C.G. asks from Austin, TX on July 19, 2009
Fostering to Adopt
Hi to all you wonderful moms, my husband & I are very interested in fostering to adopt and wondering if any of you have any experiences you would share with us. We have one small child , he is our biological child, we want to expand our little family and unable to have more children.
We went to a local adoption agency here in Austin to talk to someone, she was very helpful in explaining the process to us, but I wanted to hopefully get feedback from anyone who has actually gone through this and how it turned out. Please let us know if you have any input on this. Thanks!!!
8 moms found this helpful
So What Happened?™
Thank You soooo much to all who replied, and I may be personal messaging a couple of you ladies to ask more questions. :))) Hope thats ok.
We're anticipating a long and probably not so pleasant process, with all the paperwork and whatnot, but in the long run having it be worth it. It just makes sense to me, we desire to expand our family and there are children who need families, hopefully its a win-win.
We are wanting to foster to adopt a child ( entertaining sibling groups ) under the age of 6 yr.old, our son loves the idea!!! He understands that if all this works out, we will have children who come to live with us for awhile, and then they may have to leave so they can be with their families again and then we will eventually have one or two that will become his brother or sister and live with us forever.( at least that is our hope ) We're in this together, and he has such a giving spirt-- he wants all the neighborhood kids to come live with us!!! lol
Thanks again moms and your input.
**** Thanks to all you ladies who have recently replied, your stories have touched my heart. Your experiences have given us hope. Thanks so much again !!!!
Featured Answers
D.A. answers from San Antonio on July 20, 2009
Go for it. My husband and I have adopted six children from the system, and they are all great kids. After adopting do join an adoption support group as little things will crop up that non-adoptive families don't go thru and it will help tremendously.
Blessings,
D.
4 moms found this helpful
L.H. answers from Columbus on August 06, 2009
Camile
I know that you probably got all of the responses that you need, but I still felt compelled to respond to you. I am sitting here cuddling my adopted daughter. I completed an international adoption 3 years ago. International adoptions require double the paperwork and run around. Having said that, this was the most rewarding run around I have experienced or could imagine. Also, I cannot imagine loving a person more than I love my daughter. Hang in there with the paperwork. The reward is unmatched!
3 moms found this helpful
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M.S. answers from San Antonio on July 20, 2009
We have adopted all four of our children: private, international and 2 from foster care. I will say that, out of international and foster, foster is faster and less expensive (free, in fact!)
Here's the process of foster to adopt from the States side:
Removal of child (child is placed in an emergency shelter or home.)
Child is then placed in the first (of usually several) foster homes
While the child is waiting, the State is working with the parents (training classes, drug rehab, etc.) in order to try to achieve "reunification" (placing child back with parents)
This process can take up to 2 years before the parental rights are legally terminated by the State.
If they see that reunification with the parents will not work, they are seeking BIOLOGICAL FAMILY members who would be willing to take custody of the child/children. They do home studies/interviews to make sure they are qualified.
In many cases, the family members have issues that do not make it a safe place to put the children. (Same issues as parents or possibly others ones that are just as bad.)
If no biological family member is suitable, and parental rights have been terminated, then the child is available for adoption.
Once available for adoption, the foster family they are living with (IF THEY ARE FOSTER TO ADOPT CERTIFIED) then have the first choice of adoption.
If they chose NOT to adopt, then the child/children wait while a selection process is determined from the families who have applied and gone through the training classes. Potential parents are contacted when they feel a match has been made. You will then be able to read the child's case history and determine if you want to have this child placed with you or not.
In the state of Texas, the child has to live with you for 6 months before the adoption can be consumated in front of a judge. If the child is older, he/she has the right to say "yes" or "no" to being adopted... although it rarely happens for an older child to say "no."
Adoption fees are paid by the State if you use the lawyers that they have retained, or you can be reimbursed up to $1,500 (I believe it is) if you choose to use your own lawyer. (We used two they had retained and they were WONDERFUL!) Also, if your child meets 3 of the certain criteria: sibling group, minority status, over the age of 3, (there's more...)parents receive monthly child support until they turn 18 years old, their college is paid for and they have Medicaid until their 18. (We were shocked to discover this, but it truly was a blessing to us.)
When you do this, be certain that you are certified FOSTER TO ADOPT. You will recieve child support payments for the entire 6 months that the child is living with you prior to the adoption. Other wise, your on your own. They usually come to you with NOTHING! I literally mean NOTHING. Ratty shoes, clothes that are too small/too big, etc. What they do have will probably be brought to you in a trash bag. If their lucky, they have a suit case or duffle bag.
