Chapter
223
2005 -- S 0013 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/08/05
A N A C T
RELATING
TO ADOPTION OF CHILDREN
Introduced
By: Senators Tassoni, Doyle, and Polisena
Date Introduced: January 05, 2005
It is enacted by the General Assembly as
follows:
SECTION 1. Chapter
15-7 of the General Laws entitled "Adoption of Children" is
hereby amended by adding thereto the following
section:
15-7-2.1.
Pre-adoption report on child placed for adoption. - - (a)
Notwithstanding
any other law or regulation, in those cases
where a child is placed for adoption by the department
of children, youth and families or a licensed
child placement agency, the agency shall provide a
pre-adoption report in writing to the
prospective adoptive parents as early as practicable after the
filing of a termination of parental rights or
direct consent adoption petition and before a
prospective adoptive parent agrees to accept the
child for purposes of adoption. The pre-adoptive
report shall include the following information
that is reasonably available within the records of
the department of children, youth and families
or the licensed child placement agency that is
placing a child for adoption:
(1) A current medical,
dental, developmental and psychological history of the child,
including an account of the child’s prenatal
care, medical condition at birth, developmental
milestones; any medical, psychological or
psychiatric examination and diagnosis related to the
child; any physical, sexual or emotional abuse
or neglect suffered by the child; any
developmental assessment and a record of any
immunizations and health care received while the
child was in foster or other care; the child’s
enrollment and performance in school and any special
educational needs and any adjudications of
waywardness and/or delinquency.
(2) If the
child has undergone any genetic testing, and the agency is aware of the
results,
those results must be disclosed in the report to
the prospective adoptive parents.
(3) If the
child has been tested for HIV, and the agency is aware of the results, those
results must be disclosed in the report to the
prospective adoptive parents.
(4) The age, race,
religion, ethnicity and general physical appearance of biological
parents.
(5) The
educational levels of biological parents, including any known diagnosed
learning
disabilities.
(6) The
relationship between biological parents; the age and sex of any other children
born to the biological parents and if a parent
is deceased, the cause of and the age at death.
(7)
Nonidentifying medical, substance abuse and mental health histories of the
biological
parents and siblings; the medical and mental
health histories shall include drugs and medications
taken by the child’s biological mother during
pregnancy, any known allergies, hereditary, genetic
or metabolic diseases.
(8) The
circumstances of any judicial order terminating the parental rights of a parent
for
abuse, neglect, abandonment, or other
mistreatment of the child.
(9) The length
of time the child has been in the care of the agency and the child’s
placement history.
(10) Any
information necessary to determine the child’s eligibility for state or federal
benefits.
(11) No
information provided under subsection (a) shall disclose the name, or last
known
address of the biological relatives.
(b) A report furnished
under this section must be signed and dated by the individual who
prepared the report.
(c) Any report
regarding the child, furnished pursuant to subsection (a) (1) of this section
may disclose the identity of providers of
professional services to the child.
(d) The agency
shall not be liable for the accuracy and completeness and shall be held
harmless for information provided by the
biological parents and others that it reasonably relies on
to prepare the preadoption report.
(e) Any of the
information listed in subsection (a), in the possession of the department of
children, youth and families that is related to
adoption proceedings completed prior to the
effective date of this act shall be supplied to
the adoptive parents or an adoptee under this section,
who is 18 years of age or over, upon request.
(f) If
information listed in subsection (a) that was not available at the time the
preadoption report was forwarded to the
prospective adoptive parents becomes available prior to
the adoption proceeding, the director shall
prepare a supplemental written report detailing said
information. If subsequent to the adoption, the
biological parent or sibling contacts the agency for
the purpose of sharing information about a genetic
or hereditary illness, disease or condition that
may affect the adoptee’s health, the agency
shall make reasonable efforts to contact and forward
the information in a manner that does not
identify the birth relative, to an adoptee who is 18 or
more years of age or to the adoptive parents of
an adoptee who is less than 18 years of age.
(g) All
information and documentation provided in accordance with subsection (a), is
confidential and remains the property of the
person/agency making the full disclosure until the
adoption is final. If the prospective adoptive
parent refuses or terminates the placement, all
information and documentation provided regarding
the child and his/her birth family shall be
returned to the person/agency providing full disclosure.
A prospective adoptive parent shall not
disclose any confidential information, except as
necessary to make a placement/adoption decision
or to provide to professionals who are treating,
assessing or educating the child.
(h) This section
does not apply to a stepparent adoption, or the adoption of a child related
to the petitioner by marriage, blood or
adoption.
(i) Any adoptee
under this section, who is 18 years of age or over shall be given the
information in subsection (a)(1) upon written
request.
(j) Nothing
contained herein shall prohibit the voluntary exchange of identifying
information between mutually consenting
biological parents and adoptive parents and adoptees,
18 years of age or older.
SECTION
2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC00069/SUB
A
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