The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Adoption Day a celebratio­n for 30 kids

Annual event helps shine light on foster care system’s issues.

- By Erin Heffernan St. Louis Post-dispatch

Mary Thomas fought back tears when she was asked before a packed St. Louis County courtroom if she and her husband were prepared to raise the three children sitting by her side as their own.

“Absolutely, yes,” she said with emotion. She held the youngest, Hanzi, in her arms. The 4-yearold girl, wearing a long party dress decorated with red flowers, perked up when she heard her name read in the court. “That’s me!” she said. Hanzi and her siblings were among 30 children who had adoptions finalized in the St. Louis County Courthouse as part of the county’s first National Adoption Day event since 2015. Courts across the country take part in the annual event launched in 2000, opening their doors on the Saturday before Thanksgivi­ng to finalize adoptions and bring attention to the foster care system.

St. Louis Family Court Commission­er Catherine W. Keefe said at the event that reunificat­ion with parents is always the first goal of foster care, but when that’s not possible or in the best interests of the children, adoptions by family members or other foster parents can be the best option.

“Family is formed in a variety of ways,” Keefe said. “It’s more than who shares DNA. These people are there for these kids. They are all family.”

There were nearly 12,700 children in the Missouri foster care system as of October, down from a peak of 14,265 in 2021, according to the Missouri Department of Social Services.

But, Keefe said, the state is

still in great need of more foster parents, especially those willing to care for older children and teens. The shortage can sometimes lead to kids being placed in 30-day shelters or other temporary accommodat­ions until a spot in foster care opens, she said.

Mary Thomas and her husband, Paul, officially adopted three of five siblings — Hanzi, Jakobe and Jordan — who have been in their care as foster parents for more than four years. The children’s other two siblings were adopted simultaneo­usly by another foster parent, Jill Schmalz, who plans to raise them in constant connection with their siblings.

“We call each other our ‘sister moms,’” Mary Thomas said.

Thomas said she and her husband have fostered 15 children over the last six years, along with raising their four biological children.

“We just wanted to make sure the siblings could stay together as much as possible,” she said. “My dad’s siblings were split up in foster care and didn’t have much of a relationsh­ip. I never want that for my kids. It’s part of why I do what I do.”

Adoptive parents Jamie Viviano

and her husband, Tron Williams, were accompanie­d at the event by a large family dressed in T-shirts with the words “adoptive” and “foster” crossed out and the word “son” written in bold below.

Viviano and Williams were nervously waiting for their turn that Saturday to finalize the adoption of 3-year-old Cashous as the toddler was playing in the courthouse hall decorated with balloons and full of treats for the kids. The couple raised the toddler, who is the child of a relative, since they brought him home at 3 weeks old from the neonatal intensive care unit.

When a child is removed from a parent’s custody, often because of abuse or neglect, the Missouri Department of Social Services looks to family members to care for children first before moving them to other foster homes. But even then, it’s a long legal process.

Viviano said it took years of hearings and three trials before it was settled that Cashous would permanentl­y remain in their care. As foster parents, every decision, including getting the child’s hair cut or going on trips, needs to be approved.

Viviano recalled not knowing what to think when she got a call from a caseworker that the infant needed care. She and her husband already had three older children, now ages 12 to 19, but the happy child soon became a beloved little brother, she said.

Cashous has had years of medical complicati­ons, including cerebral palsy.

“You’ve got to have a lot of patience to be a foster parent,” Viviano said. “But these kids need us.”

Just then, the 3-year-old ran up begging Viviano to unwrap a chocolate bar given out at the event.

“OK, OK,” she said, smiling and patting his cheek.

 ?? DAVID CARSON/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH/TNS ?? Mary Thomas gives a kiss to her newly adopted daughter, 4-year-old Hanzi Thomas, during a hearing in a St. Louis County courtroom on Nov. 18. Thirty children had their adoptions finalized as part of the county’s first National Adoption Day event since 2015. The day is celebrated on the Saturday before Thanksgivi­ng.
DAVID CARSON/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH/TNS Mary Thomas gives a kiss to her newly adopted daughter, 4-year-old Hanzi Thomas, during a hearing in a St. Louis County courtroom on Nov. 18. Thirty children had their adoptions finalized as part of the county’s first National Adoption Day event since 2015. The day is celebrated on the Saturday before Thanksgivi­ng.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States