Houston Chronicle Sunday

Resistance persists to adoptions by same-sex couples

Laws in Texas, South Dakota back faith-based agencies’ refusals

- By David Crary

With tens of thousands of children lingering in foster care across the United States, awaiting adoption, Illinois schoolteac­hers Kevin Neubert and Jim Gorey did their bit. What began with their offer to briefly care for a newborn foster child evolved within a few years into the adoption of that little boy and all four of his siblings who also were in foster care.

The story of their two dad, five-kid family exemplifie­s the potential for same-sex couples to help ease the perennial shortfall of adoptive homes for foster children. Yet even as more gays and lesbians adopt, some politician­s seek to protect faith-based adoption agencies that object to placing children in such families.

Sweeping new measures in Texas and South Dakota allow state-funded agencies to refuse to place children with unmarried or gay prospectiv­e parents because of religious objections. A newly introduced bill in Congress would extend such provisions nationwide.

Opposition remains

For those who support gay adoption, it’s a good news/bad news story. Gays and lesbians have ever-expanding opportunit­ies to adopt, and a strong likelihood of finding community support if they do so. Yet bias against prospectiv­e gay adoptive parents remains pervasive, and experts say many thousands of gays and lesbians are dissuaded from adopting for fear of encounteri­ng such bias.

“Some of these agencies are quite clear that they don’t work with certain sorts of people,” said Currey Cook of the LGBTrights group Lambda Legal.

Some would-be gay adopters seek out other agencies, Cook said. “But some people think, ‘I’m not going to risk being stigmatize­d and turned away, so I’m not going to step up at all.’ ”

Same-sex couples are nearly three times as likely to adopt as heterosexu­al couples, says Gary Gates, a specialist in LGBT demography. His latest analysis of Census Bureau data indicates that in 2015, the year same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide, 44,000 adopted children were being raised by 28,000 samesex couples. That number of children was double his estimate from 2013.

For gays and lesbians able to afford the $20,000 to $40,000 cost of a typical private adoption, the odds are good.

“If you have financial means, you can find providers who are welcoming and inclusive and help you through that process,” said Ellen Kahn, who oversees youth and family programs for the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTrights group.

She says problems often arise when gays and lesbians seek the less costly option of adopting out of foster care, given that many placements are handled by faith-based agencies under contract with child-welfare department­s.

Neubert and Gorey avoided such problems when they pursued adoption out of foster care after calculatin­g that a private adoption might be too costly.

Following night classes to qualify as foster parents, they agreed in December 2011 to provide a temporary home for a newborn baby. A stay intended to last only a few days was extended into several months, and Neubert and Gorey learned that the baby had four older siblings in foster care.

They eventually decided to adopt all five of the children, a process finalized in June 2014. The youngest, Derek, is 5; the eldest, Luke, is 12. There are two other brothers, 10 and 7, and a middle sister aged 9.

More than 100,000 U.S. foster children are waiting to be adopted, and child welfare officials struggle to find enough qualified adoptive families. Some jurisdicti­ons recruit gays and lesbians to adopt, but agencies that shun gay clients operate in most states.

Catholic agency resists

Catholic Charities, which does child-welfare work nationwide, says it seeks to ensure that the children it places “enjoy the advantage of having a mother and a father who are married. “

In some jurisdicti­ons, authoritie­s have said Catholic Charities must serve same-sex couples. Rather than comply, Catholic Charities shut down adoption services in Massachuse­tts, Illinois, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.

Bethany Christian Services, which provides adoption and foster-care services in more than 30 states, says its religious principles preclude serving same-sex couples directly, but it routinely refers them to LGBTsuppor­tive agencies.

“When we meet with them, we’re very respectful,” said Bethany’s president, Bill Blacquiere. “We want them to have all the rights any citizen has, including the right to be adoptive or foster parents.”

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