If a child is not adopted by the age of 18, or by the time they graduate high school, they are released from the care of the State and are on their own.
Currently, there are 140,000 children in the foster care system (entire USA) who are eligible and waiting to be adopted. In our region, there are literally HUNDREDS of children who are waiting.
Our sons that we adopted from foster care are biological 1/2 brothers and came home to us at ages 3 and 11 years old. Our situation was unique! God told us to adopt these two boys and we went in "child specific." This means they were already available for adoption and waiting. We did not foster any other children.
It has been a difficult path, but one I would gladly do over again. These children come to you hurt and scared and, not matter how young they are, they will still have some trauma that they may not even be able to identify as to WHY they have it. Our oldest son has gone from D's and F's in school to A/B honor roll! He will be the starting quarter back for our football team this coming year and has made HUGE strides.
I cannot recommend this ENOUGH. These babies (of all ages) deserve to be loved and taken care of. If we don't intervene now to help and love them, their fates usually aren't good and society often pays for not getting involved and making a difference.
A great book to read is Adopting the Hurt Child. It will really give you insight into the lives of these children and the common behaviors that you might encounter depending on what the child has experienced.
Here is the website that will give you more information and will allow you to see just a FEW of the children available for adoption.
http://www.dfps.state.tx.us/adoption_and_foster_care/
Please give me a call if you have any questions or concerns! I hope this was helpful and not too overwhelming...
Blessings in Christ,
M.
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6 moms found this helpful
T.M. answers from Orlando on August 06, 2009
I wanted to interject a bit into this thread. My husband is a juvenile dependency attorney who works exclusively with kids and families in the foster care system.
Entering the foster care system with the intention of adopting is somewhat misleading. When children are initially taken from their parents, they are not up for adoption and the goal of the state is to reunify them with their biological parents. By law, the biological parents must be given many chances to attend parenting classes and get other help so their kids can be returned to them and released from the foster care system. In most circumstances, any child you foster will be in the middle of a case plan designed to reunify them with their parents and even if you, as a foster parent, think you can provide a better home, it doesn't matter. It's not about a judge giving the child to the best home, if the bio parents can create an appropriate home they always come first.
There are children in the foster system who's parents have had their rights terminated, but they are few and far between and often older.
You can adopt children through the state that desperately need homes and I encourage you to do so. But if you are entering into foster care with the goal of adoption, you are doing the entire system a disservice. Foster parents are supposed to be people who can care for a child temporarily, and they should work with the system to help get the child back to their bio parents...not try to hang onto the child so they can be adopted.
You can search for children in the Florida system that are ready to be adopted here:
http://www.dcf.state.fl.us/adoption/search/indexnew.asp
Please reconsider fostering if your sole goal is adoption...it's not fair to the families that are trying to put their lives back together. You would just become one more obstacle in an already difficult situation.
5 moms found this helpful
K.R. answers from Denver on August 06, 2009
I didn/t see this when it originally came out, but I wanted to respond, since I too am a adoptive/bio mom.
Following the premature birth and passing of our first child we did not get pregnant again like we had planned. We had always thought we would adopt and jumped into the process. Colorado is different, but I believe the foster to adopt system is different from the foster care system. One is kids that are pulled from their homes and in our case we became foster parents, in order to bring a baby home from the hospital whose birth parents still had to terminate their parental rights.
Our only request was that we didn't want to start out with any known problems and we also wanted a newborn. Our case worker prepared us that when you state that you will take the first available, that includes all races. We were very motivated and completed everthing they gave us in record time and were soon bringing home our son. Fourteen months later I gave birth to our daughter. Incidentally, I fretted during my pregnancy that I would not feel as connected or love her like I did our son..as all a parents know, so not a problem.
When our daughter was a year old we went to adopt again and soon were introducing our entire family to our new son. We knew the risks in taking children that whose parents rights had yet to be terminated, but for us, we watned them in our home as early as possible. Unfortunately, when our so was four and a half months old, we got a call on vacation that his birthmother was reclaiming him. Devastation does not even begin to cover how we felt. Not only did we have our personal heartache, it was going to impact our other two children who were old enough to attach, but not seemingly too young to understand that their baby brother would be leaving our family. We knew that we could fight the process and possibly prolong his return but felt like at four and a half months that the impact on him would be minimal but if we drug it out in hopes of changing their minds, or causing a battle that he could be two and well aware of leaving us. God is big and we got through the most difficult times of my life so far.
