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Children Affected by the earthquake in Haiti

January 22, 2010

The Department of State is receiving  inquiries from American citizens deeply touched by the plight of children in Haiti in the aftermath of the January 12 earthquake.

As Secretary of State Clinton said on January 20, “Children are especially vulnerable in any disaster, especially those without parents or other guardians to look after them.

This devastating earthquake has left many in need of assistance, and their welfare is of paramount concern as we move forward with our rescue and relief efforts.”

Together with the Department of Homeland Security, the State Department is processing and evacuating as quickly as possible those orphans who were identified for adoption by American citizens before the earthquake.

We understand that other Americans, moved by images of children in need, want to open their homes and adopt other Haitian children who had not been identified for adoption before the earthquake.  The State Department advises against this course of action at this time.

Intercountry adoption involves strict safeguards and legal requirements that must be met to protect children from illegal adoptions, abduction, sale and child-trafficking as well as to ensure that any adoption is in the best interests of the child.

Before a child can be legally taken to the United States for adoption, the Governments of both the United States and the child’s country of origin must first determine that the child is indeed an orphan.  It can be extremely difficult during the aftermath of a natural disaster to ascertain whether children who appear to be orphans truly are eligible for adoption.  Children may be temporarily separated from their parents or other family members, and their parents or family members may be looking for them.  Moreover, it is not uncommon in an emergency or unsettled situation for parents to send their children out of the area, or for families to become separated during an evacuation.  Efforts to reunite such children with relatives or extended family should be given priority.

In addition, some children who had been residing in orphanages before the earthquake were placed there temporarily by parents who could not care for them.  In most of these cases the parents did not intend to permanently give up their parental rights.  Even when it can be demonstrated that children have indeed lost their parents or have been abandoned, reunification with other relatives in the extended family should be the first option.

During times of crisis, it can also be exceptionally difficult to fulfill the legal requirements for adoption of both the United States and the child’s country of origin.  This is especially true when civil authority breaks down or temporarily ceases to function.   It can also be difficult to gather documents necessary to fulfill the legal requirements of U.S. immigration law.

The United States is cooperating directly with UNICEF and other relief organizations in Haiti to deliver needed supplies to Haiti’s orphanages and to provide assistance to other unaccompanied children.

UNICEF is starting the process of registering unaccompanied children and will seek to unite children with relatives.

There are many ways in which U.S. citizens can help the children of Haiti now.   For example, individuals who wish to assist can make a financial contribution to a reputable relief or humanitarian organization working in that country.

More Information

http://www.state.gov/

United States Agency for International Development (USAID) http://www.usaid.gov/iraq

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) http://www.icrc.org/

Interaction http://www.interaction.org/

http://www.unicef.org/media/media_52519.html

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Lori on January 23rd 2010 in News

Aid groups urge halt to new Haiti adoptions

London, England (CNN) – Three aid groups called Thursday for an immediate halt to any new adoptions of Haitian children after last week’s earthquake.

Save the Children, World Vision and a unit of the British Red Cross said the focus first must be on tracing any family members that children may still have and reuniting them.

“Any hasty new adoptions would risk permanently breaking up families, causing long-term damage to already vulnerable children, and could distract from aid efforts in Haiti,” the agencies said in a joint statement.

The disaster in Haiti has led to an outpouring of support around the world, with the United States alone donating more than $305 million as of Wednesday, according to the Chronicle of Philanthropy, a newspaper covering nonprofit organizations.

Stories of Haitian orphanages struggling after the quake and the plight of the children there also has led many to ask about adopting children.

After reading a CNN report on Haitian orphans, CNN.com reader Dana Fanning wrote, “It broke my heart. My husband and our 4 children want to know if and how we could adopt [any] of the children orphaned by the earthquake.”

Save the Children Chief Executive Jasmine Whitbread said the “vast majority” of children on their own in Haiti are not orphans, but were simply separated from their families in the chaos.

Their family members may still be alive, she said, and “will be desperate to be reunited with them.”

“Taking children out of the country would permanently separate thousands of children from their families — a separation that would compound the acute trauma they are already suffering and inflict long-term damage on their chances of recovery,” Whitbread said.

Allowing a flood of new adoptions also could open the door to traffickers, said World Vision Chief Executive Justin Byworth.

The poverty in Haiti already makes children there “extremely vulnerable” to exploitation and abuse, Byworth said.

“We are concerned not only about premature overseas adoption but also about children increasingly being sent unaccompanied to the Dominican Republic,” he said.

Aid groups said adoptions that were already in progress before the January 12 earthquake should go ahead, as long as the right legal documents are in place and they meet Haitian and international law.

For those who want to help Haitian children, Whitbread said, they should donate to aid agencies who are working on reuniting those children with their families.

The International Committee of the Red Cross has opened an office at the headquarters of the Haitian Red Cross in Crois de Prez to help people locate their relatives, said Pete Garratt, a disaster response manager at the British Red Cross.

The ICRC also has set up a Web site to help people searching for relatives, he said.

first appeared in CNN at http://us.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/01/21/haiti.adoptions/index.html?hpt=T1

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Lori on January 22nd 2010 in News

The Battle Over a Baby

By PAMELA PAUL

On Christmas Eve in 2007, the State of West Virginia bestowed upon Kathryn Kutil and Cheryl Hess of Oak Hill a relative rarity in the foster-care system: a newborn. The baby girl, TiCasey, was born on Dec. 8 to a longtime drug addict, father unknown, and entered the world with cocaine, opiates and benzodiazepines in her bloodstream. For two weeks after delivery, she went through withdrawal, unable to sleep and crying incessantly. When not being held by a hospital nurse, she was put in special rocking machines to help relieve her pain. Still suffering from tremors and extended crying jags, TiCasey arrived at Kutil and Hess’s home, where she was met by five other foster children all clamoring to hold her.

Over the previous two years, the couple fostered a total of 18 kids between the ages of 1 and 16; all had endured some form of abuse or neglect. While not quite a “blank slate,” TiCasey (her middle name — all except one of the children mentioned in this article are identified by their middle names to protect their privacy) was as close as most foster parents get to a child whose grim history might conceivably be overcome in a loving home. “We were just so overjoyed,” Hess recalled. “We were in disbelief that we had this beautiful redheaded baby — because you never think you’re going to get one.”

Despite three weeks of little sleep, Kutil and Hess knew they wanted to adopt TiCasey. “We were in love with her from the get-go,” Hess said. “She was this really special little being.” But it wasn’t up to them. Shortly after she was brought to their home, TiCasey’s court-appointed attorney, Thomas K. Fast, came to make a routine visit. Fast’s behavior struck Kutil and Hess as distressingly unusual. He declined offers to take off his coat or to hold the baby, Kutil says, and, by her clock, left after just seven minutes.

Fast then filed a motion with the circuit court in Fayetteville to order the Department of Health and Human Resources (the D.H.H.R.) to “remove child from physical placement in homosexual home.” The motion described the Kutil-Hess household as “comfortable and physically safe for the infant” where TiCasey “seemed to be doing well.” It then stated that children reared by homosexuals were more likely to be sexually or otherwise abused and to become homosexual themselves.

Kutil and Hess were stunned. They had been upfront with the local D.H.H.R. about their relationship, and it had never been a problem with their other foster children. Was it somehow O.K. for a lesbian couple to care for older kids no one else would take in but not for a newborn whom another set of more “deserving” parents might want?

While the laws surrounding same-sex marriage are clear-cut, the laws regarding same-sex parenthood are often murky or nonexistent. “Gay parenthood is much more porous,” says Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of the Family Equality Council, a Washington-based advocacy group. Albeit with less fanfare than in recent marriage rulings, several states have sought to limit same-sex foster care and adoption. Last year, Arkansas passed a ballot initiative prohibiting adoption by unmarried couples, which effectively makes it impossible for gay parents to adopt jointly. Utah and Michigan have similar laws; Mississippi and Florida ban adoption by same-sex couples outright. But for the most part, Chrisler says, “parenting law is determined by case law rather than legislation. It’s state by state, county by county, courtroom by courtroom.”

Kutil and Hess immediately hired an attorney. To their relief, in February, a circuit-court judge in Fayetteville, Paul M. Blake, permitted TiCasey to stay with them while her case was under review, though the women had to live with the unsettling knowledge that she could be taken away at any time. Kutil and Hess got the impression that Judge Blake did not approve of them as parents. For the next 16 months, until their case was decided by the West Virginia Supreme Court in June of this year, it seemed to the couple as if they were holding their breath.

“They tell you as a foster parent not to get attached, that it’s not the appropriate thing to do,” Kutil said. “But as a human being, that’s not possible. You don’t hold a baby like that and have them wrap their tiny fingers around yours and not have them enter your heart for good.”

KUTIL AND HESS’S goal, from the beginning, was to create a family. Hess was 42 when she and Kutil, who was then 36, met in 2004. Hess had been working at Dirty Ernie’s Rib Pit in Fayetteville when she stopped by the nursing home next door. Kutil was cooking hot dogs for a fund-raiser; Hess ordered hers with mustard and chili. They struck up a conversation and agreed to have dinner. “At first, I didn’t know she was gay,” Hess admitted. “I don’t have that gaydar, I got left out of that pool.”

