BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  AB 2488
          Author:   Leno (D)
          Amended:  8/14/06 in Senate
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE  :  5-0, 6/13/06
          AYES:  Dunn, Morrow, Escutia, Harman, Kuehl
           
          SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  Senate Rule 28.8

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  76-0, 5/11/06 (Consent) - See last page  
            for vote


           SUBJECT  :    Adoption:  sibling contact

           SOURCE  :     Childrens Law Center of Los Angeles


           DIGEST  :    This bill lowers the age of consent to  
          disclosure of contact information between adoptees and  
          their siblings from 21 to 18.  For those children under 18,  
          this bill allows them to consent to disclosure of their  
          information provided that their adoptive parent, legal  
          parent or guardian consents.  Additionally, this bill  
          authorizes a court to appoint a confidential intermediary  
          to obtain the consent of an adoptee or their sibling who  
          has not already consented to disclosure.    

           Senate Floor Amendments  of 8/14/06 clarify responsibility  
          of licensed adoption agencies.

                                                           CONTINUED





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           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law provides that adoption records  
          are confidential and shall not be disclosed by the  
          Department of Social Services (DSS) or an adoption agency  
          unless otherwise authorized by law.  

          Existing law requires DSS or an adoption agency to release  
          the names and addresses of siblings to one another if both  
          are 21 years of age and have filed a written request for  
          contact and a waiver of their disclosure rights.  DSS or an  
          adoption agency may not solicit the execution of a waiver  
          by siblings who have not already done so.
           
          This bill lowers the age of consent to waiver from 21 to  
          18.  This bill additionally allows an adoptee or sibling of  
          adoptee under the age of 18 to file a written waiver of  
          confidentiality for the release of his/her name, address,  
          and phone number provided that their adoptive or legal  
          parent or guardian consents.  The dependency court may  
          provide that consent for siblings under their jurisdiction  
          where when no legal parent or guardian is available to  
          provide consent.

          This bill allows a court to appoint a confidential  
          intermediary to attempt to obtain the consent of the  
          adoptee, sibling, or adoptive birth parent required to make  
          the disclosure, provided that contact would not be  
          detrimental to the adoptee or sibling with whom contact is  
          sought.  If consent is sought from an individual under age  
          18, the confidential intermediary must seek the consent of  
          the child's legal parent or the dependency court, when no  
          legal parent exists, prior to contacting the child.  If the  
          sibling being sough is the adoptee, the intermediary shall  
          be the department or licensed adoption agency that provided  
          adoption services.  If the sibling being sought was  
          formerly under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, but  
          is not an adoptee, the intermediary shall be the  
          department, the county child welfare agency that provided  
          services to the dependent child, or the licensed adoption  
          agency that provided adoption services to the sibling  
          seeking contact.

          This bill requires the confidential intermediary to be  
          either the department or adoption agency that conducted the  
          adoptee's adoption, unless that licensed adoption agency is  







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          unable to serve as the intermediary due to economic  
          hardship, in which case the agency shall provide all  
          records relating to the adoptee or sibling to the court and  
          the court shall appoint an alternate confidential  
          intermediary.  This bill requires that intermediary to make  
          all reasonable efforts to locate and obtain the consent of  
          the adoptee, sibling, or adoptive birth parent.  

          Existing law allows DSS to adopt regulations to require a  
          biological sibling, who remained in the custody and control  
          of his/her birth parents until age 18, to obtain the  
          consent of the shared birth parents prior to the release of  
          his/her contact information.  That requirement appears in  
          Part (F) of DSS' Form AD-904A (Waiver of Rights to  
          Confidentiality for Siblings).  [Section  9205(d) of the  
          Family Code, 22 CCR 35063 (a)(4)]

          This bill deletes that provision.

          Existing law allowing release to siblings applies to  
          adoptees and their biological siblings.

          This bill defines sibling to include half-siblings and  
          step-siblings.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  Yes

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  8/14/06)

          Children's Law Center of Los Angeles (source)
          American Federation of State, County and Municipal  
          Employees
          California Alliance of Child and Family Services
          California Association of Adoption Agencies
          California Coalition for Youth
          Children's Defense Fund, California
          City and County of San Francisco
          County Welfare Directors Association of California
          Inter-Agency Council on Child Abuse and Neglect
          Junior Leagues of California State Public Affairs Committee
          Los Angeles Affiliate of the National Association of  
          Counsel for Children
          National Association of Social Workers, California Chapter 







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          National Center on Youth Law


           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    According to the author,  
          "California law should be amended to remove overly  
          restrictive barriers and make it easier for siblings to  
          find each other after one or more of them have been adopted  
          through the foster care system."  Statistics provided by  
          the author report that over two-thirds of the California  
          children in foster care "had at least one sibling in  
          out-of-home care.  Of these youth, an astounding 58% were  
          separated from one or more of their sisters or brothers."

          While the Legislature has previously supported  
          post-adoptive sibling contact, the author states that  
          "current law makes it difficult, and in some cases  
          impossible, for siblings to find each other when one or  
          more of them has been adopted."  Accordingly, this bill  
          will facilitate sibling contact by lowering the age of  
          consent from 21 to 18, allow the release of contact  
          information for a sibling under age 18, with their legal  
          parent or guardian's consent, and allow an adoptee or  
          sibling for whom no waiver is on file to petition the court  
          to appoint a confidential intermediary to obtain that  
          waiver.


           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  : 
          AYES:  Aghazarian, Arambula, Baca, Bass, Berg, Bermudez,  
            Blakeslee, Bogh, Calderon, Canciamilla, Chan, Chavez,  
            Chu, Cogdill, Cohn, Coto, Daucher, De La Torre, DeVore,  
            Dymally, Emmerson, Evans, Frommer, Garcia, Goldberg,  
            Hancock, Harman, Haynes, Jerome Horton, Shirley Horton,  
            Houston, Huff, Jones, Karnette, Keene, Klehs, La Malfa,  
            La Suer, Laird, Leno, Levine, Lieber, Lieu, Liu,  
            Matthews, Maze, McCarthy, Montanez, Mountjoy, Mullin,  
            Nakanishi, Nation, Nava, Negrete McLeod, Niello, Oropeza,  
            Parra, Pavley, Plescia, Richman, Ridley-Thomas, Sharon  
            Runner, Ruskin, Salinas, Spitzer, Strickland, Torrico,  
            Tran, Umberg, Vargas, Villines, Walters, Wolk, Wyland,  
            Yee, Nunez
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Benoit, Koretz, Leslie, Saldana









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          RJG:mel  8/14/06   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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