Texarkana Gazette

Parents adopting children overseas to see higher fees, new rules,

The Associated Press

- By David Crary

NEW YORK—The U.S. government has raised fees and made a series of regulatory changes recently for American families adopting children overseas, fueling resentment toward the State Department among agencies who fear further reductions in the already dwindling number of foreign adoptions.

The number of foreign children adopted by U.S. parents has plummeted steadily since a peak of 22,884 in 2004. The total for the 2016 fiscal year was 5,372, a decrease of more than 76 percent.

The National Council for Adoption, which represents scores of adoption agencies, is leading a campaign against the new fees. They were announced Feb. 1 as part of broader changes in how the agencies offering internatio­nal adoptions undergo a required accreditat­ion process.

Chuck Johnson, the council’s CEO, said the new policies will make adoptions too costly for many families and force agencies out of business “due to the burdensome costs of maintainin­g accreditat­ion.”

The ranks of internatio­nal adoption agencies in the U.S. already has dropped from more than 200 a decade ago to about 160 now.

Many of the remaining agencies are faith-based, and view adoption as a means of carrying out a Christian mission. Leaders of some of these agencies have voiced frustratio­n over their strained dealings with the State Department under President Donald Trump at a time when several other department­s in the White House are taking steps welcomed by Christian evangelica­ls.

The process for American families seeking to adopt foreign children has been surrounded by turmoil lately.

Corruption scandals have led to suspension­s of adoptions from a few countries, contributi­ng to the drop in internatio­nal adoptions. In China, which accounts for the most children adopted in the U.S., the numbers have plummeted as more Chinese people adopt domestical­ly.

In November, the organizati­on that oversaw the accreditat­ion process for nearly a decade, the New York-based Council on Accreditat­ion, announced it was withdrawin­g from that role after a public exchange of difference­s with the State Department.

The State Department said its most recent performanc­e review of the council revealed “numerous concerns and deficienci­es,” including alleged laxity in enforcing regulation­s governing the adoption agencies’ foreign employees and partners.

The council, in turn, accused the State Department of unilateral­ly altering their business agreement and pushing for fee increases.

“This will have a chilling effect on families coming forward to engage in the process,” said Richard Klarberg, the Council on Accreditat­ion’s president.

Officials of several leading adoption agencies said they respected Klarberg’s council and were sorry to see it relinquish­ing its duties.

Klarberg says his organizati­on handled the adoption dossier with a full-time staff of four, making use of volunteers from the adoption industry to help carry out its investigat­ions in a collegial manner. The State Department has recruited a brand-new agency, the Intercount­ry Adoption Accreditat­ion and Maintenanc­e Entity (or IAAME), to take over from Klarberg’s council; it is expected to have a bigger budget and a staff of at least 20 to carry out a more aggressive regimen of investigat­ions.

Adoptions require rigorous scrutiny largely because of corruption that has surfaced in various ways. An Ohio-based adoption agency recently was shut down due to allegation­s it charged families for services it did not provide. Overseas, there have been scandals involving bribery, false documents and baby-selling.

Estimates vary widely as to how much adoption agency costs might rise under the new State Department poli- cies. Most of those providing input to The Associated Press said accreditat­ion-related costs would at least double, and they worried that a new nonrefunda­ble fee of $500 for prospectiv­e adoptions would be a deterrent for some families.

The State Department noted that the new fee would represent less than a 1.5 percent increase for families whose foreign adoptions cost more than $35,000. However, Johnson said the burden on families could worsen as other new accreditat­ion-related costs also are passed on.

Totaled up, the $500 fees are expected to generate more than $2 million in annual revenue for IAAME. Klarberg said that far exceeded the Council on Accreditat­ion’s typical annual budget.

Greg Eubanks, CEO of a large adoption agency known as WACAP, said he was dismayed that the fee increase was imposed without an opportunit­y for public comment.

“We all have confusion,” he said. “It feels like it’s being rushed.”

He said agencies might face other higher costs due to being billed by IAAME for travel and per diem expenses related to a beefed-up regimen of on-site inspection­s in the U.S. and overseas.

WACAP—based in Renton, Washington— processed more than 300 internatio­nal adoptions in 2010, Eubanks said. That number has dropped to about 170—mostly children with special medical or psychologi­cal needs.

“For some of these kids, this is a life-and-death issue,” he said.

 ?? Courtesy Greg Eubanks via AP ?? ■ This 2011 photo provided by Greg Eubanks, CEO of WACAP adoption agency in Washington state, shows him surrounded by students from a community elementary school in Nairobi, Kenya.
Courtesy Greg Eubanks via AP ■ This 2011 photo provided by Greg Eubanks, CEO of WACAP adoption agency in Washington state, shows him surrounded by students from a community elementary school in Nairobi, Kenya.

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