Growing up in the faded mining town of Oak Hill, population 7,200, Hess was what she calls “a late bloomer.” She briefly married, she says, and didn’t come into her “gayness” until her 20s. Over dinner one night at Hardee’s, she said to her mother, “Mama, I think I’m gay.” Her mother said, “So?” Her father, a retired coal miner, was similarly accepting, if a bit worried. People can be so cruel, we don’t want you to get hurt, her parents said. But Hess was laid back about her sexuality. “I was never out there and about.”

In any case, it wasn’t easy to meet women in Oak Hill; the closest gay bar is an hour away. “We’re in a small area of the world; trust me, there ain’t that many of us,” Hess said. Highway signs pointing to Oak Hill, with its strip malls and dilapidated downtown, and Fayetteville, the county seat next door, neatly encapsulate the towns’ respective personalities. Fayetteville is a “Coolest Small Town,” so named by Budget Travel magazine in 2006 for its white-water rafting and Americana chic; Oak Hill is “Home of Marian McQuade, Founder of National Grandparents’ Day.”

When Hess, who earned her G.E.D. after quitting school in 11th grade, found out that Kutil was the Fayetteville nursing home’s director, she thought, Oh, God, I’m so out of my league. But their connection was immediate, and they’ve been together ever since. Two years into the relationship, they had several rescued cats and dogs, but both wanted children. After artificial insemination failed, Hess suggested they adopt through the foster-care system. “She’s always on the underdog’s side,” Kutil told me when I visited in March. There were certainly plenty of children who might need a home. West Virginia holds approximately 4,200 children in custody; nearly one-third live in group homes or institutions.

“I didn’t want to do it right out of the chute,” Kutil admitted. In her 20s, she had a job as a foster-care and adoption worker and was often saddled with twice the caseload she could handle; she quit after five years, calling it “hell, chaos.” “I knew there’d be days that were absolutely insane,” she said. But Kutil and Hess’s options for building a family were limited. Even though an estimated 65,500 adopted children already live with a gay parent, and lesbian and bisexual women are almost twice as likely as heterosexual women to report they have lived with and cared for a non-birth child, not all adoption agencies are open to same-sex couples. A 1999-2000 survey of adoption agencies found that only 60 percent accepted applications from gays. Similarly, not all countries permit same-sex couples to adopt internationally. But perhaps, Kutil and Hess thought, a match could be made between a couple like themselves and foster kids in need.

So in April 2006, Kutil and Hess expanded their three-bedroom home to five bedrooms and furnished it with bunk beds. They traded in their Jeep and their sports car for a minivan and an S.U.V. And that fall, after screening and training, they welcomed their first child, a kindergartner who arrived with a garbage bag of clothes and stayed for several months before her propensity to kick and abuse the couple’s dogs and cats led them to ask that she be placed elsewhere. Their next foster children, a sibling pair, Renee, then 9, and Ray, 7, seemed a better fit. Born to a father described by Child Protective Services as “low-functioning,” Renee and Ray had been passed along from aunt to uncle to neighbor, growing up in campers and tents, sometimes bathing under a hose. Their mother, Renee told Hess, used to “get mad and sit upon us. I’d lose my breath because she was a little chunky.” Their father eventually brought them in to social services and, according to Hess, said: “I just can’t do it. I can’t give them what they need.”

To Kutil and Hess, Renee and Ray were a godsend. Though the couple had always prayed for a baby, they were happy to care for whatever children came their way. They had decided on fostering, in the end, not only to find a family, Kutil says, but also to “do some good for children who needed a chance.” Renee and Ray were clearly in need. “We knew from the start we wanted to adopt them both,” Hess said. “We had our little family.”

BUT THERE WAS a lot that Kutil and Hess didn’t know about the children now living under their roof. For parents who wonder and worry about what happens during the seven hours their kids are in school each day, it’s hard to imagine not knowing what happened during entire years in the life of a child now in your care. “As a former foster-care worker, I can tell you, even the social workers don’t know a lot about these kids,” Kutil said. “They might come to you with head lice, and you don’t find out until the next day. Or siblings may have had sex with each other — but you don’t know that.”

Kutil and Hess knew Renee had been abused, but they didn’t know when, by whom or in exactly what way. She was overweight and had trouble handling basic hygiene; kids at school made fun of her. Within a week, she was calling Kutil and Hess Mommy. Things with Ray were more difficult. Certain behaviors were alarming and self-destructive. “He would bang his head repeatedly against the wall,” Kutil recalled. “Like a 2-year-old’s tantrum.” In the middle of the night, he loomed in the doorway of their bedroom, refusing to budge. After seven months of this, Health and Human Resources moved Ray 45 minutes away to live with a foster father trained to deal with special needs. “We really didn’t have a say,” Hess said. Renee took it hard. “Why do grown-ups keep taking my family away?” she wanted to know.

Fostering can be like a series of mutual tryouts, as children are rotated in and out of homes via the cumbersome bureaucracy of social services. Until the 1990s, the goal of foster care was to reunite biological families. Adoption was viewed as a failure. In practice, this meant that children spent years cycling through foster homes in the hope that they could eventually return to their birth parents. By the mid-1990s, it became clear that long-term foster care can be detrimental to children; moreover, efforts to bring biological families back together were often unsuccessful.

To remedy the problem, the federal government passed the Adoption and Safe Families Act in 1997, which radically changed the nation’s approach to foster care. The act stipulated that children either be returned to their birth families within a short period of time or be moved to a permanent placement, offering states financial incentives based on the number of adoptions. This led to a significant increase in foster-to-adoption cases. In 1999, 46,000 children in foster care were adopted, up from 17,000 in 1990.

Yet the number of people willing to take in the cast-off, troubled and often abused children who bounce around the nation’s foster-care systems has declined over the past 25 years, and not all foster parents intend to adopt. (Approximately half a million children are currently in the system, with 130,000 waiting to be adopted.) In today’s competitive parenting culture, children are often seen to reflect our best selves, an improvement on our own pasts, a quixotic hope for our future. Foster children, by contrast, can seem like used goods. “When you get older foster kids, chances are they’ve been through quite a bit,” Kutil explained. “It’s hard to turn their lives around.”

Kutil and Hess tried to accommodate as many kids as possible, which usually meant fielding two or three requests each month. Most placements were stopgap measures; the kids returned to their families. Quite a few cried when it was time to go. “We had one 16-year-old who begged me to let her stay,” Hess recalled. The hardest part was thinking about what might happen when they returned home. “Sometimes you know the circumstances they left, and you just pray that if they go back, it’s gotten better.”

Once in the Kutil-Hess home, Renee started to thrive. After a worrisome beginning at the local public school, where Renee’s palpable yearning to please “led her down a bad path,” Kutil and Hess transferred her to Catholic school. She lost weight and took up karate. “I’m going to make good money and buy you a Jaguar,” she would tell Hess, spending hours on the computer practicing fashion design. Her vulnerability now bears a tentative veneer of confidence, and she participates in every school talent show — “whether she can sing or not,” Hess noted wryly.

Though they couldn’t adopt Renee jointly, West Virginia law allows either woman to adopt as a single parent. In late 2007, shortly before TiCasey arrived, Kutil decided to go ahead. The case didn’t land in Paul Blake’s court but went before Fayetteville’s other circuit court judge, John W. Hatcher,instead. It was a swift and smooth process, and Renee became Kathryn Kutil’s daughter in June 2008.

To Renee, the switch from her family of birth to that of her adoptive mothers marked a fresh start. She even gave herself a new name. And she clung fast to her new family, most fiercely drawn to TiCasey — willingly changing her diapers and happily bottle-feeding her. Like Kutil and Hess’s other foster children, Renee couldn’t understand why holding onto TiCasey had become such a problem. “Renee doesn’t feel like you must be born from a family to be family,” Kutil explained. “She truly feels in her heart that a family is what you make of it.”

THE BONDS BETWEEN birth parent and birth child, between birth parents and their foster counterparts, between foster child and foster parent are often uneasy and rarely fixed. Renee still bumps into her birth father at Wal-Mart and occasionally says she misses him. She also refers to her brother Ray’s foster father as “Dad.” And while TiCasey’s integration into the Kutil-Hess home has been particularly fraught, transitions are seldom uncomplicated.

The next children to become permanent fixtures in the Kutil-Hess household were Ronnie (who goes by his middle name) and Ruth. They were 12 and 5 when they arrived in June 2007 with their two older sisters. (The older sisters ultimately went elsewhere.) Ronnie and Ruth’s parents were incarcerated at the time; Kutil and Hess never found out why.

By 2008, Kutil said, she knew she wanted to adopt both Ronnie and Ruth. It wasn’t to be. Once out of prison, their mother longed for more involvement, calling the Kutil-Hess home regularly. She was, Kutil said, “very boisterous about her personal rights to her children.” Letting go of your birth parents isn’t easy either. Ronnie is intensely loyal to his mother, Kutil said, “despite everything he’s been through.” In the end, he didn’t want to leave his birth parents behind. “If you ask a 14-year-old whether he wants to be adopted and he says no, you should take into account his opinion,” she told me. Kutil became Ruth and Ronnie’s legal guardian instead; the children will be legally emancipated at 18.

