Thursday, April 30, 2009

A CHILD'S WAITING: STILL WORKING, SUING OHIO



Isn't this just peachy!

Rick Armon, at the Akron Beacon Journal writes yesterdaythat our favorite Ohio agency, A Child's Waiting, is not only still IN business but suing the state for $25,000+ in damages claiming Ohio refused to live up to its end of the deal when it booted the Skank Sisters (Jennifer Marando and Crissy Kolarik).

I check ACW's page periodically and saw that it was still in business. You'd never think that they'd been ordered out of the day-to-day operation and to stop taking new cases. Not sure if they got their new board, but I doubt it.

Armon says amongst the findings of the Ohio Jobs and Family Services:

• The agency took on three additional cases when not permitted.

• It failed to submit required monthly reports for children in its custody.

• Owners didn't step away from daily operations as required.

''This case involves an adoption agency that is unwilling or unable to keep track of the children within its care,'' state attorneys wrote in response to the injunction.

Armon interviewed me a couple weeks ago for an unrelated story that's not up yet, and told he'd noticed when he drove by, their sign was down. I knew it was too much to expect that they'd packed up for Hell.

No word on Evelyn Bennett yet. What does it take to get your kid back?


Thanks to UBL and Claud for the heads up!

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

CALIFORNIA CIRCLE JERKING AB 372: A DIALOGUE

Yesterday morning, Bastardette received a long comment from the ubiquitous Anonymous taking her to task over AB 372 which “with a little more fine tuning, will give access to over 99% of adoptees.”

Doncha love hyperbole?

It is way too long to respond to as a comment, so I’m putting it up here as a separate entry. It’s like a big circle jerk. I have no idea why I'm doing this other than to show you what we've been dealing with over the last few weeks with the CARESTAS.

Anonymous’ comments are in bold, mine not. Anything that was quoted from the original post is noted as from me.


I had some trouble with cutting and pasting and fonts, but I think it's OK now.

Enjoy!

Why do you and all the negative people look at everything as “the glass is half empty”. Is that the way you live your life. It’s sad. This bill is very good and with a little more fine tuning, will give access to over 99% of adoptees. Why do you keep whining about current language when you full well know it will be tweaked ( its only on its 3rd round). Is it because you have a dark ulterior motive and are trying to manipulate others?

http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_0351-0400/ab_372_bill_20090421_amended_asm_v97.pdf

And just how would 99% of California adoptees get “access” through the current AB 372 or its “tweaked” version? “Tweaking” suggest minor tune-ups or OCD behaviors exhibited by meth heads. AB 372 is broken and irreparable. To posit a 99% "success" rate is intellectually dishonest and practically speaking, absurd and impossible. Such a remark makes you and your fellow regurgitators look stupid. Are you channeling the Morriseys?

A third round? In most states a third round is usually the end of the line. California must be special. Our dark and ulterior motive is to defeat an ugly anti-adoptee/anti-rights bill that builds a massive state bureaucratic gateway to control the free flow of information to adoptees and abbrogate the right of association. Our dark ulterior motive is to get the state out of our lives. But then we’re talking about the People’s Republic of California.

Records are whatever birth records that the Department of Social Services has on file. Records are lost for everyone. Adoptees are not unique in that way. The vast majority of birth records are on file either in your county of birth or in common DSS files or both.

CARE has repeatedly refused to say what records they are talking about. They have waffled on whether they only want the original birth certificate, the entire adoption file, or something else. Equal access activists want the obc—like everybody else has. We do not ask for special rights or rules—unlike apparently CARE and its special rights statist cronies. The adoption file contains confidential information regarding information on finances, mental health counseling and sexual encounters that the adoptee or anyone else should not be allowed to access without consent While those documents may be interesting to some, they are not legal documents like a state-issued birth certificates. In California the adoption file and obc, as I understand it are only released by the appropriate Probate Court. The Health Department, Vital Stats or DSS has nothing to do with release.

Oregon, Alabama and New Hampshire have all implemented some form of new Open Records legislation. They have been collecting statistics on:
1) how many records they have,
2) how many adoptee requests have been made for records,
3) how many birth parents responded to the notification
4) how many birth parents failed to respond, said giving records were ok and how many said NO

You can find the latest statistics here:

http://www.americanadoptioncongress.org/pdf/or_al_nh_contact_stats.pdf

There have been just 15,191 adoptee requests which is 3.5% of the total number of adoptees in the 3 states. That is a large and statistically significant sample size. That means the data from these three states is a reasonable approximation of what can be expected in CA. If you don't understand Statistics, there is not much I can do about that. Based on how the latest CA AB372 is written, only the actual responses during the 6 month period that said "NO" would be denied access. Only 101 out of 15,000 requests came back "NO". That is about .66% which means that 100-.66 = 99.34% of the requests would have been allowed in CA under the current AB372 language and that is the intent.

In the states mentioned above, (you left out Maine), the state is NOT tracking down women to seek authorization to release the obc of their offspring. In those states the release of the obc is NOT contingent on first affirmative response from somebody whose parental rights were terminated 40 years ago. No lego needs parental consent to get bcs. In those states, sealing from the adoptee is not the default. The state does not demand consent for release. AB 372 demands that consent. If you don’t understand the difference between a CPF and a veto, then there is not much I can do about that.

(Quote from Bastardette): The egregious veto and government tracking of women says it all. Name changes, maternity homes, deaths, movement from listed homes, movement across state and county lines says it all. Permitting rape, incest, religious and "personal reasons" exemptions says it all.

Please turn your brain ON and Victim's role OFF and say something meaningful! The government TRACKS everyone! Do you really think this will change how the government tracks people? It tracks men just as much as women? The credit card companies and 100’s of private companies track people too and the government has access to their records.. If you drive, the DMV tracks you. If you work the IRS and State, SS, Medicare etc. track you. If you die you are recorded. If you own property you are tracked. Do you really think they focus on women?

While an over-reaching government may indeed track “everyone” (that in itself is questionable, but we won’t go there for now.) The government doesn’t track down women or men to get their individual consent to release the vital records of their adult offspring to those offspring. The government, with few exceptions (parole specs, for instance, or TROs with just cause) does not monitor or control who associates with whom.

