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Adoption News - 29 -
Report Urges
State To Open Adoptee Records -
Adults Should Be Allowed To Contact
Birth Parents, Leading Institute
Says.
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REPORT URGES STATES TO OPEN ADOPTEE
RECORDS
ADULTS SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO CONTACT
BIRTH PARENTS,
LEADING INSTITUTE SAYS
Mon,
Nov. 12, 2007
NEW YORK
- It's among the most divisive
questions in the realm of adoption:
Should adult adoptees have access to
their birth records, and thus be
able to learn the identity of their
birthparents?
In a
comprehensive report being released
Monday, a leading adoption institute
says the answer is “Yes” and urges
the rest of America to follow the
path of the eight states that allow
such access to all adults who were
adopted.
“States'
experiences in providing this
information make clear that there
are minimal, if any, negative
repercussions,” said the Evan B.
Donaldson Adoption Institute.
“Outcomes appear to have been
overwhelmingly positive for adult
adopted persons and birth parents
alike.”
Opponents of open access argue that
unsealing birth records violates the
privacy that birth mothers expected
when they opted to give up their
babies. They raise the specter of
birth parents forced into unwanted
relationships with grown children
who have tracked them down.
But the
Donaldson Institute says most birth
parents, rather than being fearful
and ashamed, welcome contact with
the children they bore. Its report
says the states with open records
have found that most birth parents
and adoptees handle any contact with
maturity and respect.
Kansas
and Alaska never barred adoptees
from seeing their birth
certificates. Since 1996, six other
states — Alabama, Delaware, Maine,
New Hampshire, Oregon and Tennessee
— have decided to allow access to
all adult adoptees.
However,
the progression has been slow, and
open-records legislation has been
rebuffed in many states by a
determined and diverse opposition.
Opponents in Connecticut, where
bills have failed in each of the
past two years, included the state
chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union. It depicted itself
as a voice for birth mothers who
opposed the measure but were
reluctant to speak out publicly.
In New
Jersey, where a long-running
campaign to pass an open-records
bill was derailed again this year,
the opposition includes New Jersey
Right to Life and the New Jersey
Catholic Conference. They argue that
eliminating the prospect of
confidentiality might prompt a
pregnant single woman to choose
abortion rather than adoption.
Marlene
Lao-Collins of the Catholic
Conference said she knew of no data
supporting the concerns about
abortions, “but even if it just
happened once, that would be one too
many.''
Nationwide, one of the major foes of
open records is the National Council
for Adoption, which represents many
religiously affiliated adoption
agencies. Its president, Thomas
Atwood, says any reconnection
between an adopted adult and a
birthparent should be by mutual
consent — which is the policy in
most states.
“I
empathize with anybody who feels the
need to know their biological
parents' identity,'' Atwood said.
“But I don't think the law should
enable them to force themselves on
someone who has personal reasons for
wanting confidentiality.''
Identity
denied The Donaldson report says
evidence from the states with open
records rebuts every argument
against the concept. Notably, it
says there is no proof that
abortions rise, that adoptions
decline, or that birthparents are
harassed following a switch to open
records.
“There
has been no evidence that the lives
of birth mothers have been damaged
as a result,'' the report says. “In
the states that have amended their
laws ... few birth mothers have
expressed the desire to keep records
sealed or the wish not to be
contacted.''
The most
recent state to opt for open records
is Maine; a law signed in June will
allow adult adoptees to access their
birth certificates starting in 2009.
One of
the bill's main sponsors was state
Sen. Paula Benoit, an adoptee who
personally lobbied all her
colleagues. While working on the
bill, she uncovered her own
biological background and learned,
to her amazement, that two
Democratic lawmakers she was working
with were her nephews.
“There
are so many adoptees who want to
know who they are," she said. “Can
you imagine being denied your
identity?''
Among
the many birthmothers grateful to
have been found by children they
relinquished is Eileen McQuade of
Delray Beach, Fla., who is president
of the American Adoption Congress
and a fervent advocate of open
records.
“Secrecy
was the way it was done at the time
— it was not a choice or a
preference on the part of the
mothers,'' McQuade said of the
1960s, when she placed a daughter
for adoption. “We treat adoptees as
if they're forever children — it's
absurd.''
The
Donaldson report depicts adopted
people as the only class of
Americans not permitted to routinely
obtain their birth certificates.
Giving
them full access “is a matter of
legal equality, ethical practice
and, on a human level, basic
fairness,'' the report said. "It is
an essential step toward placing
adoptive families, families of
origin, everyone connected to them
and, indeed, adoption itself on a
level playing field within society,
without the stigma, shame and
inequitable treatment they have
experienced in the past.''
“The
mythology around adoption is based
on the notion that you should be
protecting someone from something,''
said the institute's executive
director, Adam Pertman.
“But
that's not the reality,'' he said.
“Adoptees are not behaving poorly,
they're behaving very respectfully,
and birth parents do not appear to
be a frightened class that wants to
hide.''
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