For foster parents, Kutil says, there’s “this sense of having no control over your household.” Their job, as Kutil sees it, is to bring a sense of structured calm to an often necessarily ephemeral situation. The family says a prayer before eating dinner together every night, and bedtimes are strictly enforced. Given Kutil’s well-paying job in nursing-home administration, Hess, who has mostly held odd jobs and spent 11 years as an Army reservist, serves as homemaker. “It’s as normal as you can get without a man here,” Kutil summarized. But their home isn’t quite their own. Foster parents must accommodate visits with birth families, which are regulated by law, as are psychological services. Rules for disciplining the kids are set by the state. Social workers can pop in at their discretion.

And always, a child’s future and a foster parent’s hopes are at the mercy of outside forces. In October 2008, when TiCasey was 10 months old, her mother, unable to kick drugs, permanently lost all parental rights. On the morning of Halloween, the Department of Health and Human Resources issued a “permanency plan” advocating adoption. “Kathryn Kutil and Cheryl Hess have expressed their desire to adopt TiCasey, which would be appropriate,” the document stated. But in recommending who should adopt TiCasey, the agency overstepped: according to state policy, a permanency plan should recommend only whether a child should be adopted, not who should adopt.

The situation grew even more complicated that night. At 10:30, long after most trick-or-treaters had gone to bed, the phone rang in the Kutil-Hess home. A 6-year-old had been discovered wandering around barefoot at a nighttime football game, dressed only in jeans and a tank top. Could they take her in? At the time, Kutil and Hess had TiCasey, Renee, Ronnie, Ruth and another set of siblings temporarily in their care. Kutil told the supervisor from the Oak Hill Department of Health and Human Resources that another child would put them over the permitted limit of six. According to Kutil, the supervisor said she’d get a waiver, and at 2:30 a.m., a social worker dropped off Lynn, a saucer-eyed girl with long, stringy hair, wearing a pair of mittens on her feet.

FOR ALL THE MADNESS of caring for as many as seven children at a time and fostering nearly two dozen in three years, nothing compared with the bureaucratic twists and frustration of trying to hold onto TiCasey. One week after Lynn’s arrival, on Nov. 6, a hearing was called to rule on TiCasey’s permanency plan. Once again, Thomas Fast, TiCasey’s court-appointed attorney, insisted not only that TiCasey be removed but also suggested that the court should rule on the D.H.H.R.’s practice of disregarding sexual orientation. Addressing Judge Blake directly, Fast said, “Let’s duke it out here, Your Honor, this whole issue of the homosexuality.”

During the proceedings, Judge Blake seemed to see things Fast’s way. “It’s nothing against these ladies,” he said. “They’ve given this child good care while this matter is pending before the court.” However, he continued, “this court’s opinion is that the best interest of a child is to be raised by a traditional family, mother and father.” He directed the department to relocate TiCasey within two weeks.

Devastated, Kutil and Hess had their lawyer, Anthony Ciliberti, file an emergency stay and a writ of prohibition — an extraordinary appeal made before a proceeding has come to a conclusion — with the West Virginia Supreme Court. Judge Blake agreed to a follow-up hearing on Nov. 21, Ciliberti’s last chance to persuade him that TiCasey should stay with Kutil and Hess. Ciliberti was to handle character witnesses while the D.H.H.R.’s attorney would prepare an expert witness, Christi Cooper-Lehki, a child psychiatrist from West Virginia University. When the agency first contacted Cooper-Lehki, it was “very much in support of Kathryn and Cheryl keeping this baby,” Cooper-Lehki told me. “They were considered among the best foster parents they had.” She was asked to talk about the psychological literature supporting gay parenthood. But the day before the follow-up hearing, the agency informed Cooper-Lehki that her testimony would no longer be needed.

On Nov. 21, the Department of Health and Human Resources expressed support in court for Fast’s motion to remove TiCasey, despite its objection earlier that year. Not because Kutil and Hess were lesbians but because “it came to D.H.H.R.’s attention yesterday that the Kutil-Hess home is over capacity.” It turned out that the waiver for Lynn — their Halloween arrival — was never obtained. In any case, such waivers are given only to keep siblings together. Despite the timing — Lynn arrived only a week before TiCasey’s first permanency hearing — Kutil said she was sure the local agency hadn’t deliberately put their home over capacity. Thomas Fast said everyone involved in the case was taken aback. When I asked what he thought was behind the agency’s flip-flop, he said, “Frankly, I think the department got cold feet and attempted to sidestep the issue at hand.”

Kutil and Hess were well aware that building a family through the foster system meant not only adding children but also having children taken away. Still, if overcrowding was the issue, why not remove the least-bonded child, the 6-year-old Lynn, who had been there less than a month, rather than a baby who had known no other home? “Children begin to show measurable signs of attachment by 6 months of age,” says David Brodzinsky, a developmental psychologist who specializes in adoption. To separate a child TiCasey’s age from the only parents she has known, Brodzinsky says, “makes no sense whatsoever from a psychological perspective.”

Judge Blake viewed it differently. Uprooting an 11-month-old baby, while not ideal, wouldn’t be traumatic. Who among us remembers what happened when we were a year old? The child was to be moved to a “more appropriate setting” by noon the next day.

But where? Anticipating Judge Blake’s decision, a D.H.H.R. worker called weeks earlier, Kutil says, to ask if she or Hess knew of a suitable family. Desperate to secure TiCasey’s well-being, Hess scoured her own foster-parent network, settling on Amy and Roger Thompson, a couple who had adopted a 2-year-old and were fostering an infant. The day after Judge Blake’s final decision, Kutil, Hess and a D.H.H.R. escort took TiCasey to the Thompsons’ home. “I was as numb as I’ve ever been,” Kutil recalled. “It was the most hollow, empty, helpless time for us.”

At the Thompsons’, the women tried to suppress their tears and quietly left once TiCasey was distracted with toys. For Amy Thompson, the scene was painful. “I was brought up with Christian beliefs,” she told me. “But if they’re good enough to be foster parents, why aren’t they good enough to be adoptive parents?” TiCasey’s removal was particularly tough on Renee. “She couldn’t bear it,” Kutil said. “She said, ‘I just can’t lose another person.’ ”

That Monday, with the kids in school and Kutil back at work, Hess fell apart. “I felt lost,” she told me when I visited in March. “TiCasey has always been with me. She was with me all day long while the kids were at school. You wake up one day, and all her toys, clothes, crib are still there, but no baby. It’s just you. I couldn’t get out of my head how she must be wondering, Why had we left her? Where were the other kids?”

Then, the day before Thanksgiving, the Thompsons informed the D.H.H.R. that they were no longer interested in adoption. They’d only had TiCasey for five days, but Amy’s brother had become seriously ill; between that and the other kids, TiCasey was too much. So the agency swiftly moved TiCasey to yet another foster family. Three hours later, the West Virginia Supreme Court granted an emergency stay, allowing TiCasey to return to the Kutil-Hess home until it could hear their case in March. Ciliberti called Kutil, who then phoned Hess with the news. “I’m not usually that emotional,” Hess said. “But I just couldn’t keep it together.” She sat down on the edge of the bed and cried. A local social worker brought TiCasey back in time for Thanksgiving; when her car pulled up to the house, TiCasey climbed over her to get to Kutil. Renee held TiCasey and murmured: “My baby sister, my baby sister. I knew we had to get her back, and we did.”

AT 7 ON A Sunday night in March, I sat with the Kutil-Hess family as they gathered around the kitchen table, snacking. Cats hopped on the table and were shooed off, small dogs barked underfoot. Display cabinets teemed with keepsakes and animal figurines. Lynn and Ruth slid on and off Hess’s and Kutil’s laps. Ronnie entered briefly, then retreated to homework and video games. Both he and Renee are in seventh grade; both are on the honor roll. Renee was eager to display her latest trophies; she recently earned her gray belt in karate. Soon, the kids were scrambling to show me their prizes. I heard all about jazzercise, basketball, track, cheerleading, golf camp. Ruth, an exceptionally pretty blonde, produced photos of her triumph in the Little Miss pageant at last year’s Pumpkin Festival.

But the center of attention was TiCasey, a slight blue-eyed toddler who scampered around the table. TiCasey raised her hands in the air, and the family shouted, “Praise the Lord!” in recognition. The other kids broke open photo albums documenting her milestones. Then one of the girls pulled out an album from Kutil and Hess’s “unity ceremony,” which took place in 2005 at the White Oak Country Club. The girls tittered over the photographs, which show Kutil and Hess in matching cream pantsuits. There were pictures of doves, a ring pillow, a calla-lily-topped cake. “Look, you may kiss the bride!” Ruth squealed. Renee was grinning at a photo in which Kutil and Hess hold hands. “You never do this,” she said, “you’re never like this!”

The Kutil-Hess case is big news in Oak Hill. “The most surprising thing is how supportive everyone has been,” Hess told me repeatedly. “You think that because you’re gay, it’s going to be open season.” Among comments posted online in response to local reports, most have been positive, even from people who admit they “don’t approve of their lifestyle.” In Wal-Mart, a woman they knew slightly approached them and said: “I’ve been keeping up with that stuff in the paper. It’s just ridiculous, they ought to be ashamed.” All the kids’ teachers have wished them well. “In a way, being from a small town helps,” Hess offered. “People know us personally.”