AB 372 specifically tracks down first parents, supposedly promised “confidentiality” or as the adoption industry likes to say ”anonymity” in adoption with a return receipt certified letter. Now, if I lived with somebody who got one of those letters, I’d be mighty curious as to why the government was looking for my wife, mother, daughter, or friend. And what about letters those go to the wrong addresses? I can just picture that lovely domestic scene. Asmb. Ma mentioned an idea the other day about notice by publication. Let’s see, we won’t give your kid your name without your consent, but we’ll publish your name in the paper for everybody to read. Why is the State of California hiding under the skirts of mothers?

If you knew anything about politicians you would know language like “Rape, Incest etc.. are only there for political purposes. What difference does it make? You must have lots of problems to get hung up on VERY TYPICAL things or it’s a strategy by you to manipulate others. Which is it?

That simply is not true. If you knew anything about Tennessee’s semi-records access law, you’d know that. And where do “religious reasons” or the best--“personal reasons”-- fall into that political theory of yours? Why should anyone be denied their own birth certificate because something unpleasant may have happened to somebody else?

The intent of the AB372 is NOT to kick out everyone where the parent is dead or can’t be found. Be real! It will be revised as it has 3 times and fine tuned to make sure that if the government makes a "best effort" to locate the birth parent during the 6 month period, the records will be released. Even the language now requires they use the “best available address” which could be argued means whatever the government has access to. If the government uses the “best” than far less than 1% of people can be found and of course they need a death clause. Complaining about a few wording problems when the bill is the best possible given privacy laws and AD908 obligations is insincere and you know it.

Why should the government be looking for anybody? It's not the government's business.

Instead of venting like a victim, why don’t you list any concerns about specifics in a way that is sensible so it can be seen as input to the fine tuning process. A bill goes through many adjustments and POSITIVE suggestions are good. If you didn’t have an ulterior motive (which I believe you do), you would offer constructive criticism and make suggestions as to plugging problem areas. Why are you so angry? How about being genuine and authentic and just saying what you really feel? Then turn off the emotional BS and use your brain to help adoptees rather than just doing damage.

“(1) shall be sent to the BEST available address for each birth parent who is listed on the original birth certificate.”

And what government in what universe are you talking about? California? US? China? T he average person moves something like 11 times in their adult life. I’ve had 13 different addresses since 1965. Just how will “the government” find these people? Do you think the State of California is going to take the time and taxpayer money to hunt down people for a family reunion when it's firing and furloughing employees and cutting services to keep out of debtors prison? Is the State of California going to hire a battery of drones to spend their days going through Switchboard, Yahoo? Will they Google names. Or maybe the State will contract the work out to…oh, I don’t know, Troy Dunn? Catholic Charities? Confidential CI’s. Professional Searchers? Search Angels. Are they going to go through ancestry.com, order copies of the SS aps of suspected dead first parents? Death records of other states which aren’t even online? Or will they just go with the address in the “adoption file” like maternity homes and wage homes? Have you ever done an adoption search? Thought not! Ever paid for one? Thought not! Who is it that doesn't know what they are talking about?

If they can't, the records will be released because the birth parents privacy expectation and the AD908 contract obligation can't carry over after a "best effort and reasonable" attempt to locate the parent has failed. Get with it!

Speak English please.

What is wrong with you? You are so angry. Get a life and stop playing victim!!! You sound ridiculous. You can't even explain yourself. You are so angry and so deeply sunk into your victim role, you think others understand your twisted assumptions. How about explaining like an intelligent person trying to communicate.

Hey, I’m not the one who’s angry. You’re the one coming over here shaking your your spleen at a bunch of lowly dumb bastards. If you had a blog—and maybe you do—I’d not come over to your space and go into a hissy. The only thing to be angry about is bullshit deformers jumping into bed with the adoption industry. And being lectured by people who have no idea what side is up.

(Quote from Bastardette)AB 372 is a straight Mother May I bill on steroids rooted in reunion. And notice that the medical exception doesn't give a rat's ass about the veto decision of parents.

BRAIN ON - VICTIM ROLE OFF PLEASE! “Mother May” – Come on get off your victim’s soap box! The current law and doctrine put “medical necessity” above privacy. Duh!

And how many people have a medical necessity? And if so, there is no guarantee that a court will buy it. There are plenty of adoptees with life-threatening situations who are denied requests.

(Quote from Marley) This bill would take away the rights that some adoptees have now of getting their records through the courts,. How does this bill effect the 10 open counties Haven't heard a word about that. Care to explain?

No it doesn’t. It does not modify existing law unless it is specific. The medical necessity clause doesn’t change what a judge can do.

Still not an answer. And since you’re anonymous your opinion doesn’t count much. You’ve said elsewhere you don't even have a dog in this fight. Let’s hear it from lawyers and judges. How does AB 372 affect the 10 Open Counties?

Isn’t it funny how deformers call those of us who stand for equal rights and principle victims, while they’re claiming victim need? That's how bullies attempt to disempower their enemies when they're scared. Are you a Republican?

BTW, we’ve listed many positive suggestions, but the hacks in CARE don’t CARE. Cal Open for instance has talked to Anthony Pico and Asbm. Ma til’ the cows come home. AB 372 is all she and CARE can come up with? Why are the people who have actually gotten unrestricted access are passed into law the bad guys? Why are we the ones who don’t’ know what we're talking about.

We’re not the ones running around adoptees are dyin’ and making movies about elderly, and dying adoptees. We’re not the ones who said that the legislature doesn’t want to hear about rights. They want to hear about needs.

"An abomination" - Get real!

Does your boss at at Rural Community Health know you’re sending anonymous posts to blogs on your company account?


ADDENDA: I KNEW I forgot something! I suppose the State of California will tack a hefty fee on each bastard who requests their "file" (whatever that may be) to save the taxpayers their hard earned money.

VIDEO: GRANDMA IS ADOPTED

I'm working on something else right now. But for momentary relief from the California Catastrophe try out this video from ProLife Minnesota and that old baybee kollektor Pierceophile herself, Mary Ann Kuharski: Grandma is Adopted.

"I've got my daddy's eyes." Daddy? Since when do adoptees have dads?





And do check out her webpage:

We were recently forced to re-locate our Annual Culture of Love Banquet scheduled with the Radisson Roseville Hotel for May 6th, after learning that the Radisson, owned by Carlson Hotels Worldwide, offers "pay-per-view" pornography to its patrons. We also learned that Carlson Corporation is a contributor to Planned Parenthood. We were told by the Radisson that we will owe a "$3,000 cancellation fee", as a result.


BTW, this year, Kuharski will be discussing the link between porn and abortion.

Who knew?

