An expansive bill overhauling the child welfare system that aims to increase stability for children in foster care won approval from a Senate committee on Thursday.
House Bill 612 provides for increased oversight of local child welfare office decisions by the state Department of Health and Human Services. It sets out timeframes for court hearings on plans to move children in foster care to permanent homes. Courts would be allowed to authorize post-adoption contact agreements between biological and adoptive parents.
Legislators have discussed comprehensive changes to child welfare and foster care laws for years.
“It’s a long time coming,” Rep. Allen Chesser (R-Nash), one of the bill sponsors, told the Senate Health Committee during a Wednesday hearing. “I think it’s one of the most bipartisan issues we have.”
When they discussed the bill Wednesday, the Senate committee members heard concerns from a lawyer and adoptive parents that the bill would discourage infant adoptions.
The bill gives a biological father up to three months after a child’s birth, when he is not married to the child’s mother, to acknowledge paternity or attempt to form a relationship with the child before his parental rights are terminated. If a possible father finds out that a woman has fraudulently concealed her pregnancy or a child’s birth, he would have up to 30 days after finding out to acknowledge paternity before his parental rights are terminated.
“From an adoptive parent perspective, this bill is frankly terrifying,” said Natalie Carscadden, an adoptive parent. “Imagine the anxiety that comes when a person who’s never met or shown any interest in a child suddenly appears in requests for custody up to a three-month time span after that child is born. This would upset the status quo and put significantly more legal risk on potential adoptive families.”
In the committee discussion Thursday, Chesser referenced a court decision on a father’s right to act within a “timely manner.”
“What we are doing is defining what a timely manner means,” he said.
The Senate combined the measure with three other bills that have passed the House:
House Bill 795, which extends financial assistance for guardians who are related to children who won’t be adopted or returned to their parents. Payments through the Kinship Guardianship Assistance Program could start when children are 10. Under current law, children have to be 14 or older. House Bill 162 would have cities and counties require criminal background checks for any person they plan to hire who would work with children. House Bill 182, which would allow judges to issue permanent “no contact” orders against people convicted of violent crimes. Read More Details
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