When asked at the county courthouse, in November, to describe her relationship with Hess, Kutil said: “We don’t hang on each other or grope each other or anything. They don’t see that. All they see is that we care very much for each other. ” She paused. “It’s not like we go marching down in a gay-pride parade. We didn’t ask to be anybody’s poster children here. We just wanted a child or children and a family.” A rush of frustration, humiliation and despair overcame Kutil’s usual reserve as she began to cry before the court. “And here we sit today in front of judge and jury. For what? What have we done? We took this baby in that stayed up for three weeks, all night long, and we did without sleep. We’ve done nothing wrong but love this baby and love her with everything we had.”

ON JUNE 5, a year and a half after TiCasey first came under Kutil and Hess’s care, the West Virginia Supreme Court issued a unanimous opinion overturning Judge Blake’s decision. The court condemned Blake’s decision to ignore the bond forged between TiCasey and her foster parents, and it criticized the Department of Health and Human Resources for proposing that TiCasey, rather than a more recent placement like Lynn, be removed. Adoption proceedings should begin immediately, the court urged, suggesting that either Kutil or Hess “would at the very least need to be considered if not favored in the selection of the prospective adoptive home.”

Yet the court did not rule on the department’s practice of disregarding sexual orientation when considering foster parents or specifically endorse gay adoption. As in so many states around the country, in the absence of a firm policy, individual social workers, agencies and attorneys still make decisions about who can and cannot be a foster or adoptive parent. On June 9, Kathryn Kutil signed papers to begin the adoption process, which will require the approval of Health and Human Services and confirmation by a county judge. The process could take months.

After an initial spurt of excitement and relief, Kutil and Hess have retreated into wariness. They haven’t taken in any new foster kids since Judge Blake’s November order;all their efforts have been focused on the children they think of as their own. “Every day, you wake up and have this perfect baby, and you’re like this normal family,” Hess said. “Yet you sit and wait for somebody else to decide if you get to keep her. You’re at the mercy of other people deciding your life.”

Pamela Paul is the author, most recently, of “Parenting, Inc.,” a book about the business of child rearing. Her last article for the magazine was on pregnant women with cancer.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

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Lori on August 3rd 2009 in News

Be The Answer

Adoption Video

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Lori on May 18th 2009 in News

Celebrity Adoptions and the Real World

Madonna’s quest to adopt a second child — a 3-year-old girl — from Malawi has once again put the celebrity in the spotlight and stirred debate about international adoptions. Save the Children (U.K.) has said that the girl Madonna wants to adopt and children like her would be better off in their home countries, and that most children in orphanages have extended family. (A man claiming to be the father of the girl, Chifundo James known as Mercy, has come forward demanding custody.) This view of international adoption is also held by Unicef.

What should the standard be for allowing international adoptions?

Ny Times

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Lori on May 15th 2009 in News

What adopting a white girl taught a black family about race in the Obama

Raising Katie
Tony Dokoupil
Newsweek Web Exclusive

Several pairs of eyes follow the girl as she pedals around the playground in an affluent suburb of Baltimore. But it isn’t the redheaded fourth grader who seems to have moms and dads of the jungle gym nervous on this recent

Saturday morning. It’s the African-American man-six feet tall, bearded and wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt-watching the girl’s every move.
Approaching from behind, he grabs the back of her bicycle seat as she wobbles to a stop.
“Nice riding,” he says, as the fair-skinned girl turns to him, beaming.
“Thanks, Daddy,” she replies. The onlookers are clearly flummoxed.

As a black father and adopted white daughter, Mark Riding and Katie O’Dea-Smith are a sight at best surprising, and at worst so perplexing that people feel compelled to respond. Like the time at a Pocono Mountains flea market when Riding scolded Katie, attracting so many sharp glares that he and his wife, Terri, 37, and also African-American, thought “we might be

lynched.” And the time when well-intentioned shoppers followed Mark and Katie out of the mall to make sure she wasn’t being kidnapped. Or when would-be heroes come up to Katie in the cereal aisle and ask, “Are you OK?”-even though Terri is standing right there.

Is it racism? The Ridings tend to think so, and it’s hard to blame them.
To
shadow them for a day, as I recently did, is to feel the unease, notice the negative attention and realize that the same note of fear isn’t in the air when they attend to their two biological children, who are 2 and 5 years

old. It’s fashionable to say that the election of Barack Obama has brought the dawn of a post-racial America. In the past few months alone, The Atlantic Monthly has declared “the end of white America,” The Washington

Post has profiled the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s struggle for relevance in a changing world, and National Public

Radio has led discussions questioning the necessity of the annual Black History Month. Perhaps not surprising, most white and black Americans no

longer cite racism as a major social problem, according to recent polls.

But the Ridings’ experience runs counter to these popular notions of harmony. And adoption between races is particularly fraught. So-called transracial adoptions have surged since 1994, when the Multiethnic Placement Act reversed decades of outright racial matching by banning discrimination against adoptive families on the basis of race. But the growth has been all one-sided. The number of white families adopting outside their race is growing and is now in the thousands, while cases like Katie’s-of a black

family adopting a nonblack child-remain frozen at near zero.

Decades after the racial integration of offices, buses and water fountains, persistent double standards mean that African-American parents are still

largely viewed with unease as caretakers of any children other than their own-or those they are paid to look after. As Yale historian Matthew Frye

Jacobson has asked: “Why is it that in the United States, a white woman can have black children but a black woman cannot have white children?”

That question hit home for the Ridings in 2003, when Terri’s mother, Phyllis Smith, agreed to take in Katie, then 3, on a temporary basis. A retired social worker, Phyllis had long been giving needy children a home-and Katie was one of the hardest cases. The child of a local prostitute, her toddler tantrums were so disturbing that foster families simply refused to keep her.
Twelve homes later, Katie was still being passed around. Phyllis was in many ways an unlikely savior. The former president of the Baltimore chapter of the National Association of Black Social Workers, she joined her colleagues in condemning the adoption of black children by white families as “cultural genocide”-a position she still holds in theory, if not in practice. She couldn’t say no to the “charming, energetic” girl who ended up on her front doorstep.

Last November, after a grueling adoption process-”[adoption officials] pushed the envelope on every issue,” says Mark-little Irish-Catholic Katie O’Dea, as pale as a communion wafer, became Katie O’Dea-Smith: a formally adopted member of the African-American Riding-Smith family. (Phyllis is her legal guardian, but Mark and Terri were also vetted as legal surrogates for
Phyllis.)

To be sure, it’s an unconventional arrangement. Katie spends weekdays with Phyllis, her legal guardian. But Mark and Terri, who live around the corner, are her de facto parents, too. They help out during the week, and welcome Katie over on weekends and holidays. As for titles: Katie calls Phyllis “Mommy” and Terri “Sister,” since technically it’s true. Mark has always

been “Daddy” or “Mark.”

“Let me just put it out there,” says Mark, a 38-year-old private-school admissions director with an appealing blend of megaphone voice and fearless opinion, especially when it comes to his family. “I’ve never felt more self-consciously black than while holding our little white girl’s hand in public.” He used to write off the negative attention as innocent curiosity.
But after a half-decade of rude comments and revealing faux pas-like the

time his school’s guidance counselor called Katie a “foster child” in her presence-he now fights the ignorance with a question of his own: why didn’t a white family step up to take Katie?

Riding’s challenge hints at a persistent social problem. “No country in the world has made more progress toward combating overt racism than [the United States],” says David Schneider, a Rice University psychologist and the author of “The Psychology of Stereotyping.” “But the most popular stereotype of black people is still that they’re violent. And for a lot of people, not even racist people, the sight of a white child with a black parent just sets off alarm signals.”

Part of the reason for the adoptive imbalance comes down to numbers, and the fact that people tend to want children of their own race.
African-Americans
represent almost one third of the 510,000 children in foster care, so black parents have a relatively high chance of ending up with a same-race child.
(Not so for would-be adoptive white parents who prefer the rarest thing of all in the foster-care system: a healthy white baby.) But the dearth of black families with nonblack children also has painful historical roots.

Economic hardship and centuries of poisonous belief in the so-called civilizing effects of white culture upon other races have familiarized Americans with the concept of white stewardship of other ethnicities, rather than the reverse.

The result is not only discomfort among whites at the thought of nonwhites raising their offspring; African-Americans can also be wary when one of their own is a parent to a child outside their race. Just ask Dallas Cowboys All-Pro linebacker DeMarcus Ware and his wife, Taniqua, who faced a barrage of criticism after adopting a nonblack baby last February. When The New York Times sports page ran a photo of the shirtless new father with what appeared to be a white baby in his arms (and didn’t mention race in the accompanying story), it sent a slow shock wave through the African-American community, pitting supporters who celebrated the couple’s joy after three painful miscarriages against critics who branded the Wares “self-race-hating individuals” for ignoring the disproportionate number of blacks in foster care. The baby, now their daughter, Marley, is in fact Hispanic. “Do you

mean to tell me that the Wares couldn’t have found a little black baby to adopt?” snarled one blogger on the Daily Voice, an online African-American newspaper.

For the relatively few black families that do adopt non-African-American

children, and the adoptive children themselves, the experience can be confusing. “I hadn’t realized how often we talked about white people at home,” says Mark. “I hadn’t realized that dinnertime stories were often told with reference to the race of the players, or that I often used racial stereotypes, as in the news only cares about some missing spring-break girl because she is blonde.’”