Monday, April 27, 2009

IS THAT ALL THERE IS? CALIFORNIA AB 372 PASSES OUT OF JUDICIARY

The testimony is over, the vote is in: Just before 4 PM Pacific Time, AB 372 passed out of Assembly Judiciary Committee.

Frankly this doesn’t surprise me much. CARE has made clear that its current strategy is to “fool” certain members of the committee with its laundry list of adoptee insults and lies, and then excise them out later—even on the Floor. Sponsor Asmb. Fiona Ma, in fact, actually admitted during the hearing that she was foolin' her colleagues, though her confession was framed in the more discreet language of "we'd really like unrestricted access, but we respect the current law too much to ask for it and rock your boat." Maybe the committee is stupid after all. Maybe it wants Senate Pro Tem President Darrell Steinberg, who never met a bastard who didn't need locked up in vault, to do its dirty work. Maybe the committee doesn't want to look like a total Grinch. How CARE intends to fix things is a matter of faith. You can fool all of the people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool Mom. (Captain Penny).

The testimony was really too short to critique. Nobody brought up the idea to just exempt original birth certificates from the “privacy code” (btw, courts already are exempt—they are not “agencies.”). It would be real nice to know exactly what records CARE wants us to have, too. So far we are playing don't ask/ don't tell. Trust us! Nobody was bothered with this, either.

Attorney Joe Wood (for CalOpen) and first mother Linda Franklin were given a whopping 2 minutes each to oppose AB 372. (To be fair, CARE lobbyist Stephanie Williams and Sarah Burns for AAC/CUB got only 2 minutes, too.) Everybody else got about 20 seconds or less. I liked Wood’s point that in class action suits, there’s a 15-20% bounce rate on notices. Unfortunately, no mention was made that the rate would be much higher in adoption cases due to women's name changes and the fact that many women were sent off to maternity homes. “Best matches” are irrelevant, legally, ethically, and practically.

Laurie Dunfield-Baker, whose first mother is dead, testified that in the current draft, adoptees whose birthmothers are deceased would not be able to receive their obc since dead people can’t give or withhold permission (though I suspect you can send them mail.) Others, also, brought up this hard fact in their allotted 20 seconds.

Asmb. Ma countered she was “open” to several amendments including one that would permit adoptees of deceased birthmothers to receive their obcs. Of course, the adoptee would have to prove her or his mother is dead, and how does one do that when identity is sealed for most? Will the State of California search through the California Death Index, death records of every state, the Social Security Death Index, Railroad Retirement Board records, ancestry.com? Will they rent permanent space at the Sacramento LDS Family History Center and spend days checking out obscure records and leads--like adoptees do?

Even funnier, Ma said she was open to a provision to notice by publication. I kinda like the idea of entire classified sections of the LA Times and Sacramento Bee dedicated to tracking down shamed, desperate women hiding in closets and orange groves.

Marley Greiner: your bastard has contacted us to get his obc. We couldn’t find you where you lived in 1965 so we’re chasing you down in the newspaper. Hopefully your parents, neighbors or boss will recognize your name and contact us.

Or how about this:

If you had sex in or around August 1942 in or around the County of Sonoma, do you give your consent for some 67-year old retired English professosr whose conception and birth location approximates the location of your personal fall and shame to have a birth certificate?

Hey, didn’t they try that in Florida with the Scarlet Letter law?

Here’s a true story from the Ohio:

Several years ago an Ohio adoptee and alledged father were “matched” by the Ohio Reunion Registry operated by Ohio Vital Stats. The race of the adoptee was wrong and his date of birth and name of mother close but wrong. Nonetheless, Vital Statistics informed the adoptee not only of the match, but that his mother was alive since she was not in the Ohio Death Index. (Apparently nobody ever leaves Ohio). When the “match” was exposed as a mismatch, a professional searcher was able to identify the correct name of the mother in less than a day, and to verify that she had died breast cancer years earlier. The mother never changed her name hoping her son would find her. She died in Ohio, her death was listed in the Ohio Death Index, and her death certificate was filed at Ohio Vital Stats, the same place that mismatched father and son and claimed Mom wasn't dead! oops!

Why anybody would trust the government to do anything but release the obc is a mystery. And that’s overly trusting to boot. Just get the hell out of our lives!

Most states—even the worse--show adoptees a modicum of respect and acknowledge that equal access bills are a highly emotional and intimate issue. It's not like air pollution regs or speed limits. This is about people's lives. Listening to the hearing this afternoon, though, was kind of like listening to Is That All There Is?



Drive-by testimony must be something peculiar to California. I’ve attended hearings in several other states where witnesses can talk to theier heart's content but might sometimes l be limited to 5-10-15 minutes of oral testimony, but all witnesses are heard within an equal limit unless time runs short after several hours. Hearings in New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts I’ve testified at have gone for hours. (New Hampshire’s lasted about 8 ½ hours.) The Massachusetts hearing started with panels of 3-5 witnesses in specialized areas, then opened to the public. Of course, in those states there were things like co-sponsors and competent lobbyists and activists.

I think we all understand that the real political work goes on in smoke-filled rooms outside of the reach of the public and that many hearings are just show trials. (Look at the records access section of Ohio HB 7 last year, which had no public opposition, and was gutted0on- demand of Ohio Right to Life behind closed doors.) Cal committee rules just move the smoke-filled room on to Front Street.

But then, this is California. Today, one gets the impression that nobody in Sacramento cares about much other than Darfur, which is distant and safe. While we waited around for a quorum to arrive and a vote taken, a long convoluted discussion went on and on in the committee about Darfur, due process, Armenian Genocide, state’s rights, Constitutional supremacy, and the commerce clause of the US Constitution. Not to belittle the Darfur situation, but too bad nobody could get as heated about the documentary genocide of thousands of Californians.

Witnesses: I missed a couple of proponents, but think I got all the opponents. Names may be misspelled in some cases.

Proponents: Stephanie Williams (CARE) Sarah Burns, (AAC/CUB,) Cal Assoc. of Adoption Attorneys. Jean Strauss, Tom Martin, Cheryl Cook, CA Alliance Child Family Services, Jim Dunn, Jennylee Balantine, Karen Vedder, Bonnie Burnell, Kristina Cook, Rachel Smith, John Smith, Bruce Reeves,

Opponents: Joe Wood CalOpen) , Linda Franklin, Laurel Erichs, Jean Ulrich (CalOpen) , Laurie Dunfield-Baker, ("adopted citizen"), Burt Brosnan, Imogene Speed (adoptive mother, Kathleen Cox.

