Legal Toolkit Ohio Adoption and Surrogacy
What to Know About Adoption and Surrogacy
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Legally, adoption involves the termination of birth parents’ rights, the placement of a child with the prospective adoptive parents and finally the creation of a new legal parent/child relationship. Adoption is also a wonderful option for expanding a family and can take many forms, including private, open, closed, domestic agency, interstate, international, special needs, foster, single parent, grandparent and stepparent. The laws governing the process can be complex but there is a lot of information available to prospective adoptive parents. Ohio parents can seek assistance and information on the process and the various types of adoption from experienced adoption attorneys, adoption agencies (local, national and international), the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, the Franklin County Probate Court and Children’s Hospital Adoption Academies. Churches, priests, ministers and rabbis can also be good resources. An experienced adoption attorney can provide unbiased explanation of Ohio adoption laws and rights, direct clients to local, national and international resources as well as assessing risks and determining what adoption fees are legally allowed.
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Birth mothers seeking to place their child for adoption can choose an adoption attorney to advise them of their options, Ohio laws regarding adoption, and to develop an adoption plan that meets their requirements. This can include the kind of adoption they are seeking as well as addressing any medical coverage needs the birth mother might have. An experienced adoption attorney can create a plan that specifies an adoption that is completely private and closed with no contact after the baby is born, an open adoption with pre-determined amounts and types of contact once the baby has been adopted (known as a post-adoption contact agreement) or something in between. The adoption attorney will also typically be able to provide the birth mother with prospective adoptive family profiles from which she can choose to interview parents hoping to adopt.
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Post-adoption contact agreements are arrangements specifying some kind of future contact between a child’s adoptive family and members of the child’s birth family or someone else with whom the child has an established relationship, such as a foster parent, once the child’s adoption has been finalized. Post-adoption contact agreements may also be referred to as cooperative adoption or open adoption agreements. They can be a written, formal contract created by an experienced adoption attorney or a less formal understanding between the birth and adoptive families. These agreements might be requested by a birth parent as a requirement in their selection of adoptive parents and/or might be desired by the adoptive parents to be used as a future resource of information about a child’s medical, ancestral and cultural history.
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International adoptions are usually finalized in the country of origin and/or birth country of the child, and are usually facilitated by an adoption agency that works in that country or is accredited by that country to facilitate international adoptions. An attorney experienced with international adoptions can help you to consider your options, including determining what would be best for your family related to age, gender, race and medical needs as well as how to select an international adoption agency that is best for you. Many of these agencies deal with more than one country, and each country has different rules and regulations regarding accreditation for adoption agencies and the adoption process.
Re-adoption is not required under federal law for children who enter the county with an IR-3 visa (those whose adoptions were completed overseas). International adoptions finalized abroad, in most situations, are legally binding in the
Even if your state recognizes a foreign adoption decree, you may want to consider re-adoption in the United States because re-adoption in the United States enables you to obtain an American birth certificate from your state of residence for your child, as well as certified copies of your child’s birth certificate from your state department of vital records (needed for school registration, athletics, etc.). A legal name change can also be completed from a re-adoption in the
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Surrogacy laws vary from state to state. An attorney experienced in