FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts:
Bobbi Beavers
Co-founder, OBC for ME
South
Berwick, ME
207-748-3432
rbbeavers@comcast.
www.OBCforME.
Cathy Robishaw
Co-founder, OBC for
ME
Falmouth, ME
207-671-1375
tmc3910@yahoo.
www.OBCforME.
New Law Affects Maine
Adoptees
Maine has restored a basic human right to all Maine-born
adult adoptees β the right to know their identity at birth! Just as New
Hampshire, Alabama and Oregon legislatures have done in the past 12 years, the
123rd Maine Legislature made the decision in June 2007, via LD 1084, to correct
an injustice the Maine Legislature enacted in 1953 when they declared that the
original birth and adoption records of adoptees were to be sealed upon adoption
of any child after August 8th of that year and leaving adoptees access to their
original identity only at the discretion of the courts and only if adoptees knew
this fact, which is buried in the cumbersome adoption laws.
Excitement is
building as over 130 Maine-born adoptees from around Maine, plus New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, Florida, California and other states have already submitted their
info to the Maine Office of Vital Statistics. Many, including those living
out-of-state, are coming to Augusta to request their Original birth Certificate
on January 2, 2009.
Maine LD 1084/Public Law 409 β An Act to Allow
Adult Adoptees Access to their Original Birth Certificates (OBC) - goes into
effect January 1, 2009. Any Maine-born adult adoptee wishing to receive an
uncertified copy of their original birth certificate in-person on January 2,
2009 at the Office of Vital Statistics in Augusta, must contact Lorraine Wilson
immediately at the following address, email, or phone and provide her with the
information (below) she will need to locate their records:
Lorraine
Wilson
Deputy Registrar
Office of Data, Research and Vital
Statistics
Division of Public Health Systems
Center for Disease Control
and Prevention
Maine Department of Health and Human Services 244 Water Street
11 State House Station Augusta, ME 04333-0011
(207)
287-3181
1-888-664-9491 (toll free)
Lorraine.Wilson@
The
adoptee information needed:
Name after adoption, Date of birth, Town of
birth (if known)
The relationship of the requestor to the adoptee (i.e.,
same person, son, daughter, etc.)
Contact information of the
requestor
In order to receive a copy of his/her original birth
certificate on January 2, 2009, an adoptee will still need to download the
official state application form from this website:
http://www.maine.
Parents of origin (also
called birth parents) may also NOW submit information, confidentially, to
Lorraine Wilson:
Contact Preference Form, which is downloadable from this
website: http://www.maine.
Birth Parent Updated Medical History Form, which is downloadable from this website: http://www.maine.
Everyone impacted by this law should read the rules compiled by the Office of Data, Research and Vital Statistics (Maine Center for Disease Control, DHHS), downloadable at this website: http://www.maine.
REASONS FOR SUBMITTING THIS INFO EARLY: If an adoptee applies for the first time on January 2, 2009, it is very likely they will not get the uncertified copy of their original birth certificate that day. If birth parents have filled out their forms, adoptees will have updated medical info and possibly a current contact name and address that will expedite searching if that is what an adoptee chooses to do.
ISSUES TO BE AWARE OF:
Adoptees who obtain their OBC before a birth parent has submitted their forms will be able to request that DHHS send them the birth parent contact preference and medical history forms.
In about 80-90% of the cases, the birth fathers name will not be on the birth certificate (DNA testing has not been available until relatively recently and birth fathers were not always required to be part of the surrendering process as they are now), unless the couple was married.
Medical, genealogical and cultural histories are important to many individuals, yet for others, just having the document (βthe deed to my person,β as adoptee Robert Hafetz says) will be sufficient at this time.
To help people impacted by this law to work through the emotional roller coaster that this information may stimulate, OBC for ME has two adoption triad support group formats: ONLINE at this website - http://health.
A private reception for adoptees and their families will be held at the Augusta EconoLodge at 5 PM on January 2, 2009. For more information contact Bobbi Beavers, rbbeavers@comcast.
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Thank you, Adopteeme for posting this.
That makes 7 out of 50 states? We've got ummm 43 to go?
One state at a time!
- JoesGirl
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