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ADOPTION AMENDMENT BILL 2009
2009
LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
ADOPTION (AMENDMENT)
BILL 2009
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Mr Andrew Barr
MLA
Minister for Children and Young People
Background
When enacted, the Adoption Act 1993 (the Act) was viewed as
progressive legislation which included provisions such as the Aboriginal
placement principle; access to origins information; more open adoption; and
acknowledgement of the overarching principle of the best interests of the child.
The legislation has helped to ensure that in the main the Territory’s
adoption practice has remained relevant to the children, young people and others
affected by adoption, for whom it was developed.
In the light of major legal and public policy initiatives over the last
fifteen years, including the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children
and Cooperation in Respect of Inter-country Adoption and the enacting of the
ACT Human Rights Act 2004, there was a need to review sections of the Act
in terms of contemporary relevance and accountability requirements. It is also
essential that the Act be consistent with the Children and Young People Act
2008, that it incorporates the principles of the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child and reflects Government policies as
defined in the ACT Children’s Plan and the ACT Social Plan.
In November 2005, the Commonwealth House of Representatives Standing
Committee on Family and Human Services released a report on its Inquiry into
Adoption of Children from Overseas. This report also made comment on local
adoption matters. The Committee considered evidence from several hundred
persons and agencies, reflecting a high level of interest and areas of concern
about current inter-country and domestic adoption practices. Subsequently the
Committee made 27 recommendations, dealt with in the Commonwealth-State
Agreement for the Continued Operation of Australia's Intercountry Adoption
Program, to which the then Minister for Children and Young People became a
signatory on 20 May 2008.
The profile of adoption in the ACT community
has changed significantly since 1993. Overseas and step-parent adoptions now
comprise over 80 % of adoption orders made in the ACT. Adoption of infants from
the local community is unusual and often related to complex family difficulties.
Another emerging trend is that, as part of permanency planning for children and
young people in out of home care, progressively more long term carers are
seeking to secure adoption orders for children in their care. Adoption is
referred to in the Children and Young People Act 2008 as a consideration
for ensuring the long-term placement of a child or young person in a safe,
nurturing and secure environment.
Revisions of terminology used
in the Bill, in particular to describe child-centred practices, provide a
further reflection of consistency with the Children and Young People Act
2008.
Search and reunion services and post order support are also
becoming increasingly utilised as community attitudes towards past adoptions
become more accepting. The importance of children and young people growing up
with a clear sense of identity is in most cases supported through
“open” adoption practices that enable some ongoing facilitated
contact between adopted children and young people and members of their birth
family.
It is also important to acknowledge the impact of past adoption
practices upon Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. In their
policy paper, Achieving Stable and Culturally Strong Out of Home Care for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children, the Secretariat of National
Aboriginal and Islander Child Care Inc.
(SNAICC) clearly
state:
“Adoption is not part of Aboriginal culture...The Stolen
Generations and their families are to this day dealing with the trauma of past
adoption policies”.
Due to the cultural and spiritual significance
of connection to family SNAICC does not endorse adoption, other than customary
Torres Strait Islander adoptions within extended families, for Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander children.
Summary
The
purpose of the Amendment Bill is to ensure contemporary adoption practice and
accountability requirements are addressed and to ensure consistency with the
ACT Human Rights Act 2004, the Children and Young People Act 2008,
the principles of the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and
Cooperation in Respect of Inter-country Adoption (the Hague
Convention), the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
(UNCROC) and commitments made by the ACT Government under the
Commonwealth-State Agreement for the Continued Operation of Australia's
Intercountry Adoption Program of May 2008.
The amendments also
incorporate structural or language clarifications and remove anomalies or
inconsistencies identified by the drafters.
Revenue/Cost
Implications
The legislation will be implemented within existing
financial resources.
DETAIL
Part 1 -
Preliminary
This chapter sets out technical clauses of the Bill and general
objects, principles, considerations and concepts which apply across the
Bill.
Clause 1 - Name of Act
This is a technical clause and sets out the name of the new Act as the
Adoption Amendment Act 2009.
Clause 2 - Commencement
This clause enables the new Act to commence on a day nominated by the
Minister in a commencement notice.
Clause 3 – Legislation Amended
This clause notes that the legislation amended upon commencement of the new
Act is the Adoption Act 1993 and the Adoption Regulations
1993.
Consequential amendments are also made to the Children and
Parentage Act 2004, the Discrimination Act 1991, the Parentage Act
2004 and the Testamentary Guardianship Act 1984.
Clause 4
– Long Title
This clause provides for the inclusion of “young
people” into the title, ensuring consistency with the Children and
Young People Act 2008, which distinguishes between a child “a person
who is under 12 years old” and a young person “who is 12 years old
or older, but not yet an adult”.
Part 1A – Objects and Principles
This part substitutes Section 6 of the Adoption Act 1993 that
“the welfare and interests of the child concerned must be regarded as the
paramount consideration”, by specifying objects and providing further
guidance regarding the responsibilities and obligations of the relevant Minister
and Chief Executive when administering the Act .
This part also provides
explanations of what considerations are to be made to ensure that the best
interests of children and young people and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander child placement principles are implemented. This part informs and
guides adoption practice now and in the future and is consistent with the
principles that are provided in the Children and Young People Act 2008.
Clause 4 - Objects of Act
This clause sets out the main objects that underpin the Bill in relation to
all aspects of the adoption of children and young people, the inclusion of all
affected parties in decision-making at the time an adoption plan is being
considered and a commitment to open adoption practices that support all affected
parties throughout a life long journey of adoption.
The main objects of
the Bill include:
(a) ensuring that the best
interests of the child are the paramount consideration in the adoption of a
child or young person;
(b) providing an
adoption process that promotes the wellbeing and care of children and young
people in a way that recognises their right
-
(i) to grow in a safe and stable
environment; and
(ii) to be cared for by a
suitable family and to establish enduring relationships;
and
(iii) to know about family background and
culture and have the opportunity to maintain or develop cultural
identity;
(c) ensuring that the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander people are consulted about any adoption of an
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or young
person;
(d) ensuring that adoption is
centred on the needs of the child or young person rather than an adult wanting
to care for a child or young person;
(e)
including consultation with the child or young person throughout the adoption
process and, wherever possible, taking the child or young person’s views
into account;
(f) recognising a birth
parent’s involvement in making decisions about their child's
future;
(g) establishing adoption plans to
recognise the intentions of parties in an
adoption;
(h) ensuring equivalent standards
apply for a child or young person adopted from the ACT and a child or young
person adopted from overseas; and
(i)
ensuring that the adoption process in the ACT complies with Australia’s
international obligations.