Katie, too, has sometimes struggled with her unusual situation, and how outsiders perceive it. When she’s not drawing, swimming or pining after teen heartthrob Zac Efron, she’s often dealing with normal kid teasing with a

nasty edge. “They’ll ignore me or yell at me because I have a black family,”
she says. Most of her friends are black, although her school is primarily white. And Terri has noticed something else: Katie is uncomfortable identifying people by their race.

Is she racially confused? Should her parents be worried? Opinions vary in the larger debate about whether race is a legitimate consideration in adoption. At present, agencies that receive public funding are forbidden

from taking race into account when screening potential parents. They are

also banned from asking parents to reflect on their readiness to deal with race-related issues, or from requiring them to undergo sensitivity training.
But a well-meaning policy intended to ensure colorblindness appears to be backfiring. According to a study published last year by the Evan B.
Donaldson Adoption Institute, transracial parents are often ill equipped to raise children who are themselves unprepared for the world’s racial realities.

Now lawmakers may rejoin the charged race-adoption debate. Later this year the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, an independent federal think tank, is expected to publish a summary of expert testimony on adoption law-much of which will ask Congress to reinstate race as a salient consideration in all cases. The testimony, from the Evan B. Donaldson institute and others, will also suggest initiatives currently banned or poorly executed under existing policies, including racial training for parents and intensifying efforts to recruit more black adoptive families.

Would such measures be a step back for Obama’s post-racial America? It’s

hard to tell. The Ridings, for their part, are taking Katie’s racial training into their own hands. They send her to a mixed-race school, and

mixed-race summer camps, celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with gusto and buy Irish knickknacks, like a “Kiss Me I’m Irish” T shirt and a mug with Katie’s O’Dea family crest emblazoned on it. But they worry it won’t be enough.
“All
else being equal, I think she should be with people who look like her,”
says
Mark. “It’s not fair that she’s got to grow up feeling different when she’s going to feel different anyway. She wears glasses, her voice is a bit squeaky, and on top of that she has to deal with the fact that her mother is 70 and black.”

But even if Katie feels different now, the Riding-Smiths have given her both a stable home and a familiarity with two ethnic worlds that will surely serve her well as she grows up in a country that is increasingly blended.
And it may be that hers will be the first truly post-racial generation.

URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/194886

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Miriam on April 27th 2009 in News

The Epidemic That Wasn’t

January 27, 2009

By SUSAN OKIE
BALTIMORE – One sister is 14; the other is 9. They are a vibrant pair: the
older girl is high-spirited but responsible, a solid student and a devoted
helper at home; her sister loves to read and watch cooking shows, and she
recently scored well above average on citywide standardized tests.

There would be nothing remarkable about these two happy, normal girls if it
were not for their mother’s history. Yvette H., now 38, admits that she used
cocaine (along with heroin and alcohol) while she was pregnant with each
girl. “A drug addict,” she now says ruefully, “isn’t really concerned about
the baby she’s carrying.”

When the use of crack cocaine became a nationwide epidemic in the 1980s and
’90s, there were widespread fears that prenatal exposure to the drug would
produce a generation of severely damaged children. Newspapers carried
headlines like “Cocaine: A Vicious Assault on a Child,” “Crack’s Toll Among
Babies: A Joyless View” and “Studies: Future Bleak for Crack Babies.”

But now researchers are systematically following children who were exposed
to cocaine before birth, and their findings suggest that the encouraging
stories of Ms. H.’s daughters are anything but unusual. So far, these
scientists say, the long-term effects of such exposure on children’s brain
development and behavior appear relatively small.

“Are there differences? Yes,” said Barry M. Lester, a professor of
psychiatry at Brown University who directs the Maternal Lifestyle Study, a
large federally financed study of children exposed to cocaine in the womb.
“Are they reliable and persistent? Yes. Are they big? No.”

Cocaine is undoubtedly bad for the fetus. But experts say its effects are
less severe than those of alcohol and are comparable to those of tobacco -
two legal substances that are used much more often by pregnant women,
despite health warnings.

Surveys by the Department of Health and Human Services in 2006 and 2007
found that 5.2 percent of pregnant women reported using any illicit drug,
compared with 11.6 percent for alcohol and 16.4 percent for tobacco.

“The argument is not that it’s O.K. to use cocaine in pregnancy, any more
than it’s O.K. to smoke cigarettes in pregnancy,” said Dr. Deborah A. Frank,
a pediatrician at Boston University. “Neither drug is good for anybody.”

But cocaine use in pregnancy has been treated as a moral issue rather than a
health problem, Dr. Frank said. Pregnant women who use illegal drugs
commonly lose custody of their children, and during the 1990s many were
prosecuted and jailed.

Cocaine slows fetal growth, and exposed infants tend to be born smaller than
unexposed ones, with smaller heads. But as these children grow, brain and
body size catch up.

At a scientific conference in November, Dr. Lester presented an analysis of
a pool of studies of 14 groups of cocaine-exposed children – 4,419 in all,
ranging in age from 4 to 13. The analysis failed to show a statistically
significant effect on I.Q. or language development. In the largest of the
studies, I.Q. scores of exposed children averaged about 4 points lower at
age 7 than those of unexposed children.

In tests that measure specific brain functions, there is evidence that
cocaine-exposed children are more likely than others to have difficulty with
tasks that require visual attention and “executive function” – the brain’s
ability to set priorities and pay selective attention, enabling the child to
focus on the task at hand.

Cocaine exposure may also increase the frequency of defiant behavior and
poor conduct, according to Dr. Lester’s analysis. There is also some
evidence that boys may be more vulnerable than girls to behavior problems.

But experts say these findings are quite subtle and hard to generalize.
“Just because it is statistically significant doesn’t mean that it is a huge
public health impact,” said Dr. Harolyn M. Belcher, a neurodevelopmental
pediatrician who is director of research at the Kennedy Krieger Institute’s
Family Center in Baltimore.

And Michael Lewis, a professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at the Robert
Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J., said that in a doctor’s
office or a classroom, “you cannot tell” which children were exposed to
cocaine before birth.

He added that factors like poor parenting, poverty and stresses like
exposure to violence were far more likely to damage a child’s intellectual
and emotional development – and by the same token, growing up in a stable
household, with parents who do not abuse alcohol or drugs, can do much to
ease any harmful effects of prenatal drug exposure.

Possession of crack cocaine, the form of the drug that was widely sold in
inner-city, predominantly black neighborhoods, has long been punished with
tougher sentences than possession of powdered cocaine, although both forms
are identically metabolized by the body and have the same pharmacological
effects.

Dr. Frank, the pediatrician in Boston, says cocaine-exposed children are
often teased or stigmatized if others are aware of their exposure. If they
develop physical symptoms or behavioral problems, doctors or teachers are
sometimes too quick to blame the drug exposure and miss the real cause, like
illness or abuse.

“Society’s expectations of the children,” she said, “and reaction to the
mothers are completely guided not by the toxicity, but by the social
meaning” of the drug.

Research on the health effects of illegal drugs, especially on unborn
children, is politically loaded. Researchers studying children exposed to
cocaine say they struggle to interpret their findings for the public without
exaggerating their significance – or minimizing it, either.

Dr. Lester, the leader of the Maternal Lifestyle Study, noted that the
evidence for behavioral problems strengthened as the children in his study
and others approached adolescence. Researchers in the study are collecting
data on 14-year-olds, he said, adding: “Absolutely, we need to continue to
follow these kids. For the M.L.S., the main thing we’re interested in is
whether or not prenatal cocaine exposure predisposes you to early-onset drug
use in adolescence” or other mental health problems.

Researchers have long theorized that prenatal exposure to a drug may make it
more likely that the child will go on to use it. But so far, such a link has
been scientifically reported only in the case of tobacco exposure.

Teasing out the effects of cocaine exposure is complicated by the fact that
like Yvette H., almost all of the women in the studies who used cocaine
while pregnant were also using other substances.

Moreover, most of the children in the studies are poor, and many have other
risk factors known to affect cognitive development and behavior – inadequate
health care, substandard schools, unstable family situations and exposure to
high levels of lead. Dr. Lester said his group’s study was large enough to
take such factors into account.

Ms. H., who agreed to be interviewed only on the condition that her last
name and her children’s first names not be used, said she entered a drug and
alcohol treatment program about six years ago, after losing custody of her
children.

Another daughter, born after Ms. H. recovered from drug and alcohol abuse,
is thriving now at 3. Her oldest, a 17-year-old boy, is the only one with
developmental problems: he is autistic. But Ms. H. said she did not use
cocaine, alcohol or other substances while pregnant with him.

After 15 months without using drugs or alcohol, Ms. H. regained custody and
moved into Dayspring House, a residential program in Baltimore for women
recovering from drug abuse, and their children.

There she received psychological counseling, parenting classes, job training
and coaching on how to manage her finances. Her youngest attended Head
Start, the older children went to local schools and were assigned household
chores, and the family learned how to talk about their problems.

Now Ms. H. works at a local grocery, has paid off her debts, has her own
house and is actively involved in her children’s schooling and health care.
She said regaining her children’s trust took a long time. “It’s something
you have to constantly keep working on,” she said.

Dr. Belcher, who is president of Dayspring’s board of directors, said such
programs offered evidence-based interventions for the children of drug
abusers that can help minimize the chances of harm from past exposure to
cocaine or other drugs.