AB 372 is a mattress war for the hearts and minds of bastards everywhere. Both sides, in theory, want access, only one side wants to limit access and leave people behind for practical reasons, the other will leave no one behind. Politicians don't partiacularly understand the differfence and don't want to hear about internicene fights. This has to be fought by us and us alone. Do we want table scraps from the deformer's table, or dinner at The Ritz? This isn't 1967. I consider CARE and its cronies more dangerous than NCFA, ACLU, RTL, or anybody who seeks to keep our rights in abeyance.

That the AAC spoke in support of AB 372, though expected, takes some of the sheen off its remarkable conference this past weekend.

BASTARD NATION TESTIMONY AGAINST CALIFORNIA AB 372: LEAVE NO ONE BEHIND!

Below is Bastard Nation's testimony in against AB 372. It was submitted last week for today's haering. You can read the official legislative analysis of the bill here. (It's not very good.) Note that CARE has no certified proponents except it\self and the bill has no co-sponsors.

WRITTEN TESTIMONY IN OPPOSITION TO AB 372 ACCESS TO ORIGINAL BIRTH CERTIFICATES FOR ADULT ADOPTEES Assembly Judiciary Committee, April 28, 2008 Submitted April 21, 2009

POSITION: OPPOSE

Honorable Members of the Assembly Judiciary Committee:

Below is our submitted testimony on AB 372:

Bastard Nation: the Adoptee Rights Organization advocates for the full human and civil rights of adult adoptees. We believe people everywhere have a right to their unaltered and unfalsifed birth records. This means opening government documents pertaining to the adoptee’s historical, genetic, and legal identity, including the unaltered original birth certificate (obc) and adoption decree. Our membership includes adopted adults and first and adoptive parents. We have substantial membership in California.

BN was behind the 1998 Oregon Ballot Measure 58 which restored the right of the state’s adult adoptees to access their original birth certificates. In 2000 Bastard Nation sponsored legislation in Alabama which restored access there. In 2004 we worked in a coalition of adoptee rights advocates in New Hampshire where adoptee civil rights were restored on January 1, 2005. We are currently working in other states to restore records access. Bastard Nation leaves no one behind. We do not support legislation that restricts even one adopted person from receiving his or her own information.

Bastard Nation does not support AB 372. Although, as of the date of this submission, the bill is without conditions, except for age, Assb. Ma has issued a memo (April 15, 2009) outlining amendments she plans to introduce which would severely limit access and gut the alleged purpose of the bill. These amendments, according to her memo, include:
* An expansion forwards and backwards of the 1984 “birthparent” disclosure veto. This veto would seal all California obcs by default and would require unsealing only by individual “birthparent” consent. Such an amendment would take away the right that some California adoptees have enjoyed for decades to receive through the courts, without birthparent consent, their ob

* A state-run search system whereby state employees or contractors, at taxpayer expense, would track down individual “birthparents” at a “best match address” with a certified return receipt letter to seek consent for the release of the obc. If after 6 months the “birthparent” has not been located or does not return the state’s request, the obc will remain sealed.

* In the case of one “birthparent” consenting to release and the other one not (through default or request), the identifying information of the non-consenting parent would be redacted.

* For prospective adoptions starting January 1, 2010 an opt-out clause would permit one or both parents to deny obc access to their adult offspring for reasons of “rape.” “incest,” “religion” or undefined “personal reasons.”

These proposed amendments are egregious, insulting, and antithetical to the purported purpose of AB 372 and gut the entire bill of any meaning.

We also object to limiting access to the obc to adoptees 25 years and older. Access should be allowed at the age of majority. Anything else is the continued infantlization of adoptees as a class. The idea that one is old enough to fight for his or her country, buy a house, drink, and be married, but not capable of owning an original birth certificate is absurd.

WHY WE OPPOSE: BASTARD NATION’S POSITION ON AB 372 AND UNRESTRICTED ACCESS TO OBC ACCESS IN CALIFORNIA.
Unrestricted obc access in California is about rights not reunion. It is about the relation of adoptees to the state. It is about the absolute natural right of identity and the civil right to a true unfalsified birth certificate for all California adoptees not just a select few. The not-adopted need not justify why they want their vital records nor are they forced to ask their parents permission, appear before a judge, join a government-run registry, seek mental health counseling, or spend years getting a bill passed to get their birth record. The not-adopted have a presumed right to their birth certificates and can do with them what they please. All arguments for unrestricted access must then flow from the presumed right of all adults to unrestricted access and ownership of their true birth certificates, not just some. If adoptees are not equal legally to the not-adopted in terms of access, then the right of anyone to possess their own birth certificate is not a right but a state favor. The real question, then, is who owns your identity? You or the state?

Unfortunately, in California today, the birth and identity records of thousands of its citizen adoptees are owned and held hostage by the state. AB 372, which purports to loosen state ownership, in fact, tightens it with its massive restrictions and hoop jumping.

Unrestricted obc access in California should be inclusive and create birth record access equity between the adopted and not-adopted. Unrestricted access acknowledges and codifies a legally, morally, and ethically correct one-size-fits all standard of birth record access rights for all people born in California, not just the not adopted. Unlike AB 372, a genuine obc access bill would restore the right of ownership and access, legislatively rescinded in 1935, to all California adoptees.

Unrestricted obc access in California would abolish a nearly 75-year old state-constructed blacklist of worthy and unworthy citizens whose birth record access is based on a protectionist, paternalistic, discredited social system of adoption secrecy that died decades ago. Restrictions established legislatively in 1935 and expanded by the 1984 “birthparent” disclosure veto, grossly discriminate not only between the adopted and the not-adopted, but between vetoed and non-vetoed adoptees. For adoptees born in 1984 and beyond, (which AB 372 may expand to cover everyone) access is dependent on first parent permission, that gives people whose parental rights were terminated years ago, a special right that no other parent or adult has over another adult—the special right to block access to and ownership of a person’s vital and court records. If expanded back to cover pre-1984 adoptees, older adoptees will lose the right they now enjoy to receive their obc through the courts without “birthparent” consent.

Recognizes adoptee autonomy, rights, and responsibilities as full citizens who can be trusted to own their personal information. Adopted adults should not be denied their birth records to protect someone else’s comfort zone. With the growing demand for “proof of identity” through state and federal laws such as Real ID, it is imperative that all of us prove we are who we say we are. Adopted adults are routinely denied drivers licenses, passports, and security clearances because amended adoptive identities cannot be linked to original birth identities. AB 372 will do nothing to correct this.