Clause 5 — Best interests of child or young
person paramount consideration
This clause enshrines the best interests principle as the paramount
consideration for persons making decisions or taking action under the Act.
This reflects the Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article
3) which states:
“In all actions concerning children, whether
undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions, Courts of law,
administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best interests of the
child shall be a primary consideration”.
Sub-clause (2)
provides further guidance as to how this principle is to be implemented and
requires that persons making decisions under the Bill must take into account
:
(a) the child or young person’s age, level of understanding, level
of maturity, gender, and personal characteristics;
(b) the child or young
person’s physical, emotional and educational needs;
(c) the views
expressed by the child or young person;
(d) the relationship the child or
young person has with the parents, any siblings and any other relatives of the
child;
(e) the relationship the child or young person has with the adoptive
parents;
(f) the suitability and capacity of the adoptive parents to meet
the child or young person’s needs; and
(g) the alternatives to
adoption for the child or young person.
Clause 6 - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
child – additional requirements
The clause expands the provisions made for an Aboriginal child at section
21 of the 1993 Act. This clause outlines the additional matters that decision
makers must consider when making decisions under the Bill in relation to
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander children and young people:
(a) the
need for the child or young person to maintain a connection with the lifestyle,
culture and traditions of the child’s or young person’s Aboriginal
or Torres Strait Islander community;
(b) submissions about the child or young
person, made by or on behalf of any Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people
or organisations identified by the Chief Executive as providing ongoing support
services to the child or young person or their family; and
(c) Aboriginal or
Torres Strait Islander traditions and cultural values (including kinship rules)
as identified by reference to the child or young person’s family, kinship
relationships and the community with which the child or young person has the
strongest affiliation.
These conditions are referred to as the
“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander child placement principle” in
the Children and Young People Act 2008. Emphasis to their importance is
again stated as a requirement in Clause 39G “Deciding application for an
adoption order – Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or young
person”.
This principle engages the right to equal protection of
the law without discrimination, at section 8(3) of the Human Rights Act
2004. However it is justifiable under section 28 of the Human Rights
Act 2004 because the proposed affirmative measures recognise the needs of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, their families and their
communities in the light of their history as Indigenous Australians and the
impact of past adoption practices upon Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
communities.
Application of this clause also takes account of the ACT
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community as being diverse, with no single
set of traditions and/or culture, hence the importance of consulation with
relevant persons.
Part 3 – Adoptions under this
Act
Part 3 of the Bill is re-structured to more clearly
describe the different stages of adoption processes:
• Divisions 3.1
and 3.2 of this Part are structurally amended to clarify who may be adopted and
by whom.
• Division 3.3 deals with birth parent(s) consent.
• Division 3.4 provides for the placement of a child or young person
with their prospective adoptive parent(s) in the time in-between the consent to
their adoption becoming valid and the adoption order being
made.
• Division 3.5 addresses the child or young person’s
guardianship prior to their adoption.
• Divisions 3.6 to 3.9 describe
the proceedings related to making an adoption order including individualised
provisions that may be made regarding contact between the child or young person
and their birth family, naming of the child or young person and distribution of
property.
These processes apply to all adoption orders made in the ACT, or
elsewhere if facilitated by the Chief Executive, apart from some limited
exceptions relating to some overseas adoptions or adoptions in the ACT by
parents from another Convention country, which are cross referenced to Part 4A
of the Bill.
Division 3.1 Who can be
adopted?
Clause 9 – Power of Court – child or young
person
This clause applies to the adoption of persons who are present in
the ACT and aged under the age of 18 years at the time that an adoption
application is filed.
Clause 10 – Persons 18 years or
older
This clause removes any limitations that would prevent the adoption
of a person over the age of 18 years other than:
(a) the parties to an
adoption being ordinarily resident in the ACT and
(b) the Court being
satisfied that the person(s) applying to adopt have a good
reputation.
The Bill recognises that some individuals who have been
reared under a de facto adoption arrangement may wish to legalise this
relationship during their adulthood.
Clause 11 – Previous
adoption immaterial
This clause clarifies that a child or young person
can be adopted again, whether they were previously adopted in the ACT or
elsewhere. This clause enables permanency to be sought for a child or young
person whose family arrangements are not secure.
Clause 12 –
Frustration of Immigration Law
This clause is a process/language
clarification substituting “consider” for “of the
opinion” – in this case that an adoption order is not being sought
primarily as a means of evading immigration laws. This substitution is
repeated elsewhere.
An example of where this clause might apply would be
an attempt to use adoption proceedings to bring a relative, who is not actually
a child or young person in need of adoption, into Australia.
Division
3.2 Who can adopt?
This division clarifies, in simplified and
positive terms, who may adopt.
The definitions for and considerations
that are to be applied in determining the eligibility of couple, step-parent,
single and relative adoption applicants are provided in separate clauses.
The register of suitable people is also introduced in this Division.
Placement on the register is a precursor to all applicant(s) being placed with a
child or young person for the purpose of adoption in the ACT and for an adoption
order to be made. This is stated in each of the clauses that refer to couple,
step-parent, one person (single) and relative adoption
applicants.
Clause 13 – Residency Requirement
This
clause specifies that an adoption order may only be made in favour of a person
or 2 people jointly (people in a domestic partnership) who are ordinarily
resident in the ACT. It also means that people who apply to have their names
included in the register of persons as suitable for placement of a child or
young person for adoption must be ordinarily resident in the ACT.
The
Bill addresses the anomaly under the 1993 Act that the ACT is the only state or
territory that does not stipulate that adoption applicants have to be ordinarily
or habitually resident in the jurisdiction to be eligible to be assessed and
placed with a child or young person for the purpose of adoption. The 1993 Act
stipulates that the Court need only be satisfied that applicants to adopt are
resident or domiciled in the ACT for 21 days prior to filing an adoption
application with the Court.
Given this anomaly, residency in the ACT has
been identified in policy as an eligibility criteria for applicants to be placed
on the register of people suitable to adopt, although there have been waivers
made in a few exceptional circumstances, when the following issues were able to
be addressed:
(a) access to assessments undertaken by other agencies and
individuals, which provide sufficient information about the applicants to
satisfy the chief executive that they are capable of fulfilling the best
interests of a child or young person in need of adoption;
(b) sufficient
information about the applicants’ capabilities to meet the birth
parents’ entitlement to express their wishes about the conditions of child
or young person’s plan of adoption; and
(c) access to follow up
support to families and adopted children living outside of the ACT.
Each of
these considerations is required under the Hague Convention.
The
residency requirement is re-stated at Clause 18 (4) - Approval of suitable
people and Clause 19 (2) (b) - Register of suitable people. However the latter
clause provides for the chief executive to apply discretion regarding the
removal of applicants from the Register when they are living outside of the ACT
on a temporary basis.
