N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 18 § 421.19 - Foster parents
(a) Authorized agencies must:
(1) inform foster parents that a child in
their care who is free or to be freed for adoption and inform foster parents
who have not completed an application to become adoptive parents of the
procedure for applying to adopt the child ;
(2) inform foster parents if the child in
their care who is free for adoption has minor siblings or half-siblings who are
also free for adoption;
(3) inform
foster parents that children in a sibling group must be placed together in a
prospective adoptive home unless a documented assessment in accordance with
section 421.18(d) of this
Part determines that such placement would be contrary to the health, safety or
welfare of one or more of the children; and
(4) conduct group and/or individual meetings
with foster parents to review the legal difference between foster care and
adoption and the availability of adoption subsidies.
(b) Authorized agencies shall offer an
adoption application to foster parents or refer them to an authorized agency
which operates an adoption program when:
(1)
a child in their care for 12 continuous months is surrendered or parental
rights are terminated; or
(2) a
plan to free a child is made for a child who has been in their home for 12
continuous months.
(c)
Authorized agencies operating an adoption program shall accept an adoption
application from a foster parent seeking to adopt a child who has been in his
home for less than 12 continuous months. Such applicants shall be studied
according to the priority system specified in subdivision (a) of section
421.13 of this Part.
(d) Authorized agencies operating an adoption
program shall acknowledge in writing a completed application from a certified,
licensed or approved foster parent within 10 days of receipt.
(e) Authorized agencies operating an adoption
program must assess and prepare foster parent adoptive applicants as rapidly as
possible, as follows:
(1) review the
information about the family :
(i) obtained in
the original foster home study;
(ii) obtained in annual recertification;
and
(iii) available to agency
caseworkers supervising the home and the child at issue;
(2) identify those items of information
needed in an adoption study which are lacking or insufficiently
current;
(3) identify those areas
of family functioning which may need further exploration or strengthening;
and
(4) conduct an adoption study
process which:
(i) does not repeat information
gathering activities with regard to information already available;
(ii) obtains additional or updated
information as rapidly as possible, including obtaining the results of any
criminal history record check completed on the foster parent and each person
over the age of 18 currently residing in the home of the foster parent in
accordance with section
443.8 of this Title and conducting
a State criminal history record check through the Division of Criminal Justice
Services on any person over the age of 18 in the home who has not previously
had such a State criminal history check and conducting a national criminal
history record check through the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the foster
parent and each person over the age of 18 currently residing in the home of the
foster parent ;
(iii) focuses on
areas identified as needing further exploration or strengthening;
(iv) clarifies for the applicant the
difference between foster care and adoption and the issues involved in
obtaining an adoption subsidy;
(v)
includes inquiring of the Office of Children and Family Services whether an
applicant or other person over the age of 18 who resides in the home of the
applicant is the subject of an indicated report of child abuse or maltreatment
on file with the Statewide Central Register of Child Abuse and Maltreatment, in
accordance with the provisions of section
421.16(o) of this
Part and, if the applicant or other person over the age of 18 who resides in
the home of the applicant resided in another state at any time during the five
years preceding the application made pursuant to this section, includes
inquiring of the applicable child welfare agency in each such state for child
abuse and maltreatment information maintained by that state's child abuse and
maltreatment registry, in accordance with the provisions of section
421.16(p) of this
Part; and
(vi) includes inquiring
of the Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs whether
an applicant or other person over the age of 18 who resides in the home of the
applicant is listed on the register of substantiated category one cases of
abuse or neglect maintained by the Justice Center for the Protection of People
with Special Needs, in accordance with section
421.16(r) of this
Part.
(f)
Authorized agencies operating an adoption program shall complete the adoption
study process of foster parents whose studies have been initiated in accordance
with the priority scheme specified in subdivision (a) of section
421.13 of this Part, in approval,
discontinuation, or rejection within the following time limits:
(1) within two months of receipt of the
completed application for a child who is legally free; or
(2) within four months of receipt of the
completed application where the child is not yet legally free, but in no event
more than two months after the date the child becomes legally free.
(g) Authorized agencies must:
(1) reject an applicant foster parent during
or at the conclusion of the study only in accordance with sections
421.15(g) and
421.27 of this Part;
(2) in its letter of rejection indicate that
the child is available for adoption by other persons and will immediately be
photo-listed ;
(3) if the removal of
the child from the foster home is not initiated within three months of
rejection, document in the child 's record the specific reasons why the family
continues to be acceptable as a foster family for this child although not
acceptable as an adoptive family for the same child ; and
(4) document in the foster family record, if
recertification or reapproval is granted, why the home continues to be suitable
for foster care and not for adoption.
(h) Authorized agencies:
(1) shall discontinue the study of a foster
parent applicant only by mutual consent as specified in section
421.15(f) of this
Part; and
(2) shall state in the
letter indicating discontinuation that the child is available for adoption by
other persons and will immediately be photo-listed .