“I think we can say this is an at-risk group,” Dr. Belcher said. “But they
have great potential to do well if we can mobilize resources around the
family.”

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Lori on January 28th 2009 in News

Black Kids in White Houses, On Race, Silence, and the Changing American Family

November 25, 2008

by Jen Graves

After all this time, there are still things we don’t talk about. It’s a century and a half after Emancipation and a year before the election of America’s first black president. This is October 2007.

The door is closed. There is a black woman at the front of the room, near the blackboard. She is facing a black man who is sitting down and talking fast. He keeps talking for a long time, as if he has been waiting a while to say this to someone. The police, but not only the police, treated him like he was a criminal. His parents, who are white, didn’t believe him when he told them this, or if they wanted to believe him, they still just didn’t

know what to say. Why would they? They were adopting a black child, they

thought-not a black teenager, not a black man.

When he finishes, there is quiet in the room, as if everyone is giving him his due. A young Korean woman goes next. She says she has tried to find her birth mother, but the Korean authorities have stopped her. She says she is working to end all adoption from Korea.

There is a young Korean man. He is gay. He is also transgender. He grew up in a white Christian family in a white Christian town. He had to escape.
For
a long time, he didn’t talk about it. He knows he should be grateful, but here, among like-minded peers, he feels like he can really talk about it for the first time.

This workshop is called “Race and Transracial Adoption Workshop with Lisa Marie Rollins.” Rollins is the black woman at the front of the room. She

says that a social worker labeled her Mexican, Filipino, and Caucasian because people didn’t want black kids. But she looked more and more black as she grew older. Her parents still said she wasn’t black. She was.
Finally,
they admitted it too. Then once, as an adult, visiting home, she found a

mammy doll in her mother’s kitchen, in among the other knickknacks.
That’s
the end of the anecdote. She’s still basically speechless about it.

She says it is time to watch a video called “Struggle for Identity.” In the video, people tell their stories, stories like the ones in the room. A black woman who was adopted by white parents boils it down: “Don’t think you can make black friends after you adopt a black child. If you don’t already have black friends, you shouldn’t be adopting a black child.” Then the lights go up. There are several white people in the room who have said they have already adopted black or Asian or Guatemalan children, or that they are right now waiting to leave for Ethiopia to pick up their adopted children.
All of those people-the white people-are crying.

They are crying because they have heard things they did not want to hear.
But there is more to it than that. They are also crying because they do not know how else to respond to the great, big cultural silence that has been broken here.

I t would be easier for white people if race did not exist. Or if everyone could agree that race did not matter, that is. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word “transracial” first appeared publicly in a
1971
Time magazine article. The article introduced transracial adoption, or adoption across racial boundaries-most often white parents adopting children of color-and reported a strange phenomenon. According to a study in Britain, some white parents “tended to ‘deny their child’s color, or to say he was growing lighter, or that other people thought he was suntanned and did not recognize him as colored. Sometimes the reality was fully accepted [by the parents] only after the very light child had grown noticeably darker after being exposed to bright sunlight on holiday.’”

It’s such an outrageous finding that it sounds like a joke. Stephen Colbert’s dimwitted white-guy alter ego has a joke like this, when he says on The Colbert Report, always in the most ridiculous of situations: “As you know, I don’t see color.” The joke is funny because in so many ways it’s

true. Plenty of white people don’t see color. We refuse to look at it, prefer not to see too much difference, because difference almost always makes us feel bad by comparison.

Transracial adoption is awkward to discuss at first, because although it is designed to chart a radically integrated future, on the surface its structure repeats the segregated past. Just look at the basic structure of a family and apply race to the equation. The most crude way to put it:
Whites
are in charge, children of color are subordinate, and adults of color are out of the picture. And that’s not even talking about class.

And yet there are more of these families now than ever. The exact number of transracial adoptees in this country is unknown, but the practice, which

began in earnest in the 1970s, has been on the rise for at least 10 years.
Twenty-six percent of black children adopted from foster care in 2004-about 4,200 kids-were adopted transracially, almost all by white parents, according to a New York Times analysis of data from the National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect at Cornell University and the Department of Health and Human Services. That figure is up from 14 percent in 1998 and, according to adoption experts, it has continued to climb. The 2000 census, the first to collect information on adoptions, counted just over 16,000 white households with adopted black children. In the last 15 years, Americans have adopted more than 200,000 children from overseas, but that trend is cooling off, partly because international adoptions are so expensive.

In spite of all that, a person has to slog through layers of silence just to meet someone else at the surface for a conversation about the topic.
When
Mark Riding, a black father in Baltimore, burst out last November on an NPR blog with a long narrative he’d clearly been waiting to tell someone-about adopting a white daughter, getting glares on the street, and trying to censor his own family’s talk about “white people” at home-he found himself in a debate with another commenter, who told him repeatedly to “rise above the race issue” and talked about “membership in the human race.” There’s a silencer in every conversation about race.

But anonymous commenters can be great sources of information, because they’ll write what they’d never say. On The Stranger’s blog, I wrote about the woman at the workshop who said you shouldn’t adopt black children if you don’t already have black friends. An adoptive parent named Teresa took serious offense. Biological parents don’t even get screened, she wrote.
“My
husband and I are white, and we adopted a 9-year-old Hispanic boy four years ago. The amount of training and inspection that we went through was incredible…. You don’t know the whole story. You can’t possibly. You aren’t part of those families.”

“P.S.,” she wrote at the end, “It isn’t that hard to get a white person to cry.”

Teresa’s comment was long, and it built to a climax before the P.S. Her
point: If you don’t silence these disgruntled adopted adults, then adoption policy could become race-conscious, and if adoption policy becomes race-conscious but white people still mostly aren’t, then white people could be denied the right to adopt, and if that happens, then children of color are going to go without good, permanent homes.

Don’t talk is the idea-it can’t lead to anything good. All it leads to is shouting, and suing, and then, finally, resilencing.

B arack Obama may as well have been a transracial adoptee.

He grew up with white grandparents, without black role models. His Kenyan father and his Kansas mother were not constant presences. As an upperclassman in high school, he realized what it meant to be black in a

white world and became sick with the particular loneliness of a transracial adoptee. His grades dropped, he smoked pot, he snorted coke, he came close to trying heroin with an acquaintance in a meat locker: In short, he nearly destroyed himself. To his family, he simply fell silent. “I was trying to raise myself to be a black man in America, and beyond the given of my appearance, no one around me seemed to know exactly what that meant.” So

they didn’t talk about it.

In the world of transracial adoption, you don’t have to look very hard to figure out why no one talks about this stuff. Federal adoption laws mandate silence. Social workers aren’t allowed to talk to families about whether

they already have black friends. They aren’t allowed to tell families they might want to get some. Any of that would be seen, according to federal law written in 1996, as a violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The 1996 law prohibits the placement of an adoptee on the basis of race, color, or national origin. Race does not matter, the law says. The American domestic child-welfare system is officially colorblind-or, more to the point, colormute.

There’s one exception: The law doesn’t apply to Native American children. A separate 1978 law governs them and says the opposite: that in-race adoptions are preferred. Both laws were written by people who said they had the best interests of the children in mind. Yet today, as a report released this past May by the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute shows, Native American and black kids-despite being governed by philosophically opposite laws-both on average stay in the child-welfare system longer than children of any other race. Why are these kids still stranded? If one way of helping minority foster children doesn’t work, and the opposite way of helping minority foster children doesn’t work either, why are we still pretending one is right and one is wrong?

A doption has never been simple for adoptees, and increasingly, adoptive

parents are learning that making life easier for their children may make it more complicated for them. Today, many parents acknowledge absent birth parents-always present to the adoptee-as a presence in their families too.
For a transracial adoptee, race is like another missing parent. In fact,

transracial adoptees hunger for heritage at a younger age than their white counterparts, searching for their parents on average five years earlier
(25.8 versus 31.2), and looking not just for parents but also for a racial identity.

We know this because of a study cited in the 2006 anthology Outsiders Within, which is the first book ever to be written entirely by transracial adoptees and to include academic research, scholarly papers, memoirs, and artworks. It’s a landmark book representing a new voice, or an old voice

finally speaking up. Why did it take so long? Gratefulness. Gratefulness is the most powerful silencer in the adoption world. Even if a transracial adoptee breaks the silence to make a criticism about his or her experience, the immediate response always is: Would it have been better if you’d never been adopted? It’s a rhetorical cul-de-sac, a false runaround that continues to stifle conversations about more complicated subjects, like what’s the

difference between a family that’s tolerant and one that’s actively antiracist, or why are there so many children of color adopted in the first place?

That old stifling question is starting to die.

These are the voices that are coming out instead:

“I can’t be alone in thinking that being transracially adopted, we have lost
something: lost our languages, traditions, cultures, and most importantly the subtleties and nuances of those cultures. We have lost something we never had, which we may not have even valued had we had it, and yet we continue to mourn. Am I alone in this grief?”

That’s M. Anderson, writing in Outsiders Within. Here’s Rita Simon, a researcher at American University who has been studying transracial adoption since 1968 (she’s talking on NPR):

“What we find consistently is that the white families cannot raise a black child as if it was its own birth child. They have to make changes in their lives. In other words, love is not enough.”

