate the court order from
the required criteria needed to obtain a certified copy of a registrant's
original birth certificate for registrants adopted 7/1/67 - 9/30/97. Also,
eliminate the disclosure veto birth parents can sign starting 10/1/97.*
What action should the government
take to solve the problem?
Pass this proposed bill which
eliminates the court order requirement for people wanting a copy of their own
original birth certificate, adopted, and born 7/1/67 – 9/30/97. Eliminate the
disclosure veto birth mothers can sign with an end date. Honor the disclosure
vetoes currently in place, but do not allow new ones to go into effect.
Is it possible to achieve your
proposed solution by changing existing statutes? Which ones?
See below.
Is there a document or “draft
bill” prepared by a citizen, agency, lobbyist, or other entity that could serve
as a model or provide guidance for drafting your bill?
See below.
Is there legislation from another
state that could serve as a model?
Yes. To name a few: OR, NH, RI,
ME, and IL.
Will it cost money to implement your proposal? Where should the money come from?
New statutes will streamline
procedures saving money and actually increase revenues in the vital statistics
office. Additional requests for birth certificates will not exceed reasonable
and current work loads.
*A disclosure veto is essentially a form that seals a birth certificate and causes the adult adoptee to get a court order before they can access to their birth own certificate. Generally these are signed at the time of birth. Obviously, birth parents can die, change their minds over time, don't always understand the paperwork they sign at the time of birth, and while they deserve the right to say 'I want to be left alone,' they don't have the right to deny another person access to essential information about themselves. The disclosure veto should be a contact preference if people feel this is important. Generally, the state can allow adults to be mature enough to speak for themselves and not hide behind a document potentially 20 years old. Privacy of a birth parent, disclosure veto, and the contact preference is from the era of shame when adoption laws were based on the concept of protecting children from the stigma of being a bastard child. In states that have opened access to birth certificates and kept statistics on contact preference and disclosure vetoes, we see less than .4 of one percent of birth parents seeking privacy. Let adults be adults and manage their own private interests.
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