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Adam Pertman

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With So Many Kids Who Need Families, Why Are We Rejecting Parents?

Posted: 09/15/11 04:26 PM ET

Politicians love to say it. Child-welfare professionals work mightily to practice it. American laws and practices promote its essential truth: every boy and girl deserves to live in a permanent, loving family.

Yet tens of thousands of children in the U.S. spend their lives in temporary (i.e., foster) care, unable to return to their original families and without great prospects for being adopted into new ones. At the same time, the number of gays and lesbians becoming adoptive parents increases daily. This reality has raised hopes throughout our country among children's advocates who see an underutilized supply of prospective mothers and fathers for so-called "waiting children."

Across the United States, however, some conservative interest groups and politicians have worked in recent years to implement laws and policies that would prevent lesbians and gay men from providing homes for these boys and girls, and a few such efforts have been successful. The good news is that the research on this subject is almost unanimously one-sided -- that is, it shows that non-heterosexuals make good parents, and their children do well (see the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute's report on the subject, "Expanding Resources for Children," and my two new books, Adoption by Lesbians and Gay Men: A New Dimension in Family Diversity and Adoption Nation: How the Adoption Revolution Is Transforming Our Families). And, in the legal realm, the latest news is positive, too: the Arkansas Supreme Court recently struck a blow for best practices in child welfare by striking down a 2008 referendum -- which allowed only married couples to foster or adopt a child from state care -- as unconstitutional.

The bad news is that proponents of such measures are continuing to formulate legal and procedural strategies to accomplish their goal. Some of the activists engaged in the gays-shouldn't-be-parents campaign acknowledge that they believe non-heterosexuals are problematic simply because of who they are. But most maintain, at least publicly, that they are motivated primarily by a desire to do what's best for the kids who need families.

It is not homophobia, they insist, to establish rules that promote the benefits of parenting by both a mother and a father who are married to each other. They frequently add that preventing gay men and lesbians from adopting protects children from being negatively influenced, or even physically harmed, by the adults who are supposed to protect them.

Such arguments are, at best, ill-informed and, in many cases, plainly disingenuous. If politicians and others who make those assertions truly believe their own words, they should act quickly to remove the millions of supposedly at-risk girls and boys who are already in families in which one or both parents are gay. More urgently, they should swoop children out of single-parent homes, since those families deprive far more children of two married, cohabitating, heterosexual parents than any other cultural phenomenon in history.

Those are silly suggestions, of course, and no one is going to follow them (though there probably are some people who want to).

The Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, which I head, is not a gay/lesbian advocacy organization. We conduct independent, nonpartisan research and education projects on a broad range of subjects in order to improve the lives of everyone touched by adoption -- especially children -- through better laws, policies and practices.

Among the many reports we have published over the last several years are three about gay and lesbian adoption. They contain no shockers; in fact, they simply affirm what previous research has found: that children grow up healthier in loving families than in temporary care, including when the families are headed by qualified (training, vetting and oversight are all parts of the placement process) lesbians or gay men.

That is why a broad range of professional organizations -- including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Association of Family Physicians, the National Association of Social Workers and the Child Welfare League of America -- has come to the same conclusion as we have at the Adoption Institute. These are not fringe groups that would put kids at risk, but just the opposite. The common threads among all of the organizations listed here is that we are in the mainstream and we all work, based on the best available information, for the welfare of children. And we all agree that allowing adoption by qualified gay men and lesbians furthers that objective.

Not incidentally, most adoption practitioners in our country have come to the same conclusion. Indeed, one study by the Adoption Institute showed that a growing majority of agencies nationwide accepts applications from gay and lesbian prospective parents, and at least 40 percent have placed children with them. Again, the social workers, therapists and other professionals at these agencies aren't in business to hurt boys and girls but to improve their lives. And they've decided that that occurs when children stop shuttling between foster homes and are firmly ensconced in permanent ones.