It is acknowledged that the ACT has a significant
demographic of highly mobile residents, such as defence and public service
personnel. Several submissions during the consultation process raised this
issue. Balancing this against the evidence about the impact of mobility on
individual’s and family life it is envisaged future policy may allow, in
some circumstances, for applicants who are ordinarily resident in the ACT to
apply to remain on the ACT Adoption Register with a suspended status, during any
posting away from the ACT.
In such cases it would be expected that the
applicant’s current circumstances would need to be re-assessed prior to
re-instatement on the register and that the best interests of the child
principle would remain the paramount consideration. Applicants would need to
demonstrate their capacity to provide stability to a child or young person
placed with them.
Clause 13 (2) makes a sole exception to the residency
requirement when an order is made under section 57 (Adoption in the ACT of ACT
child or young person from Convention country). This is a reciprocal
arrangement under the Hague Convention where prospective adoptive parents who
live overseas have been identified for a child or young person in the ACT in
need of adoption. It is envisaged that this clause will have very limited
utility, but that it could be applied in cases such as a child or young person
being orphaned in the ACT with kin overseas who are suitable to adopt the child
or young person and provide them with a permanent family.
Clause 14
– Adoption by couple
In addition to the language clarifications
about who is considered to be a couple, this clause includes the first reference
in the Bill to a register of suitable people.
Clause 15 –
Adoption by step-parent
This clause addresses an anomaly that applies when an
adoption order is made in favour of a step-parent. In all other cases an
adoption order extinguishes birth parents’ rights and responsibilities
under provisions of the Family Law Act 1975.
In the case of adoption by a step-parent, the other
birth parent’s rights and responsibilities are not automatically
extinguished for the purpose of the Family Law Act unless the Family Court has
granted leave for the adoption by the step-parent to proceed. Without the leave
being granted, the non-continuing parent could at any time initiate proceedings
in the Family Court in relation to the child, which could impact on the child or
young person’s well-being and security.
The Bill makes it a requirement that step-parent adoption applicants
obtain leave to proceed with the adoption from the Family Court under Section
60G of the Family Law Act 1975, thus clearing the way to terminate the
rights and responsibilities of a non-continuing parent at the time of an
adoption order being made, in favour of the child or young person’s
step-parent.
Clause 16 – Adoption by one person
This
clause stipulates that for an adoption order to be made in favour of one only
person, the instrument of consent to adoption by the parent(s) must show their
consent to the adoption of the child or young person by one person, meaning
someone who is not in a domestic partnership, commonly referred to as being
“single”. This is a stronger requirement than Clause 18 (3) of the
Act which requires only that “regard” be given to the wishes of the
birth parents about the placement of the child or young person with one
person.
This amendment recognises that with Open Adoption, contact
between the child or young person, adoptive and birth parents will be
encouraged. If the birth parent(s) express a view regarding the adoptive
parent(s) domestic status, which is not fulfilled, this could become a
complicating factor in future contact arrangements.
Clause 18
– Approval of suitable people
This clause concludes the process of
decision-making about who can adopt.
People are required to apply in
writing to the chief executive for approval to be registered as suitable for the
placement of a child or young person for the purpose of adoption.
The
chief executive is then required to make the decision to approve or refuse to
approve the application, and to ensure consistency, direction is provided that
the same criteria are used to decide whether to place a person on the Register
of suitable people, as the Court is required to use in deciding an application
for an adoption order. These criteria are set out in section 39F (1)
(c).
The requirement for residence in the ACT to be eligible for approval
is re-stated in this clause.
Clause 19 – Register of suitable
people
The Bill distinguishes the separate process of approval and
registration of people as suitable to adopt, from that of the making of an
adoption order in favour of suitable persons, which is dealt with under Division
3.6 – Proceedings for an adoption order.
This clause states that
the chief executive must keep a register of people approved as suitable to adopt
and that the register also will include a record of people whose applications to
adopt are refused or withdrawn subsequent to an earlier approval.
The
chief executive is required to provide written advice to unsuccessful applicants
or those whose names are subsequently withdrawn from the register.
Sub
clause (2) (b) allows the chief executive to apply discretion regarding the
removal of applicants from the Register when they are living outside of the ACT
on a temporary basis.
This clause is further amended to make provision
for the repeal of legislation and instruments overtaken by the ACT Civil and
Administrative Tribunal Legislation Amendment Act 2008 (No 2). The decision
to refuse or withdraw approval under this clause becomes a reviewable decision
(Item 1 of Schedule 2 the Adoption Regulation 1993) and an application to review
the decision will be brought before the Administrative and Civil Appeals
Tribunal (ACAT).
The 1993 Act provided a process for reconsideration of a decision made
by the chief executive not to include the names of applicants on the Register of
suitable people. This involved requesting that the Minister convene a committee
to review the decision and make a recommendation to the chief executive to
either confirm or vary the decision. The chief executive was then obliged to
reconsider the decision and inform the applicants in writing of the outcome.
However, if no action was taken within fourteen days after the initial request
for review, the “chief executive shall be taken to have reconsidered and
confirmed that decision on the expiration of that period”.
The
requirements and time frame for convening a committee appointed by the Minister
to reconsider the decision and for the applicants to be informed, were found in
practice to be impractical and thus this provision was found to be an
ineffective review mechanism. The formation of ACAT provides an alternate review
mechanism, with the level of professional expertise required.
Division 3.3 Consent to Adoption
Clause 26 –
Consents of parents and guardians
Sub-clauses (1) (a) and (b) are amended
to require that the consent to adoption is obtained from each parent and
guardian of a child or young person. The previous wording in section 27 of the
Act, where consent was required by either a parent or guardian, conceivably
might allow for the chief executive or a parent to give sole consent, regardless
of the wishes of the other(s).
Further, in sub clause (2) this
amendment refers to the Parentage Act 2004 to define a
“parent” for the purpose of consent to adoption. This clause
states that the consent to adoption by a child or young person’s father is
only required if he is presumed to be the father under the Parentage Act
2004. This removes a previous legal impediment to the adoption of a child
or young person if their father’s consent was not able to be obtained when
paternity was not disclosed.
Difficulties arose in 2004, when the
Adoption Act was amended to remove the reference to the Birth,
Equality of Status Act when that Act was repealed. The section in that Act
referred to by the Adoption Act defined circumstances where presumptions
could be made about fathers whose consents were required to an adoption. The
Parentage Act 2004 is silent on this reference to parentage for
the purpose of consent to adoptions.
Two ACT Supreme Court Justices made
comments regarding this omission. In 2004 Connolly J commented that the present
Act requires consent of the actual father of the child – irrespective of
whether that person is known or not and that it has the effect of turning the
chief executive into an investigator of the paternity of every proposed adopted
child.