And this from the Donaldson report this past May:

“Two principles provide a solid framework for meeting the needs of black

children and youth in foster care: that adoption is a service for children, and that acknowledgement of race-related realities-not ‘colorblindness’-must help to shape the development of sound adoption practices.” (Emphasis
mine.)

The Donaldson report, commissioned by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, calls for a change to federal adoption law.

P am LaBorde, a Seattle pediatrician, is in her kitchen making black-bean burritos for dinner. “My white friends don’t really get it when I say this, but I basically have these kids because of poverty,” she says.

Her willingness to talk openly is surprising; I find myself wanting to silence her for her own protection.

Pam and her husband, Bill, both white, adopted two black children, Theo and Simone, whose mother, Amanda, lives in Texas. Amanda had to give them up

because she’s poor and has been dealing with illness in her immediate family. The semi-open adoptions cost almost $20,000 each. “Some of my white friends think there’s something wrong with the birth mother for giving up her kids. Okay, she could have used contraception, but not everyone I know is perfect in that way either. There’s nothing wrong with her. It’s important that my kids know that. I’ve thought before, what if I’d just given that money to her?”

In international adoptions, the poverty of the parents is usually blamed on corrupt governments or bad political situations, Pam says. “But when it’s domestic, we blame the parents.”

The Transracially Adopted Children’s Bill of Rights, by adoptee Liza Steinberg Triggs, includes this rule: “Every child is entitled to parents who know that if they are white they experience the benefits of racism because the country’s system is organized that way.”

Pam is the sort of person-maybe all self-critical parents (people?) are this way out of necessity-who can’t help but believe in opposing ideas. She and her husband, who studied black history in graduate school, were interested in adopting black children “from a social-justice point of view.” Both because more black children than white children need homes, and because the LaBordes believe in the civil-rights dream of an understanding and connection between different races of people.

A year ago, they moved from the lily-white Proctor neighborhood in Tacoma to the racial mix of Columbia City, and Theo, now in kindergarten, goes to school at John Muir Elementary, where the LaBordes are hoping to meet and befriend black families. (They want not only black peers but black role models for their kids.) Their adoption agency gave them a few tips about

respecting black culture and sent them on their way. “It’s not enough,”
she
says. “Honestly, we could have gone and moved to a white gated community in northern Minnesota, and nobody would have done anything about it.”

Some days, Pam does feel like moving to a white neighborhood, not that she would. Several months ago, on a bus in Columbia City, a young black man asked her whether her kids were adopted. She said yes. He chanted, “That’s fucked up, that’s fucked up.” Then he told her that when her son got older, he’d get up in the middle of the night and kill her, so maybe the man would just kill her now, there on the bus. Another time, a black woman in a car yelled at Pam and the kids when they were walking on the street in Columbia
City: “How does it feel to steal black babies, you white bitch?”

There are times when black parents or grandparents smile at her knowingly, or randomly hug her, or give her unsolicited help, but usually she feels

nervous around black parents. “I feel that I need to do it right,” she says.
“I need to prove that I’m capable of parenting these children.”

She gives herself only middling marks. Neither she nor Bill have close black friends yet. And they aren’t Christians, so they can’t join a black church.
“It’s complicated,” she says. “It’s only going to get harder as they get

older. I think you have to be willing to talk about it constantly, and over and over.”

I ‘m a moderate racist.

My personal data “suggest a moderate automatic preference for European Americans compared to African Americans.” This data came from something called the Implicit Association Test, which is hosted on the website of Harvard University. The test, developed in 1998, is intended to gauge unconscious bias. It measures how long you take to answer questions (by
keyboard) that ask you to associate faces of different races with good (e.g., “joy”) versus bad (e.g., “failure”) words.

This is the test that King County employees of the state’s Children’s Administration department are going to be taking, because Washington has a problem. It’s the same problem pretty much everywhere around the country, and not a new problem either: Too many kids of color are coming into foster care and staying in too long. In King County, the Children’s Administration is writing a plan with five parts, one of which is “staff development, which begins with self-examination,” says director Joel Odimba. “We’re going to train in knowing who we are.” The five-point plan includes-in addition to soul searching-a review of policies, the formation of an advisory committee, and a possible Cultural Competency Center.

Those are pretty quiet, bureaucracy-as-usual ideas compared to the idea that made Seattle famous on this issue. In 1999, Washington’s Department of Social and Health Services launched a pilot project that four years later became the full-blown Office of African-American Children’s Services (OAACS, pronounced “oasis”). It was staffed with people trained to handle the particular issues of black foster kids, and most of the county’s black kids were routed through it-blatantly defying the colorblind mandates of federal adoption law. Quickly, it was the talk of the nation, a test of dealing with race head-on in public policy, as if it matters. And it was invented out of a sense of desperation not uncommon around the country: In 2004, while black children made up 7 percent of the population of King County’s kids, they

accounted for 30 percent of the kids in King County foster care.

It was a stab, an effort, a start. But it got complaints. Its management

turned over often, and it was criticized by the rest of the department.
Last
spring, just as OACCS’s approach was about to be validated by new research-two months later, the Donaldson report would call for an emphasis on race in the child-welfare system-OACCS was killed. The federal Office of Civil Rights declared it in violation, and the state decided to let it go.
The state’s foster-care administration would no longer deal with race in a direct way. Meanwhile, the OAACS building would be renamed the Martin Luther King Jr. office-an apt linguistic elision. Now it operates like all the others, taking cases on the basis of where the kids live. You’d never know that a major experiment on the role of race in families went on there, and whatever it might have been on its way to learning appears to have been lost.

T here are not that many movies about domestic transracial adoption. In one, the 1995 movie Losing Isaiah, Halle Berry stars as a crackhead named Khaila who leaves her baby, Isaiah, in a trash can while she goes to find some crack. He’s discovered, taken to a hospital, and adopted by Jessica Lange’s character, Margaret. When Khaila cleans up and discovers her son is still alive, she wants him back, and a judge orders his return. But it is too late-the toddler is attached to Margaret, and he doesn’t respond to Khaila.
Khaila is forced to admit that Margaret has become her son’s mother. The

last scene shows Margaret and Isaiah reunited over some toys, and Khaila

playing alongside them. A title card flashes: “And a little child shall lead them, Isaiah 11:6.”

A little child shall lead them.

That phrase hits me hard. One of the reasons I was at that October 2007 workshop (at Seattle University), and that I’d been looking into transracial adoption, was to teach racist family members of mine a lesson. I had other reasons too-I’ve been debating whether to become a parent for a while-but this one was the most embarrassing. In my fantasy, I hadn’t considered how exactly I would protect my child. The child was a means to an end, a healing
agent: Want to rid your parents of their overt racism? Give them black grandchildren and defy them not to love them! Need to atone for your own

covert racism? Adopt a black child and let him teach you!

Part of the genuine appeal of transracial adoption, it’s true, is its potential to transform our culture. “I often think about transracial adoption as a grand social experiment,” writes John Raible, one of the first mixed-race children adopted to a white family in the 1960s and something of a spokesperson on the topic.

Even so, children shouldn’t be the day laborers on the job, says Chad Goller-Sojourner. Would you want your children to be the test cases in a

grand social experiment?

“What I’d ask parents is, are you willing to be the uncomfortable one?”
Goller-Sojourner says. This is how he’d question a prospective parent if he were a social worker. “Because somebody’s gonna be uncomfortable, and it

seems the burden is on you. You have to be the uncomfortable one.”

He means that if white parents of black children, for instance, don’t live in black neighborhoods, join black churches, have black friends, and send their children to significantly mixed-race schools, then at least they should cross the thresholds into black barbershops even though it’s awkward, or drive out of their way to shop at grocery stores in black neighborhoods.
Parents should be careful to raise their children to live in this world, not the one they wish existed.

“If you’re buying a house and you have a dog, don’t you spend more time looking for a big old yard for your dog?” he says. “Love is but one of many components of parenting. You’re raising children to live in a world that may not be your world. If you go to the pound, they won’t just give you a dog.
There are rules. They’ll say, ‘That dog’s not good for your house, we’ll get you another dog.’ But when you ask that question about kids, people freak out.”

Goller-Sojourner is a performer. This summer, he put on a one-man show at the Rainier Valley Cultural Center called Sitting in Circles with Rich White
Girls: Memoirs of a Bulimic Black Boy. As a big, gay, dark-skinned black

adoptee of white parents living in white University Place outside Tacoma, he has had to explain himself many times, from many different perspectives, to many different kinds of people. He’s developed multiple metaphors: the dog-adoption analogy, one involving a seven-foot child with five-foot parents (“It’s not that one’s better, it’s just an acknowledgement of likeness or nonlikeness”), and one about lions and a gazelle.

“Let’s say I was a gazelle adopted by lions,” he says. “I pranced around

happy until I got to first grade and all these lions tried to attack me;

it’s like they didn’t get the memo. The other gazelles, they smelled the

lion on me and didn’t trust me, so I stood open.”

He can also tell it literally: “The difference between when I got called

nigger and when other black kids got called nigger is that they went home and got love, and I went home and got love from people who looked just like the people who called me nigger. As a child, you don’t have the ability to bifurcate.”