Unrestricted obc access in California would not change adoption procedures. Adoption records are sealed upon finalization, not relinquishment. If the court denies an adoption petition or the petition is withdrawn, the birth record remains unsealed. If an adoption is overturned or disrupted, the birth record is unsealed. Most significantly, if a child is never adopted the birth record is never sealed. Thus, if sealing birth records was meant to hide parental identities absolutely, records would be sealed upon relinquishment, not finalization. Even in traditional closed adoptions first parent identities are often recorded on court documents given to adoptive parents without first parent consent. Similarly, legal advertisements with identifying information are often published, and courts may open adoption records for “good cause” without first parent consent. Moreover, California’s Birth Index, which includes the names of “birthmothers,” has been open and available to the public for decades. It was even sold on the Internet by the State of California and is routinely available on eBay. Though closed a few years ago, thousands of copies of the index remain available through legal sources.

Unrestricted access to obcs in California would unseal obcs only to the adopted persons to which they pertain.
Allowing adoptees access to information about their origins is NOT a violation of anyone's privacy rights. Adoptee access to their own original birth certificates is not the same as public access or disclosure to the public. It is not "outing" anyone. The records would remain sealed from the public.

Unrestricted access to obcs in California would reflect best practice adoption standards. Unrestricted obc access is a priority of every genuine adoption reform organization, national, state, and local, in the US today. The Evan. B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, The Child Welfare League of America (which sets best practice standards), The National Association of Social Workers, and The North American Council on Adoptable Children, the National Adoption Center, and Ethica: A Voice for Ethical Adoption all support unrestricted access.

CONCLUSION
Rights are for all citizens, not favors or privileges for some. US and California law does not privilege rights by race, religion, ethnicity, age, or gender. The law should not privilege rights by adoption. Bastard Nation cannot think of any other judicial procedure where records are sealed from those to whom the procedure pertains. But in California adopted adults are discriminated against daily due to their adoptive status. AB 372 not only continues the gross discrimination, but threatens to expand it. It is, in fact, the worse “adoption reform” bill Bastard Nation has seen since its 1996 inception.

A true records access bill in California would not harm anyone. It would instead restore legal equality, dignity, and fairness to adopted persons and their biological and adoptive families. Bastard Nation, therefore, cannot support AB 372 with its continued and additional harm to California’s adopted citizens.

Bastard Nation recommends that the Judiciary Committee votes DO NOT PASS.

Don’t leave anyone behind!


LISTEN TO AB 372 HEARING ONLINE


I'm back from the AAC and catching up. In the meantime...

CalOpen reminds us that we can LISTEN LIVE to the Assembly Judiciary Hearing on AB 273 from our computers.

You will need Windows Media Player, to listen.
http://www.assembly.ca.gov/defaulttext.asp

Scroll down and click on: "Assembly Audio Session and Committee Hearings".

At the top of the next window, click on: "Committee Room List". On the side of the chart marked Assembly, click on: "Committee Room 444"

CalOpen and other opposition to the bill will be there to support its defeat.

Go to CalOpen for more information. Also see BB Church's Funhouse.

ADDENDA: The time of the hearing keeps changing. 11 AM; 12 Noon, "afternoon." How appropriate! Just keep on checking. AB 372 is one of several bills being heard today.

BN's submitted testimony will be posted here and on the BN page later today. I don't want to put it up before the hearing for any CARing person to read. It's obvious what we'll say, but why let them read it ahead of time?

Sunday, April 26, 2009

DMC TONIGHT AT AAC

I won't have time to write more until I get home. Darryl did his adoption story tonight and then ended with he and Zara Phillips singing I'm Legit. Here's a picture of them afterwards signing CDs.

Friday, April 24, 2009

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAC CONFERENCE, CLEVELAND, PART 2


I've been drinking wine tonight with Bad Bastards and Sluts and don't have any time to post much . I sat out most of the day anyway, working on my presentation--or trying to. Here are a few pictures from the awards lunch and later though. You may recognize some of the names, or know them



Margie Perscheid, Third Mom and Anti-Racist blogger


BJ Lifton, Margie Persheid, Bastardatte looking awful.


Fred Greenman, AAC legal advisor and Barbara Raymond, author The Baby Thief



Mirah Riben, author The Dark Side of Adoption and The Stork Market, Karen Lynn, member, Coordinating Commititee for the Coalition for Open Adoption Records (COAR) and founding member Canadian Council of Natural Mothers; Maryanne Cohen long time activist, poet, essayist and Bastardette guest blogger.


Michael Grand, member COAR, Professor in Clinical Psychology Program at the University of Guelp; Monica Byrne, Parent Finders of Canada, Karen Lynn.

CARE's Jean Strauss was awarded the Emma Vilardi Humanitarian Award. Here she is below accepting her award flanked by Pam Hasegawa and Penny Partridge.




And here is a great nut shop across the street featuring Chief Wahoo.

DOUBLE BLESSING: JOE ESZTERHAS AND SUZANNE PERRYMAN

Again I'm just sending out a short report. No special insights.

Yesterday's afternoon keynotes were writer Joe Eszterhas and his daughter Suzanne Perryman, an absolutely socko double reading of their "memoir" (so-to-speak) of separation and reunion: Double Blessing. I've been a fan of Joe Esterhaz' since his days as a crime reporter at the Cleveland Plain Dealer and later an editor and writer at Rolling Stone. and I never dreamed I'd ever meet him. OK, I'm talking like a groupie now, I know. Forgive me Dear Reader, for I have sinned. Joe is the author of The Devil's Guide to Hollywood and Charlie Simpson's Apocolpyse (nominated for the National Book Award) and the writer of numerous screenplays including Basic Instinct, Jagged Edge and the ever notorious Show Girls. In 1968 his daughter Suzanne Marie was placed for adoption in Cleveland. 30 years later she located him with the help of Adoption Network Cleveland, co-sponsor of this year's AAC conference. Suzanne is a writer and advocate of special needs children. Her two daughters suffer from the dengenrative mitochondrial disease.

Joe and Suzanne took turns reading about their lives pre and post reunion, the support they've given each other through Joe's cancer and the illness of Suzanne's girls, their special bond as father and daughter, and their shared faith. It was an extremely moving but not sentimental presentation, even for mean ol' Bastardette. This was the first time they have appeared together and I hope it's not the last.