The bottom line is simple: no state can effectively prevent lesbians or gay men from becoming mothers or fathers, because they can do so in other ways -- such as surrogacy and insemination -- or by moving somewhere that permits them to foster or adopt children. So all a state can accomplish if it imposes restrictions, as Arkansas tried to do and as Utah and Mississippi still do, is to shrink the pool of prospective parents and, as a result, decrease the odds that children in its custody will ever receive the benefits of living in permanent, successful families.

 
 
 
Politicians love to say it. Child-welfare professionals work mightily to practice it. American laws and practices promote its essential truth: every boy and girl deserves to live in a permanent, lovin...
Politicians love to say it. Child-welfare professionals work mightily to practice it. American laws and practices promote its essential truth: every boy and girl deserves to live in a permanent, lovin...
 
 
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03:03 PM on 09/21/2011
Adam Pertman's book & bloggs on adoption are essential -- to the adoption community at large and to the public in general. Nowadays everyone has a connection to adoption -- whether it is oneself who is adopted, one's child, a sibbling, a cousin, niece, nephew, etc. The furthest one can be from adoption today is through a friend. We need Adam to keep us all -- straight, gay -- tightly in the loop. Three cheers for his blogg on HuffPo. Cathy
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01:10 PM on 09/21/2011
I hope adovcates and decision maker for children are listening to and acting on what Adam and the Institute publications are telling them about what's best for children awaiting adoption -- placement in stable and loving homes, regardless of the sexual orientation of the parent or parents.
03:19 PM on 09/20/2011
I agree with Adam and applaud his efforts to enlighten people and promote adoption for children who need homes. It's sad that so much research is needed to "prove" lesbians and gay men are equally qualified to be parents, but since the research so overwhelmingly supports this, it seems to me, as a gay man and an adopted person, that the root of resistance is homophobia. As has always been the case, homophobia is evaporated by courageous lesbians and gay men living open lives, and activists working for civil rights.
Patrick McMahon
San Diego, CA
01:51 PM on 09/20/2011
It is ridiculous that we are even discussing this issue and yet here in Illinois the Catholic Church continues to try to keep children from having healthy, loving homes with LGBT led families. It is incredibly important that non gay related organizations like the Adoption Institute continue to champion our cause.
01:46 PM on 09/20/2011
As a gay man that adopted our son over 10 years ago, I think it is tragic that almost all the men we meet now are choosing surrogacy instead of adoption to start families. That, when there are so many children waiting in the system. They are intimidated by the poisonous atmosphere created by the far right, the bans, etc. They are afraid, and I can't blame them. The only people that are being hurt are the children that need loving, forever homes.
01:10 PM on 09/20/2011
Thanks to Mr. Pertman for his usual incisive analysis. Children are waiting to be loved, to feel a sense of connection, permanence and security, to have restored to them their need for and RIGHT to a family. What a betrayal it is to allow a social agenda to delay or prevent these kids, who very often have suffered abuse/neglect/trauma, from beginning their healing journey with parents devoted to their growth and success. As any adoptive parent knows, the screening and education requirements placed upon individuals who desire to build a family through adoption is more than adequate scrutiny to protect children from harm. No such mandate for this extensive scrutiny upon couples who decide to become parents the “old fashioned way” exists; and if it did, perhaps the number of children in our foster care system would be lower. I am proud to know several adoptive families guided by parents who happen to be gay. I believe that in some ways, their heightened sensitivity to the challenge of living as a minority better prepares gay couples to have empathy, strength and understanding for the kinds of struggles adopted children face. As with so many myths surrounding adoption that dissolve into fact once examined, the idea that gay couples are not good parents is preposterous. Thanks to the EBDI for bringing the light of truth to yet another area where shameful practices and outdated stigmas have dominated for too long. Let's do better!