Heartbroken we decided to try to get pregnant again. Three weeks after the loss of our son, our agency called us to tell us that a baby had been born and left at the hospital, but the birth parents had signed all the paperwork on the way out. We took her home and she has been this incredible blessing who is a gift to everyone she meets. When our daughter was two weeks old I found out that I was pregnant with our fourth and our joy was complete.
Jump forward..my kids are now 13, 12, 10 and soon to be 10. They know our family story. They know that they are all loved and that their lives have been a huge gift to their parents and one another. We have worked through times of being sad over the loss of birth parents and the joy of seeing family and friends add to their lives through adoption as well. The racial issuse have always been talked about openly and bluntly.
Sorry so long, but I have to end with is that one of my greatest sense of peace comes from hearing them speak of having their own families someday and discussing how many children they would like to have and how many they would like to adopt and what cultures those babies may come from.
Blessings to you and your family!
5 moms found this helpful
S.G. answers from Houston on July 19, 2009
Hi C., This is how I got my son & it was the best thing I ever did. I would advise you to talk to several agency's. Also go to an adoption fair in your area. There is alot of red tape to go thru but you can do it.
When you find an agency you like make sure you are honest with them with what you are wanting. In my situation, I had no children and wanted to adopt. I didn't feel like I could handle taking a child and having that child taken away. It's always a risk, which I knew but my case worker did fantastic at screening the cases before approaching us.
We used Homes of St. Marks & they did ok until my case worker left to go to another agency, but the agency that appeared to have such a great success rate was Depelchin. You can also go on line and look at some of the children & read up on what is expected of you.
If I can help any further, please let me know.
4 moms found this helpful
D.A. answers from San Antonio on July 20, 2009
Go for it. My husband and I have adopted six children from the system, and they are all great kids. After adopting do join an adoption support group as little things will crop up that non-adoptive families don't go thru and it will help tremendously.
Blessings,
D.
4 moms found this helpful
L.M. answers from Philadelphia on August 06, 2009
Hi C.,
I am a former foster care social worker. I think Michelle S offered a really clear outline of the steps.
I just wanted to throw in some advice for dealing with the social workers... having been one myself. While most are hard working and dedicated, there are some really shady social workers out there. Unfortunately, I saw this first hand. You have the right -- and I think duty -- to call the supervisor of any worker you think is being disrespectful, lazy, or delinquent. They should be clear in what the guidlines for home inspections and visits are. Yes, they can, and are usually required, to make some surprise visits. But normally, they should call ahead, show up on time and inquire about the child's welfare. If you don't get proper resolution from their supervisor, call the head of the agency. Do not be afraid to do this!
Also, try not to be insulted by the fact that the SW may need to inventory the child's clothes, get documentation from you regarding medical/dental visits and even sign a paper that they visited you. Social Work is ALL ABOUT documentation.
I monitored children in family placements, often with their grandparents. A lot of those people would be very insulted when I had to perform clothing inventories, school visits, etc. I understand where they're coming from, but it is usually state/city required. Its a "trust but verify" mentality.
Finally, if you are nice to the SW, they will usually be nice to you and want to help you. Some foster parents are also "shady"... so if you get a good SW they will be greatful to have you on their case load. Trust me... some foster parents are verrrrrrry shady and difficult.
Just don't hesitate to report the bad SWs... they make all SWs look bad and without complaints from clients, it is very difficult to get rid of them.
I wish you lots of luck.
3 moms found this helpful
L.H. answers from Columbus on August 06, 2009
Camile
I know that you probably got all of the responses that you need, but I still felt compelled to respond to you. I am sitting here cuddling my adopted daughter. I completed an international adoption 3 years ago. International adoptions require double the paperwork and run around. Having said that, this was the most rewarding run around I have experienced or could imagine. Also, I cannot imagine loving a person more than I love my daughter. Hang in there with the paperwork. The reward is unmatched!
3 moms found this helpful
S.B. answers from Louisville on August 06, 2009
Hi C., My name is S. B. My husband and I were foster parents and we adopted a little girl. I highly suggest becoming an foster parent first and even adopting thru your state system vs. going thru an agency. I have friends who have went thru private agencies and ended up paying a lot of money. Whereas we didn't pay anything. In fact, our daughter got benefits from child support, medical insurance, child care and her college will be paid for! Either way, make sure you get as much info as possible on the biological mom (family history) One of my friends is really dealing with some issues that she was unaware of in the beginning. Best Wishes!
3 moms found this helpful
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