Photo by Bastardette

Thursday, April 23, 2009

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAC CONFERENCE, CLEVELAND, PART 1

I'm really not going to write at length about the AAC conference in Cleveland. Conferences wear me out, and I'm tired tonight, even though I haven't done anything since 5:00 PM but have a Delmonico steak dinner at Otto Moser's Cafe over on Euclid. I think it's all the people and all the sitting and talking and listening and more talking and more listening. Is this a normal way to live? It's now nearly midnight. I had 'net connection problems and just now get on line after 2 hours of fiddling around. I did, though, want to make a few short remarks about the presentations I attended.

DOROTHY ROBERTS KICKS ASS! I first ran into Prof. Roberts at the ASAIK (now the Alliance for the Study of Adoption and Culture) Conference at Pitt a couple years ago. She blew me away then and continues to do so. Roberts is the author of Shattered Bonds: the Color of Child Welfare and Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction and the Meaning of Liberty. The topic of her keynote address was Why Ending Racial Disproportionaly Will Transform Child Welfare. Prof. Roberts says some very important things about how race runs the child welfare system, how the system punishes poor women of color by forcing them to trade custody for aid, and how overall racism keeps the child welfare system from being effective by valuing punishment over services.

MEMOIR ME. Bastardette's friend Dr. Mariane Novy (r) presented, Memoirs by Adpotees, Commonalities and Contrasts, discussing the work of BJ Lifton (who is here, btw), Sarah Saffian, AM Homes, Catherine McKinley, Jane Jeong Trenka, Emily Hipchen, and Jean Strauss (also here). I found particularly interesting the contrast Novy made between fictional adoptee narratives with their constructed memories and memoirs which jibe with the actually experience of adoptees. The Q&A period included Penny Partridge talking about her new book The People They Brought Me: Poems in the Adoption Community; Jean Strauss discussing the art of writing; and Patrick McMahon with the news that his own memoir is nearly finished. Yay! Dr. Novy also informed us that the Call for Papers for the next ASAC conference is out. The topic of the April 29-May 2, 2010 conference at MIT is "Adoption: Secret Histories, Public Policies. As time goes on I'll be writing more about this. It looks really good. Marianne is another native Buckeye Bastard.

SIBLING CONNECTIONS: Ohio's own Lisa Dixon, Grace Hilliard, and Amanda Dunlap facilitated a workshop on how the maintenance of contact between adoptees and their siblings builds trust and how denial of contact works against an adoptee's ability to "attach" to adoptive parents. (l, Grace and Lisa,), Lisa is a founding member of Foster Care Alumni of America and founded the Ohio Chapter. She is a national speaker and advocate for children in fostercare. I've met Lisa a couple times and she is ...well...you have to meet her to understand. Grace gave the amazing testimony here in Ohio in support of HB 7 which I wrote about last year, who made me look at evil of sealed records in a whole other way. (As if it couldn't already by evil enough.) Amanda is a social work major at Ohio State University and the Youth Outreach Coordinator for the Ohio Chapter of the Foster Care Alumni of America. FCA makes "postcards" and some of them were included in the presentation. This one sums up adoption for so many people (I wrote this is a hurry so I may have a couple works wrong, but I think it's really important:

The said I had Attention Disorder
Really, I had a life disorder
I attached accordingly

All the presentations, particulary 1 and 3 are a reminder of how sealed records is just a small part of the over-arching secrecy and corruption that hallmarks adoption and so-called child welfare.

I'm staying holed up in my room most of tomorrow to work on my presentation which STILL isn't done (as if 19 pages isn't enough!) I hauled up about 20 pounds of files to work on while here. In case Mrs. M is reading this, my topic is: Baby Dumping: An Ohio "Safe Haven" Case Study.

(photos by Bastardette)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

OFF TO THE CLEVELAND THE AAC

I'm packing my things
I'll soon be leaving
I'm going to Polka Town

Listen Group!

Stay Sick
Turn Blue
Doro-r-thy
Oxnard
Purple Knif
AAC


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

SOMETIMES WORDS....


...aren't necessary.

This is taken from CARE's action alert for SB 372. (emphasis mine).

AB 372 will give hundreds of thousands of adult citizens adopted in California (who currently have no hope of ever having their own original birth record) an opportunity to know their original identity. Many of these citizens will die out of the system in the coming years. To oppose this legislation is to literally oppose their ability to have this record at any time in the foreseeable future. The opposition to this legislation is coming from many people who have no skin in the game. Adoptees from other states, birthparents from other states, adoptees who already have their records, are not the ones who should be influencing this decision.

Does this mean CARE is ready to boot its leaders and out-of-state advisory committee members?

CALIFORNIA: AB 372 HEARING DATE CHANGED

This just in from CalOpen:

Leg Counsel announced by e-mail at 4:29 this morning that the hearing date has been moved forward to Monday the 27th.

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009
Hearing Date Moved forward to Monday, April 27th.
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/09-10/bill/asm/ab_0351-0400/ab_372_bill_20090420_status.html

I telephoned the Judiciary Committee and learned:

- Confirmed Hearing date of Monday, April 27th
- Commencement of hearing upon adjournment of floor session.
(Time to be announced on Thursday the 23rd, at floor session, probably noon)
- Confirmed TODAY's 5 PM deadline for submission of letters into the official analysis still holds, regardless of the premature hearing date.

ACTION ALERT - DEFEAT CALIFORNIA AB 372

We are running on a very tight schedule here, so I'm posting CalOpen's AB 372 Action Alert here instead of writing up a separate one for BN. Bastard Nation is submitting it's testimony later today.

NOTE: As of this posting, the official Ma amendments are not available.

Help us defeat this abomination!



* * * CALIFORNIA OPEN ACTION ALERT * * *
PLEASE DISTRIBUTE FREELY

Issued April 20, 2009

URGE THE CALIFORNIA STATE LEGISLATURE
ASSEMBLY JUDICIARY COMMITTEE
TO VOTE NO ON AB 372

DEADLINE FOR YOUR LETTER TO BECOME A PART OF THE RECORD: 5 PM PST TUESDAY, APRIL 21st, 2009
(Even if you miss the deadline, please continue to send your letters and e-mails.)

On Tuesday, April 28th, 2009 AB 372 will come before the California State Legislature's Assembly Judiciary Committee. Assembly Bill 372 would require State Notification to birthparents of an adoptee's request for their record and the birthparent's Consent to Disclosure and Release of the Original Birth Certificate to the adoptee. Until the amendments are viewed, it is not known who would fund the notification. Perhaps that would be the responsibility of the adoptee making request.