In 2006 Higgins J commented that while the Act does not define a
“father” for consent purposes there is no basis to exclude unnamed
fathers from their right to consent to an adoption, thereby denying them natural
justice. He expressed concern that should the consent be dispensed with in such
circumstances, the father may, at some stage in the future, seek to have the
adoption order overturned and this would not be in the child’s best
interests.
Sub clause (3) clarifies that the consent of a person who is
dead is not required. The 1993 Act was silent on this matter. In 2008 Refshauge
J commented on the lack of a clear exception to the requirement to seek the
consent of a birth parent to an adoption where that parent is
deceased.
Clause 27 – Information for certain parents
considering consent
This clause makes provision for consideration of the
particular vulnerability of parents considering a plan of adoption either in the
first 28 days after the birth of a child or when a parent has not yet attained
the age of 18 years. It specifies information that must be provided to parents
by the chief executive about the consent and revocation of consent process,
future contact with the child or young person and alternatives to adoption. It
also requires the chief executive to offer the parent the opportunity for
counselling if requested.
Birth parents under the age of 18 years of age
fall into a special category of vulnerable people because of the level of
maturity associated with their age. In present adoption legislation they are
treated no differently to other parents for the purpose of giving adoption
consent.
The amendments require that a young person under the age of
eighteen who wishes to give consent to the adoption of his or her child be
provided with access to counselling and independent legal advice.
General or limited consents - substitution at section 29 (3)
(d)
A simplification is made by substituting (d) by a step-parent in
place of
Section 29 (3) (d) “by a person referred to in section 18
(2)”:
Revocation of consent – substitutions at section 31
(1) (a) & (b)
Amendments to Sections 31 (1) (a) and Section 31 (1)
(b) substitute a 30 day period with 28 days. This is a practical amendment as 4
calendar weeks is easier to calculate than 30 days.
Defective consents
– substitution at section 34 (3)
Section 34(3) of the Act allows
for 7 days after birth before a mother can consent to the adoption of her child.
A consent taken before the 7 days has elapsed is defective.
The Bill
extends the period of time after the birth of the child before which the mother
can sign a valid consent to the child’s adoption from 7 to 28 days. This
amendment is consistent with most other Australian jurisdictions. As in Clause
21 this amendment recognises the particular vulnerability of parents considering
a plan of adoption in the period immediately following the birth of the child
and affords the parent a more reasonable period of time in which to formulate a
decision and plan for the child.
The legislative period that specifies
how soon after a child’s birth a parent may consent to the child’s
adoption needs to balance a number of competing interests and considerations.
These are the rights of parents to information and support to enable them to
make an informed and voluntary decision, the rights and interests of the child
to be cared for by his/her parents and family if possible; and the child’s
need to be placed with a permanent family as quickly as possible. It is
considered that 28 days is an appropriate period of time to take into account
each of these considerations.
Division 3.4 Placement of child or young
person before adoption
This division describes the process of placing
a child or young person with their prospective adoptive parent(s) in the time,
that in practice amounts to several months, which elapses between the consent to
their adoption becoming valid and the adoption order being made.
The
Bill expands and provides additional guidance in relation Sections 16 and 19 of
the Act to include provisions that will promote effective permanency planning
for the child or young person and include them in the planning process.
Clause 35A – Placement of child or young person before
adoption
New provisions in this clause which are included to
facilitate best practice and consistency with other parts of the Act
are:
• consultation with the child or young
person (refer to Clause 35B for further
guidance);
• application of the Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander child placement principles where the child or young
person is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander;
• reference to the suitability
criteria for persons eligible to adopt a child or young person; and
• commitment from the prospective adoptive parents to instigate
adoption proceedings within a period of 12 months.
Under this clause the
parental responsibility assigned to adoptive parents prior to the making of an
adoption order is a new definition of “daily care responsibility”,
taken from section 19 of the Children and Young People Act 2008.
Guardianship of the child or young person during this period is vested with the
chief executive and is further described at Clauses 36 and 37 which
follow.
Clause 35B – Consultation with child or young person
before deciding placement
The child or young person’s right to participate in decision making,
if after taking into account their intellectual and developmental capacity this
is reasonably practicable, is seen as a fundamental principle of this
legislation.
Provisions in Section 19 (2) (a) of the Act for ascertaining the
child or young person’s wishes in regard to their own adoption are very
general and do not provide sufficient guidance for a decision maker to ensure
the child’s wishes are heard, or in which circumstances this is
appropriate.
In order to ensure involvement of the child or young person
in the planning and decision making about their placement with an adoptive
family the amendments specify decisions requiring consultation with the child or
young person. These include:
• placement of the child or young person for
adoption;
• developing an Adoption Plan concerning the child or young
person;
• making an application for an order for the adoption of the
child or young person;
• any proposed change of the child or young
person’s name following their adoption; and
• contact
arrangements with birth parents or others connected with the child.
In
addition, to ensure that consultation with the child or young person is
effective, the amendments state that he or she must have:
• sufficient
intellectual and developmental capacity;
• adequate information in
accessible language concerning the decision;
• the opportunity to
express his or her views freely;
• information about the outcome of the
decision and an explanation of reasons for the decision;
• any
assistance that is necessary to understand the information and to express
views; and
• the opportunity for counseling.
Division
3.5 Guardianship before adoption
As part of the structural
clarifications of Part 3 of the Bill this Division describes the guardianship
status of children and young people prior to the making of an adoption
order.
Clause 36 – Guardianship before adoption
This
clause clarifies anomalies under the Act which states that in the case of
children and young people residing in the ACT, when all necessary adoption
consents have been signed or dispensed with, the child is automatically placed
in the guardianship of the chief executive. Whilst this is a vital provision
in the case of a local infant whose parent has consented to their adoption, and
thus relinquished all responsibility for the child’s care, there are other
circumstances where a plan of adoption is made that do not require the safeguard
of the chief executive assuming guardianship.
In the case of
step-parent adoption, the continuing parent consents to the step-parent adopting
the child while maintaining their own role as a legal parent. During the period
required to then obtain the consent or dispense with the consent of the
non-continuing parent, it is considered neither necessary nor desirable that the
chief executive assume temporary guardianship, given the child or young person
already has a continuing legal parent.
This clause also identifies other
exceptions to the desirability of the chief executive assuming guardianship
where:
• The principal officer of a private adoption agency is the
guardian. Whilst there is no private adoption agency operating in the ACT at
the present time this provision may be relevant in the future.
• A
child or young person is under the guardianship of the appropriate authority in
another state or territory. A system that enables reciprocal arrangements to
allow the adoption of a child or young person, who has or it is intended will
move to another state or territory with a prospective adoptive family, is in the
best interests of children and young people.