Dawn Scott,
President, Adoption Knowledge Affiliates
11:04 AM on 09/20/2011
I think what the far right is concerned about is that people will indeed see that LGBT families are like any other in terms of raising children, thereby showing, up close & personal, that the big lie the far right tells about them being so evil is wrong. Kids need stability (allowing "gay marriage" would help with that,) they need love, discipline, education, nutritional food, and medical care.
So, from this list, the only thing that isn't offered in most state is marriage, because we've allowed religious zealots to write laws that have no business being laws.
I've got friends who have been together at least as long as my husband and I and who are every bit as committed to each other and their family as are we. Why shouldn't they be allowed to adopt chidren who need homes?
One thing I read about being "different" between children raised in opposite gender familes as opposed to same gender families is that those in LGBT families tend to be more tolerant. In my eyes, that is NOT a bad thing! We could certainly use a bit more tolernace in our country.
11:04 AM on 09/20/2011
It seems so ridiculously self-evident - and therefore so outrageous that it needs to be said. We LGBT parents are pretty much like every other parent out there: we worry about what our kids are eating, doing, and watching; we help with homework; we get them to dancing school and baseball practice; we teach them what they need to know to grow up into sane, responsible adults. Whether parents are single or coupled, gay or straight, black or white (or any of the millions of shades of gray between any of those extremes), we want what's best for our kids. People who would deprive ANY child of that kind of love and commitment really need to examine their priorities. Seriously, what is in the best interest of any child more than a loving family?
10:27 AM on 09/20/2011
As an adoptive parent, I know how thorough and difficult the screening process is. Parents do not subject themselves to the process unless they are committed to providing a safe, loving home for a child. Credible adoption agencies and licensed social workers do not approve applicants as adoptive parents unless they successfully pass federal fingerprinting, personal (four hours of interviews plus reference checks), financial, and medical screening. If gay or lesbian or single applicants successfully pass all these screens, I don't see any reason why they shouldn't be adoptive parents. Children need stability, permanancy, and love. Parents provide these so much more effectively, and at a significantly lower cost to the taxpayer, than foster care can.
10:38 PM on 09/19/2011
The fact that homophobia to such an extreme still exists and is legitimized by state governments is shameful. The data remains that children raised in families with same-sex parents thrive. Let's stop wasting time arguing over the morality of same-sex families and let's start being thankful that children have homes who would otherwise languish in the foster care system. We could further discuss what happens to children who age out of foster care because they don't have homes and compare that data with children in stable families. Kudos to The Adoption Institute and the Huffington Post.
09:44 PM on 09/19/2011
an extremely important topic-there is so much at stake here. i find it so sad that homophobia and a refusal to look at the solid research being done around this issue means that kids languish in the foster care system when there are so many potential parents for them. there is a chance here for so many more loving families to come together, if only people would let them.

i'm a social worker, and i work with many kids who have spent time in the foster care system, and will likely stay in that same system until they age out-these kids need loving, caring adults to support and parent them, to help them grow and thrive and have the lives they deserve (many of them ended up in foster care because of abuse or neglect that took place at the hands of straight, married couples, actually). the sexual orientation of the parents these kids need-and desperately want- should not matter in the least.

i wish the people who help make the laws in America would try talking to those kids instead of making decisions based on their own biases.
05:51 PM on 09/19/2011
This is a critically important child welfare issue--kids deserve loving parents and potential parents (gay and straight) should be judged on their readiness to parent and to not have sexual orientation be the factor that excludes them. This Institute publication is fair and unbiased and it's time to pay attention to it.
03:37 PM on 09/19/2011
It is critical that all kids who need homes are placed with loving families, regardless of sexual orientation. Let's not punish prospective fantastic parents and kids who need homes with crazy discriminatory laws and policies. Sanity must prevail. One's sexual orientation has nothing to do with ones ability to parent!
12:17 PM on 09/19/2011
If this weren't so sad, it would be silly. Kids are languishing in foster care and loving adults who are gay and lesbian would like to adopt them. Let's help these kids and put them in these loving homes.