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SPONSOR: |
Swisstack |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
736/aHCPAC/aHJC |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Foreign Adoption Provisions |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
Maloy |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
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|
|
NFI |
|
(See Narrative) |
Recurring |
General
Fund |
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
See
Narrative |
Recurring
|
General
Fund |
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Duplicates SB 397/SPACS
Responses Received From
Children Youth and Families Department
Office of the Attorney General
Administrative Offices of the Courts
Commission on Status of Women
Office of Indian
Affairs.
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary
Committee has amended House Bill 736 to make a stylistic / grammatical
change. The amendment is not
substantive.
Synopsis of HCPAC Amendment
The House Consumer and
Public Affairs Committee amended House Bill 736 to include the express
authority to establish rules for the assessment of fees in the department’s
rule making authority for the administration of the Adoption Act.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
House Bill 736 amends
The bill sets forth
the following with regard to international adoptions:
·
Identifying a child for adoption and
arranging the adoption;
·
Securing termination of parental rights
to a child or consent to adoption of the child;
·
Performing background study on a child
and reporting on the study;
·
Performing a home study;
·
Making determination regarding the best
interest of the child;
·
Performing post-placement monitoring; and
·
When there is a disruption before an
adoption is finalized, assuming custody of the child, providing or facilitating
the provision of care for the child pending alternative placement.
Parties
to this convention have come together to institute processes and protections to
prevent the abduction, trafficking, and abuse of children in their intercountry
adoptions.
CYFD asserts the
following:
1. This bill makes the necessary changes to the Act to
bring it into compliance with federal statutes and regulations governing
international adoptions. According to CYFD, the bill makes the most critical
change needed. This bill designates the
department as the accrediting entity for agencies handling international adoptions.
2. The bill also provides for the collection of fees to
support the state’s obligations, which is not provided under
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HB 736 does not
contain an appropriation and will not have a direct impact on the state. However, administration of the requirements
of this bill will result in an increased expenditure of CYFD FTE and budget
resources, as well as the courts’ FTE and budget resources.
HB 736 will also
result in an increase in revenue to the general fund because the fees to be collected
for such services as accrediting an agency, approving a person in matters
relating to convention adoptions.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE
ISSUES
CYFD also asserts the
following:
1. CYFD is the obvious agency to handle this process because it oversees private adoption agencies.
2. If no state agency is authorized to do the accreditation when the federal regulations become effective this year, the United States Secretary of State would have to enter into an agreement with a private entity to do international adoptions. This would be much more costly to the agencies seeking certification and would leave those agencies without needed state supervision.
SJM/njw:yr