• The chief executive has
long term care responsibility for the child or young person under the
Children and Young People Act 2008. The option allowing for the adoption
of children and young people on long term care orders is likely to become used
increasingly as part of the Office for Children Youth and Family
Support’s permanency planning practices. These provide guidance about the
circumstances in which a change of guardianship is in the best interests of
children and young people.
Clause 37 – Guardianship of non-citizen child or young
person
This clause makes the first reference in the Bill to overseas
adoption and how it applies to ACT residents. Further, its placement within
the Division “Guardianship before adoption” demonstrates a
reconstruction of the Bill to bring together similarities, where they exist, in
the process of adopting a child or young person in the ACT, whether they were
born locally or overseas.
This clause does not apply to a child born and
adopted overseas, who is the subject of a full and permanent adoption order made
overseas.
In a number of countries a full and permanent adoption order
is made in the country of a child or young person’s birth before they
enter Australia. In other cases the process of adoption from overseas requires
that an adoption order in the ACT is made to confer guardianship with the
adoptive parent(s). Where this applies the chief executive is the guardian of
the child or young person until the adoption order is made as is the case with
locally born children and young people.
Children and young people who
enter Australia for the purpose of adoption, for whom a full and permanent
adoption order was not made in their country of birth, are subject to the
provisions of the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946. They
are defined as non-citizen children and enter Australia under the guardianship
of the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship. The powers and functions of
this guardianship are subsequently delegated to the chief executive until an
adoption order is finalised in the ACT. The effect of making an adoption order
is to transfer the child or young person into the guardianship of their adoptive
parent(s) and to give them an entitlement to Australian citizenship.
While the Act refers to the chief executive’s guardianship role of
certain overseas children and it contains no reference to obtaining this as a
delegation from the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship. The amendments
reference and explain this.
Later, Part 4A of the Bill describes in
detail the different processes that enable inter-country adoption to take
place.
Clause 39 (2)
Involves a substitution of language
“best interests” (of the child or young person)
instead of
“welfare and interests”.
Division 3.6 Proceedings for an
adoption order
This Division is a continuation of the structural
amendments that describe, in a sequence that reflects current child-centred
adoption practice, the steps to making an adoption order. Thus clauses 39A to
39K re-organise sections 19 – 26 of the Act.
Under this Division
various responsibilities are assigned to persons during the proceedings for an
adoption order.
Clause 39A – Application for adoption
order
This clause clarifies that it is the responsibility of adopting
parent(s) “A person who meets the requirements of division 3.2 (Who can
apply to adopt?)” or part 4A (Intercountry and overseas adoption) to apply
to the court for an adoption order.
Clause 39B – Notice
of application for adoption order
This clause substitutes Section 22 of
the 1993 Act.
Clause 39C – Parties to proceedings
This
clause substitutes Section 23 of the 1993 Act.
Clause 39D –
Report on proposed adoption
This clause introduces the concept of an
“adoption plan”, which is the central feature of a report provided
to the Court by the chief executive, or principal officer of a private adoption
agency if applicable, about the proposed adoption.
The report provides information about the circumstances of the child or
young person, the proposed adoptive parent(s) and the adoption plan. The
adoption plan is developed in age appropriate consultation with the child or
young person and their birth and adoptive parent(s) and may
include:
• preferences about the social, financial, and religious
characteristics of the adoptive family;
• arrangements for exchanging
information about the child or young person’s medical
background;
• arrangements for contact between the child or young
person and their birth family and/or significant others; and
• ways
that the child or young person may develop an understanding about his or her
family background and culture.
This clause changes the provision in the Act that allows consenting
parents to express “wishes” regarding their child’s adoptive
family to become an ability to express “preferences”. This change
allows the court to exercise discretion in taking into account whether all
aspects of the adoption plan are in the best interests of the child or young
person.
This clause also allows for other Central Authorities to provide a report,
in a format of their choice, when an application has been made in the ACT for an
adoption order with respect to a child or young person in their guardianship.
This flexibility means that an adoption plan will not be thwarted simply because
of a different reporting style, although the Bill sets out clearly what
information and considerations the Court will take into account prior to making
an adoption order.
Sub-clause (5) covers the event of the adoption of an
ACT child or young person by parents from another Convention Country and
provides for a report to be presented by the Chief Executive which includes
details of consideration given to placement of the child or young person outside
of Australia.
Clause 39E - Consultation with child or young person
before adoption order made
This clause re-iterates Clause 35B “Consultation with child or young
person before deciding placement” and the child or young person’s
right to participate in decision- making as a fundamental principle of this
legislation.
Clause 39F – Deciding application for adoption
order
This clause is a structural and language clarification of section
19 of the Act “Criteria for court’s discretion”. Rather than
the implied “discretion” allowable in the latter title, the criteria
upon which the court makes a decision about whether to make an adoption order
are clearly set out in these amendments.
Emphasis is given to the process
of taking consents by separating out in sub-clauses (1) (a) and (b) that giving
of consent and the period of time in which a consent may be revoked.
The
Bill also provides the direction that in deciding an application for an adoption
order the court must consider the suitability of the applicants, if reasonably
practicable the views expressed by the child or young person and whether the
best interests of the child or young person will be met by the making of the
order.
There is also provision under this clause for other additional
requirements that may apply to intercountry adoptions such as the agreement of
another Central Authority to the adoption and immigration law.
Clause
39G – Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or young
person
This clause invokes the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
child placement principle, in the decision-making process about an application
for an adoption order for a child or young person of Aboriginal or Torres Strait
Islander background.
Clause 39H – Adoption of non-citizen child
or young person
This clause is a reminder that the court must be assured
of compliance with all the provisions in the Act relating to inter-country
adoptions before making an order.
Clause 39I – Deciding
application for adoption order for person 18 years or older
This clause
requires the consent of the person to be adopted as it is conceivable that an
improper or exploitative application could be made by someone who previously
held a role as the person’s carer.
Clause 39J –
Notification to chief executive of adoption order
This clause closes the
loop in the adoption process - once an adoption order is made the chief
executive’s guardianship responsibilities for the child or young person
are extinguished.
Clause 39K – Alternative orders on refusal of
adoption order
This clause enables the court, on considering an adoption
application, to make instead of an adoption order, an order relating to the
guardianship or custody of the child or young person, or any other order that
the court considers will be in the child or young person’s best interests.
Such an order may be made in favour of the chief executive or any other
person.
Examples of where this clause might be used
include:
• recognition of a customary care arrangement within an
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or young person’s extended
family
• making an Enduring Parental Responsibility Order where the
court considers that it would not be in the child or young person’s
interests to legally extinguish their relationship to their birth
family.