WE MUST ACT NOW TO DEFEAT AB 372 AND LEAVE CLEAR THE PATH FOR A RIGHTS DRIVEN OPEN RECORDS BILL. DO NOT ALLOW A MISGUIDED ATTEMPT TO WORK WITHIN AND EXPAND AN EXISTING DISCLOSURE VETO, UNDER THE GUISE OF "PRIVACY RIGHTS", TO ESTABLISH FURTHER PRECEDENT IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA! NO MORE BAD LAW ON THE BOOKS!

VIEW UPCOMING AMENDMENTS TO AB 372: http://www.calopen.org/MaMemoRE_AB372.pdf

FAX, PHONE and E-MAIL the Assembly Judiciary Committee to vote NO on AB 372.
A SAMPLE LETTER on how to direct your comments to the Committee can be found here:
http://www.calopen.org/lobby.shtml

We urge all California residents to ATTEND THE HEARING.
http://www.calopen.org/attend.shtml

You can watch and listen LIVE to the hearing via the internet:
Tuesday, April 28th, 2009
Room Number 4202
8:00 AM (PST)
http://www.assembly.ca.gov/committee_hearings/defaulttext.asp
(Click on Committee Room List)

PLEASE PHONE, FAX AND E-MAIL the members of the Assembly Judiciary Committee:
http://www.calopen.org/asmjudy.shtml

RAPID E-MAIL CUT-N-PASTE
Assemblymember.Feuer@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.tran@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Brownley@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Evans@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.jones@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Knight@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Krekorian@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Lieu@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Monning@assembly.ca.gov;
Assemblymember.Nielsen@assembly.ca.gov;
info@calopen.org

YOU LETTERS AND PHONE CALLS DO MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

California Open and Coalition Partners thank you for your activism!
www.calopen.org

Sunday, April 19, 2009

"SOMETHING'S HAPPENING TO CAUSE ESTHER TO FEEL THIS WAY"

Just give me my records now, damn it! I don't want to wait until I'm 25, I don't want some California bureaucrat tracking down my "birthmother." And I sure don't need CARE to speak for me.

Esther's not happy about AB 1372 and she aims to do something about it.



Thursday, April 16, 2009

CARE'S LATEST GAFF: "WHEN I USE A WORD...IT MEANS JUST WHAT I CHOOSE IT TO MEAN...."

BE SURE TO TAKE THE TWO AB 372 POLLS AT THE RIGHT!


When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, `it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less.'


`The question is,' said Alice, `whether you can make words mean so many different things.'


`The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, `which is to be master -- that's all.

Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass

As many of us suspected, CARE continues to support AB 372. In CARE NuSpeak, gutting rights "language" now means restoring rights later.


Earlier today CARE's "volunteer" Executive Director, professional lobbyist Stephanie Williams wrote to BB Church about the current status of AB 372 and its anti-adoptee language. Williams was responding to an email from BB asking if CARE would continue to support the bill now that their sponsor, Asmb. Fiona Ma, has issued a memo with a list of amendments to gut it. (see 2 previous entries here). Since Williams sent a copy of her reply to Jean Strauss and Strauss forwarded the post to CUB president Margy McMorrow with the message to feel free to pass it along, (which Margy did on the CUB list) this email is no longer a private email between BB and Williams, so I am posting it and Strauss' permission:

From Jean Strauss:-

Dear Everyone,

Stephanie just co-copied me an email she sent to Ron Morgan, explaining the current situation and illuminating some of the issues at hand. Please feel free to pass this on to anyone who does not understand that this is beginning of the legislation process, not the end. This may well be the only shot we have at incremental change in the foreseeable future. To that end, educating people about the process has become as important as educating people about the need for adoption reform...

Sincerely,

Jean Strauss



Letter to BB Church from Stephanie Williams:

Subject: AB 372 - Process Response
From: stephanie@ca-care.org
Date: Thu, April 16, 2009 9:53 am
To: jean@ca-care.org
cc: "Bonnie Burnell"

Ron

You saw a memo not bill language. I would think you better than anyone would know how legislation is developed. Like sausage! This is not language going into law, it is the first of likely 8 hearings/floor votes. This is the beginning of the dialogue that will take us through August 2010. We have a committee consultant who is treating this issue as hostile - as did you in 2001.

CA Bar association is opposed, CA Adoption Agency Association is opposed, ACLU is opposed. Department of Public Health is opposed as is their sister agency CA Department of Social Services (which means the Governor will veto). The hearing is set for April 28th, the very last policy committee hearing for this year - which means all or nothing to move forward. The effort in 2001 punted and nothing has happened since. Why don't you wait and let things progress before you jump to conclusions? Everyone is looking for the same outcome...lets see what we can get. Grandstanding does not open records.

Release of data on individuals under the 1977 privacy codes carries with it civil liability for the state agency that we need to figure out how to mitigate. We still don't have the codes that are being amended so we can't respond. Nor an analysis to testify against. Things will be much friendlier in appropriations and on the floor where the committee consultant is removed from the process and we can begin lobbying reasonable people who will attempt striking a balance.

Just so you know, the disclosure veto is less troubling than Section 1798.24q which prohibits a state to release identifying information. We need to deal with this problem first, and we can once we see the analysis and committee proposed language....not CARE language.
Even if this bill is eventually dropped, going through the preliminary process of a hearing in both the Senate and Assembly will give us the legal information we need to develop a strategy that addresses the facts brought forward by the two consultants. Without this information to respond to, we don't have the ability to open records ever...that is unacceptable to CARE.

Stephanie Williams
Volunteer

CARE & Co must think the rest of us are really stupid. Why do they keep issuing statements and drafts and whatnot and then say, "oh, that's not what we really mean." For Pete's sake, just say what you really mean and shut up! Honestly, I've never seen a legislative campaign about anything as muddled and confused and disingenuous as this. Read what I've written about CARE and its sideshow over the last few months if you don't believe me.

Here is the latest CARE snake oil. Williams wrote of Ma's proposed amendments:

This is not language going into law, it is the first of likely 8 hearings/floor votes. This is the beginning of the dialogue that will take us through August 2010.