P hebe Jewell is gay. She and her partner, Dawn, adopted a boy named Isaac.
He has the same mother as Bill and Pam LaBorde’s two children, the poor woman from Texas, Amanda, who for the most part finds it too painful to be in contact with the children she’s let go. Isaac, Theo, and Simone all live in the same neighborhood, and Theo and Isaac go to the same school (Simone is too young). When friends from school come over, they are often confused about why Isaac, Theo, and Simone don’t live together. But then somebody

explains it, and that’s that.

Isaac is 6 1/2, the oldest of the three, and he is not a quiet kid. You can hear him across the aisles at a store. Phebe worries that some people will see him as “dangerous, a thug,” but she knows that if he were quiet, he’d probably get teased as an Oreo. At his school, many of the kids are black.
He comes home talking black, calling her “girl.” It makes her proud, that he’s getting black culture, black cadence. Even though she’s white, she knows it herself, having grown up partly in the South. She jokingly calls him “boy” in return, but she knows she’ll eventually have to stop herself, because of that word’s old association with power and slavery, something

Isaac couldn’t know about now.

Isaac does know about slavery. He learned about it a year ago.
Eventually,
he used it against his mother when she tried to tell him what to do.
“White
people don’t own black people anymore, so you can’t own me,” he told her.

Ingenious, she thought. That’s my son.

O ver at Theo and Simone’s house, they have just finished eating their black-bean burritos, and it’s time to put on swimsuits and get in the car to go for lessons. Lessons are at Medgar Evers Pool, a place named for a man who was intimidated from voting just 62 years ago, who was on his college debate team, who married a woman named Myrlie, who had a Molotov cocktail thrown into the carport at their home, who was nearly run down by a car, who was shot dead in his own driveway-in the back-by a Ku Klux Klan fertilizer salesman who was not convicted of murder until 30 years later.
Everything
good that happened to Medgar Evers was because of Medgar Evers.
Everything
bad that happened to him was because he was black and refused to apologize for it.

Theo and Simone are sitting in the backseat of the car. Pam is explaining how she dresses the children carefully. If they were white children, she

might dress them as “little Goodwill hippies,” but she doesn’t want black or white people thinking of them as poor maltreated urchins, so she dresses

them up. Theo is wearing a white button-up polo shirt and glasses. We are driving past Garfield High School, where on Halloween night, a black teenager was killed in what police think was a gang shooting. Since then, black teenagers have been walking around the Central District and riding

city buses along Martin Luther King Jr. Way in sweatshirts that say “RIP Lil Q” for the kid who died.

Theo doesn’t know any of this. He doesn’t know that he’s going to a pool

named for Medgar Evers. He doesn’t know that there was a shooting here at this same place, another shooting of a black man. He doesn’t know that this is my neighborhood, where I live, where I’m learning about the meaning of race, the moderate racist in the front seat.

He does know about Obama, though. What does he know about Obama? I ask him.
He puts his fingers to his chest and says, “Black.” Then he says, “White

House.” That’s all he says.

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Lori on December 7th 2008 in News

Birth Defects Tied to Fertility Techniques

November 18, 2008

By DENISE GRADY
Infants conceived with techniques commonly used in fertility clinics are two
to four times more likely to have certain birth defects than are infants
conceived naturally, a new study has found.

The findings applied to single births only, not to twins or other multiples.
The defects included heart problems, cleft lip, cleft palate and
abnormalities in the esophagus or rectum. But those conditions are rare to
begin with, generally occurring no more than once in 700 births, so the
overall risk was still low, even after the fertility treatments. Cleft lip,
for instance, typically occurs in 1 in 950 births in the United States, and
the study found that the risk about doubled, to approximately 1 in 425,
among infants conceived with the fertility treatments.

The procedures that increased the risk were so-called assisted reproductive
techniques, like in vitro fertilization, which require doctors and
technicians to work with eggs and sperm outside the body. The study did not
include women who only took fertility drugs and did not have procedures
performed.

“I think it is important for couples to consider the fact that there may be
a risk for birth defects,” said Jennita Reefhuis, an epidemiologist at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the first author of the
study, which was published online on Sunday by the journal Human
Reproduction.

But Dr. Reefhuis (pronounced REEF-house) also said that although her study
linked fertility procedures to birth defects, it did not prove the
connection or explain it. If the connection is real, it is not known whether
the procedures increase the risk for birth defects, or whether infertility
itself raises the risk.

Fertility doctors, she said, “may not believe my findings.”

Dr. James A. Grifo, director of the fertility clinic at New York University
Medical Center, said, “The good news is that the risk is low.”

Dr. Grifo said more research was needed to test the findings, because the
study included only 281 women who had fertility procedures. He said that if
the association with birth defects was real, the underlying cause was more
likely related to the patients’ infertility than to the treatments.

“The results are concerning, but with this small a sample of patients, a
bigger study would need to be done,” Dr. Grifo said. “And the fact that they
see it in singletons, not in twins, makes it hard for me to think this is a
direct relationship.”

Twins and other multiple births have a higher risk of birth defects than
single births and whether infertility treatment adds to that risk is
unknown.

Dr. Alan R. Fleischman, vice president and medical director of the March of
Dimes, said: “I think it’s an important study. It’s confirmatory of the
direction we have been concerned about, an increase in some structural birth
defects in babies born with assisted reproductive techniques compared to
those born without such. And yet the numbers are still small, the risks are
low.”

Women considering fertility treatment should be informed that there might be
a risk of birth defects, Dr. Fleischman said, but they need not be “overly
concerned.”

In 2005, about 52,000 infants were born in the United States as a result of
in vitro fertilization and related techniques, according to the disease
centers. The number doubled from 1996 to 2004; currently, about 12 percent
of women ages 15 to 44 in this country seek fertility treatments.

The researchers used information already collected by a large project paid
for by the government, the National Birth Defects Prevention study. Dr.
Reefhuis and her colleagues compared 9,584 women who had children with birth
defects, and 4,792 control women whose children were born without defects.
In the control group, 1.1 percent of the women (51) had undergone fertility
procedures; in those whose children had birth defects, the figure was 2.4
percent (230). The increased risk among those who had the procedures was not
related to their age, income, the number of children they had or to whether
or not their babies were born prematurely.

Dr. Fleischman acknowledged that the number of women who had fertility
procedures was small, but, he said, “These are very well-studied
populations, and they’re just about as good data as we have.”

The study included information from 281 births conceived with fertility
techniques and 14,095 without.

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Lori on November 19th 2008 in News

Vietnam: Update on September 1, 2008 Deadline

The Vietnamese Department of International Adoptions (DIA) has confirmed that the DIA continued to issue referrals to prospective adoptive parents until September 1, 2008, the date the United States – Vietnam bilateral adoption agreement expired. According to the Vietnamese Ministry of Justice, prospective adoptive parents who received a formal referral by September 1 will be allowed to process their adoption to conclusion. Dossiers that were not referred by September 1 will be closed and returned to the adoption service provider.

According to the DIA, a referral occurs when DIA sends a letter to prospective adoptive parents informing them that both DIA and provincial authorities have agreed to the match of a specific child.
Any case where this letter has been sent to the prospective adoptive parents before September 1 will be considered as having a referral and will be processed to completion.

The DIA has informed the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi that they will supply the U.S. Embassy with a list of all cases that have received a referral. The Embassy expects to receive this list during the third week of September. The Embassy will confirm when this information is available to all U.S. adoption service providers and issue a public announcement providing a general summary about the number of cases still in process. Prospective adoptive parents who have not received a referral letter may wish to verify the status of their case with their adoption service provider.

According to an informal poll of adoption service providers taken in mid August, approximately 600-700 prospective adoptive parents still had an application pending with the DIA and had not yet received referrals. The U.S. Embassy in Hanoi, Vietnam, will process to conclusion all adoptions that meet the Government of Vietnam’s criteria and deadlines.

The United States is strongly committed to processing legitimate intercountry adoptions from Vietnam. We have indicated to the Vietnamese our interest in negotiating a new agreement. An important goal for the United States is that any new agreement must establish enforceable safeguards and a transparent process which ensures that the children and families involved in the adoption process are protected from exploitation. The Government of Vietnam shares this concern. Both countries acknowledge that more needs to be done to address deficiencies in the current system. It is not possible, at this time, to predict when a new bilateral adoption agreement may be negotiated and signed.

U.S. field investigations continue to reveal incidents of serious adoption irregularities, including forged or altered documentation, cash payment to birth mothers (for other than reasonable payments for necessary activities such as administrative, court, legal, translation, and/or medical services related to the adoption), coercion or deceit to induce the birth parent(s) to release children to an orphanage, and children being offered for intercountry adoption without the knowledge or consent of their birth parents. During the month of June 2008, some children were reunited with their families after investigations by the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam revealed that the birth parents had not consented to their adoption. In August, Vietnamese officials confirmed media reports that 24 individuals have been arrested and charged throughout Vietnam for documentation fraud and child trafficking instances related to intercountry adoption.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service and the Department of State have instituted procedures to verify that children identified for placement meet the requirements of Vietnamese and U.S. law, before the child has been adopted under Vietnamese law. Information about these procedures is available from USCIS or through their website http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis. The Embassy strongly advises prospective adoptive parents not to travel to Vietnam until they have received notification from the Embassy that their case is ready for final processing and travel is appropriate.

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Miriam on September 6th 2008 in News