Clause 39L – Discharge of adoption order
The
substitution of “consider” for “of the opinion” is
repeated elsewhere.
Taking into account the seriousness of this clause
which has the effect of extinguishing a parental relationship, this clause is
strengthened. Under the existing Act written notice of an application to
discharge an order must only be served to each person whose consent to the
adoption was required; this clause extends the obligation to serve notice to
include the other parties to the adoption, that is the adopted person if aged 12
years or older and each adoptive parent
Division 3.7 Conditional
Orders
A structural amendment, this Division heading was previously
3.3.
Division 3.8 Effect of adoption orders
A structural
amendment, this Division heading was previously 3.4.
Clause 43 –
General Effect
Sections 43 and 44 of he 1993 Act are simplified to
clarify child-parent legal relationship(s) following adoption and the adopted
person’s right of inheritance.
Clause 45 – Names of
adopted child or young person
The “best interests” principle
has to be applied to all decisions made under the Act, however this clause
recognises that there are some rights of the child or young person that need to
be specifically supported by legislation.
The United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the Child (UNCROC) states that a child has a right to retain
name and identity. This right is one that was disputed by a number of parties
during the public consultation process. The Government position is that UNCROC
must be applied.
The Act allows a child to be given any name on adoption,
including retaining an existing first name or surname, or replacing either or
both of these.
Even if not deemed important at the time of adoption,
retention of a child or young person’s given and family name into their
full name after adoption, are an important factor in promoting a secure sense of
identity.
The amendments require adoptive parents to preserve the
child’s given name(s) with the option to give the child additional names.
In certain circumstances adoptive parents may apply for a court order to change
the name(s). Such an application would require a report with a recommendation
from the chief executive that the change would be in the child’s best
interest.
This clause substitutes section 45 (2) with:
• a
requirement that the child or young person’s given name(s) be retained
after adoption;
• the option to add additional names after the given
name(s); and
• provision to appeal to the court after the adoption
order has been made, for name change in certain circumstances.
It is
envisaged the last provision would only be applied in special circumstances, for
example where the given name is likely to make the child or young person
vulnerable to ridicule or teasing in his or her every day life in Australian
society, or that having a different name to other family members can be
demonstrated as a barrier to the child or young person settling into their
adoptive family.
Distribution of property by trustee or personal
representative – substitution at section 47 (2)
Substitution is
made of “shall not” with “must not”.
Division
3.9 Interim Orders
A structural amendment, this Division heading was
previously 3.5.
Part 4 Recognition of Australian
adoptions
Clause 53 – Recognition of Australian
Adoptions
This clause is a language clarification, in simplified and
positive terms, that an adoption made in another Australian State or Territory
has the same effect as an order made in the ACT.
Part
4A Intercountry and overseas adoption
This part was
significantly re-written to take into account obligations under the Hague
Convention on the Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of
Intercountry Adoption (The Hague Convention or Convention). – Schedule 1
of the Bill.
The Australian Government became a signatory to the
Convention on 1 December 1998. The Convention came about largely to prevent
child trafficking and to ensure that the increasingly common practice of placing
children away from their country of origin for the purpose of adoption remained
consistent with Article 35 of UNCROC, which deals with child kidnapping and
selling.
The Convention establishes a system of reciprocal cooperation
between contracting states and provides a common set of fundamental principles
to guide intercountry adoption practice between them.
The objectives of
the Convention are:
• To establish safeguards to ensure intercountry
adoptions take place in the best interests of the child with respect for his/her
fundamental rights as recognised in international law;
• To establish a
system of cooperation amongst contracting states to ensure those safeguards are
respected and thereby prevent the abduction of, sale or trafficking in children;
and
• To secure recognition in contracting states of adoptions made in
accordance with the convention.
As a result of Australia ratifying the
Convention, all Australian states and territories have endorsed the articles of
the Convention. Under the agreement, a “Central Authority” is the
designated authority in each ratifying state, responsible for undertaking the
adoption process and ensuring that adoptions comply with Convention standards.
The Secretary of Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department is the
designated principal Central Authority in Australia for the Convention and each
state and territory has a designated Central Authority. In the ACT, the Chief
Executive, Department of Disability, Housing and Community Services is the
designated ACT Central Authority and is required to fulfil the functions of a
Central Authority in accordance with the Convention.
These functions
include:
• undertaking day-to-day casework involved in a particular
adoption;
• approving an application for the adoption of a child or
young person;
• giving consent to the adoption of a child or young
person;
• accrediting a body/bodies to carry out functions under the
Convention, where applicable; and
• revoking the accreditation of a
body for the purposes of the Convention, where applicable.
The
Commonwealth, states and territories are party to a further agreement named the
Commonwealth/State Agreement for the Implementation of the Hague Convention
on Protection of Children and Co-operation in respect of Intercountry
Adoption 2008, which sets out the terms of their relationship in
administering their duties as Central Authorities. This agreement includes
further obligations under Commonwealth law, including immigration law, in
relation to the overseas adoption.
Not all countries with which the ACT
has existing adoption agreements have ratified the Convention. In accordance
with the terms of the Commonwealth - State Agreement, the ACT Central
Authority can continue to arrange adoptions with countries that have not
ratified the Convention (commonly referred to as “non-Convention
countries”), if an agreement was already in existence at the time of
signing. These are known as Bilateral Agreements.
It is envisaged
several of Australia’s intercountry adoption programs will continue to
operate as non-Convention programs, subject to Bilateral Agreements, into the
future. In some instances, whilst particular countries have the infrastructure
to support Convention-compliant programs, those countries have indicated little
or no interest in becoming signatories to the Convention. In other instances
limited infra-structure is a barrier at present to the countries concerned.
Each of the Bilateral Agreements is reviewed on a regular basis, being
considered at least every three years, by the Community and Disability Services
Ministers' Conference. This process of review has been established to ensure
that Australian intercountry adoption practices remain compliant with the
Convention.
The above describes a complex set of arrangements in relation
to intercountry adoption that the ACT adoption legislation must now govern.
Prior to the amendments these were largely administered through policy.
Division 4A.1 Preliminary
Clause 54 –
Adoptions outside Australia
This clause directs that the adoption of a
child or young person outside of Australia is only recognised in the ACT if it
is covered by the provisions of this part of the Bill.
Clause 55
– State central authority
This clause identifies the chief
executive as the State central authority and that there is an obligation on him
or her to keep the Commonwealth central authority of current contact
details.
Clause 56 – Functions of State central
authority
This clause recognises the division of responsibilities between
State and Commonwealth central authorities, which are detailed in the
Commonwealth - State Agreement 2008.