At no point did BB or I say that this language was going to be in the "law." There hasn't even been a hearing with testimony yet. But unlike the grand poobahs of CARE with their magic decoder rings, we have only Asmb. Ma's own words to go by, and they don't look good. Asmb. Ma stated clearly in the opening of her memo that she would offer restrictive amendments and then listed a summary of each:

In order to keep the bill moving and do as much as possible to provide greater openness, I have decided to draft the following amendments

At the close of the memo, she states:

The Assembly Judiciary Committee has noted that this bill will be heard on April 28, 2009. These amendment do not guarantee approval in committee, but provide AB 372 with a better chance to succeed.

What else could that possibly mean other than what Asmb. Ma says? Do the rest of us have so hire the Amazing Dunninger to figure it out?

But, wait.! CARE has an answer. This "strategy" is a way to get the bill out of the Judiciary Committee.

Williams goes on about the need to pass the bill out now, and then hints that it can be amended back later in a plethora of other committee hearings, or as CARE has claimed elsewhere, on the Floor. Yeah, right! Especially when (so far) the California Bar, California Adoption Agency Association, California ACLU (note: I thought they were in the bag!), California Dept. of Public Health, and the California Dept. of Social Services oppose, which translated means even if AB 372 were passed, the governator would veto it. For some reason Williams fails to include as opposition adoptee rights organizations, unorganized groups (such as AAAFC ), and unaffiliated bastards and their families that oppose anything less than unrestricted access and are on record as opposing AB 372 if it goes bad. These are the same people CARE threw under its high speed train when it opened its campaign. Oh, that's right. We're the meaningless dried-up, leave-no-one-behind grassroots who have actually gotten successful bills passed, while the "professional" CARE astroturf insurgency, that can't put an honest sentence together, admits up front that it will compromise rights for all for favors for some.

Finally, Williams lists legal concerns CARE has about California privacy codes and liability. These are very legitimate and dangerous problems that absolutely need to be neutralized. But why weren't they addressed before this campaign started? When the tough questions come, CARE should be able to pull the answers out of its back pocket now and say "here's the answer" --not a year from now when they might be better organized and actually know what they're talking about. But that takes time and patience, something CARE is short on. The old slapdash "adoptees are dyin' "excuse. In its rush to get something introduced now, they left a lot of work behind, along with the bodies of adopted folks and their families who were eager to jump into the fray and ended up kicked in the head by their "friends" before the fight even began. Bastards aren't lab rats. As socially engineered adoptees, we know a bad experiment when we see it. AB 372 is junk science and CARE its Dr. Frankenstein. Go home and read the Periodic Table of Elements. Learn to make a Bonko or static electricity or something, and then come back to talk.

Smart activists and lobbyists don't just mosey into the statehouse and get a bill introduced, much less passed without first building, building, building. They develop strategies and tactics They network. They schmooze. They go over scenarios. They raise funds. They build infrastructure, support, and trust amongst constituents. They don't make a move until they've got traction. Stephanie Williams is certainly smart and savvy, so why is CARE behaving badly? Any trustworthy group no matter its genesis, with a clear mission and a guarantee of a rights-based, no compromise, leave-no-one-behind fight will get overwhelming support and assistance from bastards and their families. We already know that no-compromise fights can be won. Today there is no reason to work for anything less.

History shows us that "baby steps" are giant steps backwards. Incremental legislation has never been revisited successfully and won't be. Deformers have created their own barriers to genuine rights, with their legitimization of the enemy's arguments and language, just as CARE is doing today. Even their "slogan" admits it: "California's effort to open 'original records of birth' for adult adoptees while acknowledging state privacy laws." (laws which they have yet to actually research and understand.) Why would any self-respecting bastard/adoptee activist roll over for the enemy and accept less than full rights today?

I have no idea why CARE has a whiffle-waffled since it's inception other than a lack of guts. This week's Kabuki performance put them in the Bastard Hall of Shame. CARE willingly sat on the fence, and then fell off. There is no way it can be put back together again.

BONUS:

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

BASTARDETTE POLL: WILL CARE PULL AB 372?

Today California Asmb. Fiona Ma announced amendments she proposes to AB 372, the alleged records access bill pushed by the alleged adoptee rights group California Adoption Reform Effort.

According to Asmb. Ma's memo, these are the changes she plans to offer. Note that these amendments include a blanket default disclosure veto plus a mandatory state-run "birthmother" track-down system.

NuAB 372 will:

-Amend the Health and Safety Code section 102705 to require the courts to release the original birth certificate contingent upon the finding of a serious medical condition requiring familiar information.

-Starting Jan 1, 2010 and going backward, the state shall open the original unamended birth certificate in an “Informational Only Copy” form to an adult adoptee age 25 or older if all of the following conditions are met:

1 -A certified, return receipt letter is sent to the best-match address of the biological parent notifying them of the change in law and allowing them to keep their record confidential by signing an enclosed form and returning to the Department of Health.

2 -A period of six-months from the time of the biological mother receiving notice is given for them to respond with the opt-out notice. -Should the Department not receive a return receipt, the record shall remain confidential/sealed (per status quo).

-If both biological parents are listed on the certificate and one, but not both choose to remain confidential, the certificate shall released with the name of the bio parent who wishes to remain confidential redacted.

-Prospectively, starting Jan 1, 2010, all adoptions completed shall have notification to the biological parents that the child who is being adopted shall have unrestricted access to their original un-amended birth certificate in the form of an “Information Only Copy” upon their 25th birthday. This notification shall require signature from both biological parents that they understand this and agree to the provisions stated, so long as both are listed on the birth certificate.

-This notification shall include an opt-out form, allowing either of the biological parents to keep the birth certificate confidential and sealed and shall state: For reasons including but not limited to rape, incest, religious or personal reasons, I decline to allow the record of birth to be released -If both biological parents are listed on the certificate and one, but not both choose to remain confidential, the certificate shall released with the name of the bio parent who wishes to remain confidential redacted.


Now there could be a number of reasons Asmb Ma added these clunkers to a "clean" bill (which everybody knew wasn't really clean). She actually believes that the State of California needs protected from adoptees. She believes compromising the purpose of the bill right out of existence is the only way to get it passed. Or maybe she's just wants out from under it and has decided to nuke it with language.

So, Bastardette has set up a little poll here. Actually 2 polls. we want to know what YOU think.

Why is Asmb. Ma offering insulting compromises to California AB 372?

Will CARE pull their own bill: California AB 372?

You have until midnight, April 28, 2009 to vote. The second poll will stop earlier if CARE pulls the bill.

The polls are at the top right.

Happy voting!