Santa Fe New Mexican

Michigan set to be last state to permit surrogacy contracts

- By Joey Cappellett­i

LANSING, Mich. — Rachael Lang and her husband share the same last name as their biological daughter but are not listed on her birth certificat­e. Instead, it bears the name of a surrogate who carried their daughter due to Lang’s past cancer diagnosis.

Michigan’s ban on paid surrogacy contracts — the only state with such a law — has forced the couple to spend nearly a year trying to adopt their own daughter.

State lawmakers voted last week to change that, hoping to make it easier for people like the Langs to more easily be deemed the legal parents of their children born through surrogates.

“Whenever I fill out paperwork for her, they ask, are you a parent or guardian? And you have to check one box or the other. I don’t know what to check because I am her parent biological­ly, but legally, I’m her guardian,” said Lang. “So that just makes me feel very conflicted and very sad about what I am on a piece of paper to her.”

Michigan is currently the only state in the nation where surrogacy contracts are criminally banned, according to the governor’s office. A 1988 law passed by Republican­s makes it a misdemeano­r or felony charge to take part in a compensate­d surrogacy contract.

An agreement reached between a woman who acts as a surrogate and then hands over parental rights to the child is “void and unenforcea­ble,” under the current law. That means the intended parents must go through a judge or the adoption process to gain custody.

Parents who testified in favor of changing that law say they spent months — sometimes years — trying to adopt their child born through a surrogate.

“Decisions about if, when, and how to have a child are deeply personal. Politician­s should not be dictating the terms of these private decisions that should be left to a family, their doctor, and those they love and trust,” said Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in a statement.

Whitmer, who has said she will sign the package, added the legislatio­n was vital as “other states make it harder for you to start a family.” The nine-bill package also includes added protection­s for other assisted reproducti­on, such as in vitro fertilizat­ion services.

The package was introduced in a Senate committee just weeks after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled frozen embryos can be considered children under state law, which forced some clinics in the state to pause IVF services. Alabama’s governor has since signed legislatio­n into law shielding doctors from legal liability resulting from the ruling.

In Michigan, Tammy and Jordan Meyers were among those pleading with lawmakers to make the change based on their two-year legal battle.

The couple in 2021 had sought a pre-birth order for custody of twins they were expecting via gestationa­l carrier. The twins arrived prematurel­y, before the order’s approval, and a judge denied the couple custody despite the twins being their biological children.

“If I’m being honest about it, we missed out on a lot of moments with our babies,” said Tammy Myers. “Time that we should have just been focusing on the babies that arrived safely, despite being eight weeks premature. We weren’t living in the miracle. We were living in the trauma.”

After a 23-month legal fight, the Myers won the right to adopt their twins in late 2022.

Tammy Myers watched from the balcony overlookin­g the Senate chambers on Tuesday as lawmakers considered the package. Prior to the vote, Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks drew attention to Myers, who eventually received a standing ovation from lawmakers.

“There is no good reason that parents such as Tammy and Jordan should have to adopt their own babies,” said Brinks.

The Lang family, who is still attempting to adopt their 1-yearold, are among those who could potentiall­y grow their family under the new law. In an interview prior to the vote, Rachael Lang said she and her husband felt so broken by the process that they vowed not to try for another child through surrogacy.

“But now, you know, if it does go through, we would consider working with a surrogate again,” said Lang.

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