Division 4A.2
Convention on intercountry adoption
Subdivision 4A.2.1 Adoption
under Convention
Clause 57- Adoption in ACT of ACT child or young
person by parents from Convention country
This clause allows for the
adoption of an ACT child or young person by parents from another country that is
a signatory to the Hague Convention. In this instance Australia would be the
“donor” country and the child would be raised by adoptive parents
outside of Australia.
It is envisaged that it is unlikely that this
clause is ever employed , but in the event that there is a child or young person
for whom it would be in their best interests to be adopted by parents who reside
in another country, this clause allows for this to occur.
In this clause
several exclusions from Division 3 of the Bill recognise the different
eligibility and reporting criteria involved in making an order for a child to by
adopted by parents outside Australia, which will be determined by the other
country’s legislation and willingness to recognise the ACT adoption as a
full and permanent adoption in the other country.
Clause 57A –
Report on child for intercountry adoption
This clause covers the
obligations upon the chief executive to provide a report to the central
authority of a Convention country about a proposed overseas adoption of an ACT
child. These obligations reciprocate those of other authorities placing a child
with ACT adoptive parents.
Clause 57B – Adoption in ACT of child
or young person from Convention Country by ACT parents
Adoptions orders
made in Convention countries are either “full and permanent” or
“simple” or “guardianship” orders (refer to the flow
chart on page 26). In the former case there is no necessity for further
adoption proceedings in the ACT and the adoption in the overseas country is
recognised in the ACT (see Subdivision 4A.2.2).
However simple or
guardianship adoptions mean that while an order is made in the overseas country
placing a child or young person in the care of adoptive parents, a further
order is required in the ACT to finalise and permanently extinguish the child
or young person’s legal relationship with their birth parents.
This
clause outlines the considerations that the court must take into account before
making an order in the ACT to finalise the adoption of a child or young person
born overseas. It is to be read in conjunction with clause 39F of Division 3
“Deciding an application for adoption order for child or young
person”.
The specific considerations under this clause are
that:
• the child or young person was previously resident in a
Convention country;
• the applicants are on the register of suitable
people;
• the central authority of the Convention country has agreed to
the adoption of the child or young person;
• the child or young person
is allowed to reside permanently in Australia;
• the child or young
person is present in Australia (the implicit expectation is that they are in the
care of their adopting parents); and
• arrangements for the adoption of
the child or young person have been facilitated by the chief executive or, if
applicable, a private adoption agency.
These checks ensure compliance
with the Hague Convention and that the child or young person’s best
interests are safe-guarded :
• the child or young person is in need of
adoption, consents have been properly obtained and the wishes of the parent(s)
and child or young person have been considered;
• that after
consideration of possibilities for placement of the child or young person within
their country of origin, it has been determined that an intercountry adoption is
in their best interests;
• that the prospective adoptive parents are
suitable to adopt the child or young person; and
• recognition of the
legal parent-child relationship between the child or young person and their
adopting parents will result in their entitlement to Australian citizenship (and
stability and permanency within the family unit).
Clause 57C –
Issue of adoption compliance certificate
When an adoption order is made
in the ACT for a child either born in a Convention country (subject to clause
57B) or going to live in a Convention country (clause 57) the chief executive
has an responsibility under the Hague Convention to issue an adoption compliance
certificate to the central authority of the Convention
country.
Subdivision 4A2.2 Recognition under
Convention
Clause 57D – Recognition of adoption of child or
young person from Convention country in that country
This clause applies
to the adoption of a child or young person in a Convention country, for which
the chief executive or a private adoption agency has made arrangements.
In relation to the flowchart on page 26, this clause applies to when an
order made overseas is categorised as a “full and permanent” order.
No further legal proceedings are required in Australia for the overseas order to
have the same effect as an adoption order made under the Act.
To ensure
the validity of the overseas order, sub-clause (1) (b) refers to the issue of an
adoption compliance certificate in the overseas country, the adoption becoming
recognised and effective in the ACT on and after the date the certificate takes
effect.
The dictionary defines adoption compliance certificate as
“a certification (however described) issued in accordance with the
Convention, article 23.” This allows for overseas authorities to
determine the form of certification as long as it certifies that the adoption
was made in accordance with the Convention. In terms of Australia’s
intercountry adoption program with the People’s Republic of China this
definition is given additional strength through the Family Law (Bilateral
arrangements – Intercountry Adoption) Regulations 1998, which
specifically recognises adoption compliance certificate issued by the
PRC.
Clause 57E – Recognition of adoption of child or young
person from Convention country to another Convention country
This clause
covers the recognition of an adoption carried out in a Convention country by
adoptive parents who were habitually resident in that country at the time. This
adoption does not involve the chief executive or a private adoption agency
accredited in the ACT and thus the requirements of Part 3 of the Bill do not
apply.
This clause applies to adoptions, verifiable with an adoption
compliance certificate” by expatriate Australian families living and
adopting in a Convention country and subsequently returning with their adopted
child or young person to the ACT.
Clause 57F – Effect of
recognition
This clause reiterates that a full and permanent overseas
adoption has the same effect as an adoption made in the Act and that this means
that the legal relationship that the child or young person had with their birth
parent(s) is terminated.
Clause 57G - Refusal to recognise adoption or
decision
This clause allows the chief executive to apply to the court for
a declaration to be made that refuses recognition of a “full and
permanent” adoption in a Convention country.
Resort to this
provision may only be made if the adoption can be demonstrated as being
manifestly contrary to public policy, taking into account the best interests of
the child or young person.
Clause 57H – Order terminating legal
relationship between child or young person and parents
This clause
provides for the chief executive to make an application to have the legal
relationship between the child or young person and their birth parent(s)
terminated, if the order in the overseas country has not done so.
This
may apply to “simple adoption” or “guardianship” orders
on the flowchart which must be “finalised” in Australia to have the
same effect as an adoption order made under the Act.
Under this provision
the court must be satisfied that a compliance certificate was issued by the
Convention authority, which signifies that the requirements under the Convention
regarding counselling and taking of consents from the Parent(s) have been
followed.
Clause 57I – Evidential value of adoption compliance
certificate
This clause provides that an adoption compliance certificate
is considered evidence that an adoption was carried out in accordance with the
Convention and the laws of the overseas country.
As above this clause
allows for overseas authorities to determine the form of certification as long
as it certifies that the adoption was made in accordance with the
Convention.
Division 4A.3 Bilateral arrangements for intercountry
adoptions
Australian States and Territories facilitate adoptions only
from countries that have signed the Hague Convention and countries with which
Australia has existing
bi-lateral arrangements in relation to adoptions
– referred to hereafter in the Bill as adoptions from prescribed overseas
jurisdictions. The bilateral agreements are reviewed on a regular basis by the
Community and Disability Services Ministers Conference.
