Pending bill opens records to adoptees

Monday, March 31, 2008 11:44 AM EDT

Adoptees will have the same right to the birth records and early health histories as every other person has always had, under legislation pending in the state Senate and Assembly. Currently, eight other states offer this right and several others are considering it. Adoption records in Kansas and Alaska have never been sealed.
New York began sealing adoption records in the mid-1930s to protect adoptive parents from possible interference from biological parents. Contrary to popular assumption, however, there has never been a legal guarantee of secrecy offered to birth parents who have given up their children for adoption.

Since the 1930s, social perceptions and medical research have evolved to the point where most professionals in the field of adoption agree that open adoption and background information is to the benefit of all concerned. For example, one of the first things a doctor needs to know is a patient's medical and psychiatric history. Currently, that potentially life-saving information is obtainable only by court order and at considerable cost to the individual. Unfortunately, it is usually not sought because of those deterrents, to a patient's serious disadvantage.

Other adoptees seeking their birth records believe that the matter is one of basic human rights, including the right to know one's heritage, something that is taken for granted by everyone else. Such denial of access consigns adoptees to second-class citizen status.

The proposed adoptee rights legislation strikes a balance between an adopted person's right to know and the confidentiality concerns of biological parents.

With the political fray in Albany this year, these bills need the attention and support of your elected officials. Please contact your state senator urging support of bill S235 and your assemblyman of bill A2277.

Joyce Bahr

Gracie Station

Bahr is president of New York Statewide Adoption Reform, Unsealedinitiative@nyc.rr.com

The Citizens' Say

There are 5 comment(s)

msusiecu wrote on Apr 2, 2008 3:01 PM:

" Just want to say as a mother who surrendered my daughter in 1966 that I support open records for adopted persons and their families. After all who better has a right to this info?
It is a myth that we wanted confidentuality in fact, in my 18 yrs of being involved in 26 different adoption related groups I have concluded that about 97% of parents hope to someday know their child is ok. It is unbelievable to me that the inhumane laws in most states, have not been changed already. "

lminisce wrote on Apr 2, 2008 2:06 PM:

" I wasn't told I was adopted until I was 11 years old. At that age, everything is already melodramatic!, so I took it to mean that I didn't belong. That was surely not what my adopted mom was telling me - that was how I interpreted it. But I have lived my whole adult life, feeling one-half of me was connected to my children; but, the other half was empty. I desire greatly, to know what makes me who I am - why I love the things I love - who do I look like; and consequently, who do my children look like. It's a feeling of being incomplete. Only an adopted person understands that feeling. "

BorninBing wrote on Apr 1, 2008 9:40 PM:

" I find it so disheartening that as a U.S. citizen I am denied the right to know who I am, where I came from and what my heritage is. I have no medical information and I can't protect myself or my children from what may be life-threatening hereditary conditions. All of this because a few legislators in the state of New York feel that I have no right to this information. They have no clue what it is like to go through life not knowing, always wondering and hoping that one day my right to know this information will be granted. I only hope that that day will come before it is too late. "

Natalie14612 wrote on Apr 1, 2008 8:12 AM:

" New Jersey has just become the most recent state to allow adult adoptees to get their original birth certificate. New York needs to do the same! Instead of legislators looking back at what they think was promised to birth parents way back when, they need to look at recent statistics and see that open records have been a success for ALL involved!
Many thanks to Joyce Bahr for all her hard work. Thanks, too, to MY state legislators, Senator Joseph Robach and Assembly member David Koon of the Rochester area, for sponsoring this bill. "

Gaye Sherman wrote on Mar 30, 2008 9:31 AM:

" Excellent points by Ms. Bahr. I would like to add that despite the dire predictions of opponents in Oregon, Tennessee and other states - abortion rates did not rise and adult adoptees respected the wishes of first parents who filed "no contact" requests. "

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