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The Public Adoption Process and the Adoptive Families
Adopting a child from the public welfare system can be a
challenging, yet exciting experience. The public adoption process
can be cumbersome at times, with little understanding
of how the system operates. This is often frustrating
to a family that is trying to adopt. Potential
adoptive families simply want to provide a loving,
stable home but then find they have to wait through
a long, cumbersome adoption process. It is essential that
families don’t get discouraged and leave
the process all together. Support, patience and understanding
of the public adoption process may be helpful.
Adoption in Ohio, as in most states, use the public matching
process. A social worker
is assigned to a child, and works with that child
while in foster care, preparing him or her for
a permanent family. At the same time, the social worker
is recruiting and searching for a permanent adoptive family
for this child. This recruitment first takes place
with any possible biological relatives, then generally
moves to a local search, and then finally a national
search of possible “stranger”
adoptive families. Often social workers will read
many homestudies to consider for the same child.
The social worker will narrow down this group of
potential families to the top three to five families
that the worker feels may best meet the child’s
needs. There then is some type of committee or “staffing”
held to help determine the best possible match
for the child. There are times that the acting
social worker will interview each family, and/or
the agency that wrote the family homestudy. Sometimes
families are asked to make photo albums to show
their family, and even videos of themselves to
show the committee a little about themselves. This
video and album may be the child’s first
introduction to the family after they have been
identified as the selected family for the child.
There are many varieties to this adoption process, but they
generally follow a similar course. After a family
is identified, they are presented with as much
information as the agency has on the child, (sometimes
this information is presented before the staffing).
Often the family is able to talk with foster parents,
teachers, and even therapists to help make a decision
as to whether they feel they would be able to meet
the needs of this child. Once a decision is made
by the family and the agency to move forward, a
visitation process is established. The child and
the family visit, and spend overnights together
until everyone involved is ready for the child
to move in to the adoptive home permanently.
Once the child moves in with the
family, the true transition begins to take place.
Families find it helpful to work with the child’s
previous therapist (if they were in counseling
prior to the move) while beginning the process
with a new counselor closer to their home. The
social worker will continue to work with the family
and the child to help with any needs that may arise
during this time. States vary, but adoption in Ohio, can be
formalized after six months by the adoptive families.
This is an exciting time which signifies
to the child the end of a social worker making
decisions for them while becoming a permanent member
of their “forever family”.
When a younger child is being placed
for adoption, the social worker can identify a
home relatively quickly. It is not unusual for
a social workers to have more than 50 to 100 homestudies
to read for children under eight years old. With
older children, social workers may have to look
through many agency’s and resources to find
homestudies of adoptive families that may be able and willing
to parent such a child. The greatest need is for
families open to adopting minority children, or
those children over the age of 8 or sibling groups.
The process of adopting a child out of foster care
can be a “roller coaster ride” with
different guidelines to follow depending on the adoption
agency with whom you are working. There are thousands
of children waiting for a loving, permanent family
and a better understanding of the public adoption process and
the types of children that are waiting will make
the trip until your family is home much smoother.
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