(i) Authorized agencies approving a foster
parent for adoption of the child in their home shall:
(1) give approval in writing;
(2) if the child is legally free at the time
of approval:
(i) accompany the approval
letter with an adoption agreement;
(ii) notify the approved adoptive parent in
writing of his or her fair hearing rights under section
421.18(h) of this
Part;
(iii) inform the parent that
if the adoption agreement is not signed and returned within one month of the
date of the approval letter their application shall be considered withdrawn and
the child will be photo-listed ;
(iv) inform the parents in writing that if
they fail to petition the court to adopt the child within three months of the
date of the approval letter their application will be considered to be
withdrawn, their agreement abrogated and another home will be sought for the
child by photo-listing and other means; and
(v) inform the parents in the approval letter
of the procedures necessary to adopt the child in accordance with paragraph (5)
of this subdivision;
(3)
if the child is not legally free at the time of approval:
(i) inform the foster parents of that fact in
the approval letter;
(ii) provide
for the agency's attorney to serve written notice promptly on foster parents
who have been approved by the agency to adopt a child in their care:
(a) of the entry of a court order approving
the surrender of the child or committing the custody and guardianship of the
child to the authorized agency ; and
(b) that an adoption proceeding may be
commenced upon the entry of the order;
(iii) send with the written notice required
by subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph:
(a)
an adoption agreement;
(b) a
statement that:
(1) the adoption agreement
must be signed and returned within one month of the date of the written notice
that the child is free for adoption; and
(2) if the adoption agreement is not signed
and returned within that time, the adoption application will be considered to
be withdrawn and another home will be sought for the child by photo-listing and
other means;
(c) where
appropriate, an adoption subsidy agreement;
(d) a written notice informing the foster
parents of the right of an adoptive parent to a fair hearing under section
421.18(n) of this
Part where the adoptive parent 's request to adopt a child in his or her care
has been denied or has not been acted upon within 60 days of the request;
and
(e) a statement that if the
petition to the court to adopt the child is not filed within three months of
the date of the notification letter, the adoption application will be
considered withdrawn, the adoption agreement abrogated and another home will be
sought for the child by photo-listing and other means;
(4) document compliance with
section 421.24(b) of this
Part;
(5) inform the foster parents
in writing of the following procedures necessary to adopt the child :
(i) An adoption petition must be filed by the
parents or their attorney as soon as possible but in no event later than three
months after receiving notice that the child is legally free for adoption,
subject to the provisions of this subparagraph. Where the child was freed
through an extra-judicial surrender, the petition may not be filed until at
least 45 days after the surrender was executed. Where the child was freed
through an order of a court committing custody and guardianship of the child to
the authorized agency under article six of the Family Court Act, the petition
may not be filed until at least 30 days after service of the order of
commitment on the parent . If the order committing custody and guardianship is
appealed, the petition may not be filed until after the appeal is finally
resolved and then only if the order of commitment remains in place. The
petition must be filed in a court of competent jurisdiction and must comply
with the requirements of section
112 of
the Domestic Relations Law.
(ii)
The adoption petition must be accompanied by an affidavit of readiness from the
petitioners' attorney attesting that the petitioners have prepared the petition
for the adoption of the child and have collected the documentation required in
section
112 of
the Domestic Relations Law. The petition and required documentation must be
complete before the court may consider the petition to be filed. After the
petition is filed, the court must review the petition and documents.
(iii) The authorized agency must present to
the court a schedule which has been verified by an official of the agency
providing information on the child and the child 's birth parents as required by
section
112
(3) of the Domestic Relations Law. This
verified schedule must be annexed to the petition.
(iv) The adoption petition must be verified,
as required by section
112
(5) of the Domestic Relations Law.
(v) If the child being adopted is less than
18 years of age, the child must have resided with the adoptive parents for at
least three months. This requirement is met when foster parents are adopting a
child who has been in their home for a period in excess of three
months.
(vi) The court must inquire
of the department and the department must inform the court whether the adoptive
parents are the subjects of an indicated report of child abuse or maltreatment
maintained in the Statewide Central Register of Child Abuse and Maltreatment,
pursuant to section
112
(7) of the Domestic Relations Law.
(vii) The court must cause an investigation
to be made by a disinterested person or authorized agency to examine the
allegations set forth in the petition and to ascertain such other facts about
the adoptive child and adoptive parents as will enable the court to determine
the propriety of approving the adoption, pursuant to section
112
(7) of the Domestic Relations Law. A written
report of the investigation must be made before the order of adoption may be
made.
(viii) Upon the filing of the
documents required by section
112
(2), (2-a), (3), (5) and (7) of the
Domestic Relations Law and the court rules , the court will calendar the
adoption proceeding for review to determine if there is adequate basis to
approve the adoption.
(a) If the court finds
that there is adequate basis to approve the adoption, the court will calendar
the appearance of the adoptive parents and the child before the court for
approval of the adoption.
(b) If
the court finds there is not adequate basis for approval of the adoption, the
proceeding will be adjourned and the court may require further hearings,
submissions or appearances as may be required to make a decision on the
case.
(ix) When the
court is satisfied that adoption is in the best interests of the child , the
court will issue an order of adoption, pursuant to section
114 of
the Domestic Relations Law.
(x)
None of the papers in the proceeding may state the surname of the child in the
title and no document to be signed by the adoptive parents may contain the
surname of the child , pursuant to section
112
(4) of the Domestic Relations Law.
Notes
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