Clause 57J -
Adoption in ACT of child or young person from prescribed overseas country by ACT
parents
This clause provides for the court to make an adoption order for
a child or young person from a prescribed overseas country in favour of ACT
parents. The child or young person must be present when the order is
made.
This order can only be made if the competent authority of the
prescribed overseas jurisdiction has agreed to the adoption and arrangements
that have been made by the chief executive or a private adoption agency for the
adoption of the child.
This clause covers the circumstance where the
adopting parents travel to the non-convention country and complete legal
proceedings there which enable the child to be placed with them, for travel back
to Australia. For the purposes of making the order, the child or young person
needs to be allowed to reside permanently in Australia.
In relation to
the flowchart on page 26, this clause applies to when an order made overseas is
categorised as a “simple adoption” and must be
“finalised” in Australia to have the same effect as an adoption
order made under the Act.
Clause 57K – Evidential value of
adoption compliance certificate – div 4A.3
This clause means that
an adoption compliance certificate, or certification of the adoption order made
in a prescribed overseas jurisdiction will be recognised as evidence that the
adoption was carried out in accordance with the law of that
country.
Division 4A.4 Recognition of other overseas
adoptions
This Division applies to adoptions made overseas in which
the chief executive was not involved in arranging.
57L –
Recognition of adoption order made outside Australia
This clause provides
for the recognition of an adoption order made outside Australia if it is
compliant with the Hague Convention. The Convention allows people domiciled or
resident overseas for a minimum of 12 months, for purposes other than adoption,
to adopt a child or young person from an overseas country, according to the laws
of that country.
Under this clause an adoption order made outside
Australia will have the same effect as an order made under the Act
if:
• the adoption is in accordance with and not been rescinded under
the law of that country; and
• as a result of the adoption, the
adoptive parent(s) take on the parenting role of the child or young person and
in this respect have a superior right to that of the child or young
person’s birth parent(s).
Under this clause the court may refuse to
recognise an adoption if it considers there has been a denial of natural justice
to any party.
Clause 57M – Declaration of validity of adoption
order made outside Australia
This clause is open to those adoptive
families described in this Division, who after their return to Australia, wish
to obtain a declaration of validity of the overseas adoption order. This
declaration would give the overseas order the same effect as an order made under
the Act.
Intercountry and overseas adoption
orders
Expatriate Adoptions
- privately
arranged between applicants and an authority in overseas country
Territory Supported Adoptions - arranged by the
chief executive as an intercountry adoption
Applicants are
assessed and Adoptive parents undertake
placed or withheld from the
legal proceedings in overseas
register of suitable
people. country – must have lived overseas for at least 12
months.
If approved as suitable, applicant
dossier
sent to overseas country.
Assessment undertaken
by
overseas authority; chief
Placement proposal of child or
young executive
not involved in
person is received by chief
executive. processing of application.
If proposal is accepted the
applicants
travel to overseas country to undertake
adoption
proceedings; they then return
to ACT with child or young person. At some
point in time adoptive
parents return to live in
ACT
or with child or young
person.
Adoption from
Convention
Adoption from prescribed overseas Adoption from overseas
country
country country (under Bilateral Agreement) whether
Convention country/not
Division 4A.2 Division 4 A.3
Division 4 A.4Overseas order
either“Simple”:
“Full & permanent”: “Other” - finalised
Adoption completed Order
recognisedconverted to full
recognised in ACT. overseas under when final order if full
& permanent
order when order other arrangements:
made in
ACT. Convention adoption
made in ACT that r
ecognised in
ACT.* or
declaration of terminates child’s
validity can be
legal relationship sought in
ACT.
with birth parents.
*Family Law (Bilateral arrangements –
Intercountry Adoption) Regulations 1998, entered into prior to People’s
Republic of China ratification of Hague, recognise adoption compliance
certificate issued by PRC, that are different from compliance certificates
issued under the Hague Convention
For a full list of countries with which
Australia has an intercountry adoption program the current status of orders
made in those countries is at
http://www.ag.gov.au/www/agd/agd.nsf/Page/IntercountryAdoption_Currentintercountryadoptionprograms
Part 5 Access to
Information
The absolute right of adopted people to access
identifying information about their adoption after turning 18 years is now
provided in all Australian state and territory adoption legislation except for
the Northern Territory, where a veto may be placed on the release of
information.
The 1993 Act allows access to information by birth
parents, adoptive parents and some types of birth relatives, as well as the
adopted person, after the adopted person has turned eighteen. This is the
widest eligibility categories of any Australian state or territory. In the Act,
these categories of eligible applicants are termed “associated
persons”. In addition, there are very few restrictions on the type of
information that can be supplied to “associated persons”. Access is
allowed to most information available to the Chief Executive about a particular
adoption, placing restrictions only on information stating that the adopted
person was born as the result of rape or incest.
Initial misgivings
expressed by some other jurisdictions that information in the ACT would be too
readily available to too many people have proved to be unfounded and the supply
of adoption information has proceeded largely without controversy. Since the
legislation was enacted there has been a steady increase in the number of
applications but no letters of complaint to the Minister or Ombudsman about the
access to information provisions since 1997. This suggests that the provisions
are widely accepted in the ACT community.
The Act also includes
provision for parties to adoptions who do not want to be contacted after another
party has received identifying information to place a “veto” on
contact. Contacting against a veto is an offence under the Act although there
have been no convictions to date.
The ability to veto contact was considered
important to protect the privacy of those who were involved in an adoption
process in an era when it was believed the adoption would remain secret
indefinitely and future contact would be impossible. The veto provision does
not apply if there has already been contact.
Since 1993, most adoption
orders made in the ACT have some degree of openness with ongoing information or,
in some cases, regular contact. Local adoptive parents and birth parents are
now well aware that future contact between an adopted person and their family of
origin is a strong possibility while many families who have adopted from
overseas are now exploring future avenues of contact and reunion for their
children.
The administrative unit that provides most post adoption
information services is termed in the Act the “Adoption Information
Service”. The unit provides information, registers vetoes and assists
with reunion, as well as providing informal counselling.
Clause 58
– Definition of associated persons, birth parent, birth relative and
identifying information
This clause provides new expanded definitions for
“associated person” – to include as a birth relative a person
born after the child or young person was adopted who would have been a relative
if the adoption had not taken place. An example of this expanded group of
relatives is sibling of the adopted person who was born after the
adoption.
Clause 59 – Application – pt 5
This
clause recognises the provisions under the Act that allowed for an objection to
contact to be made and/or contact vetos to be lodged. These options are removed
under the Bill and will not be allowable after the commencement of the Bill.
Clause 60 – Confidentiality of records
Sub clause (1)
(c) substitutes “adopted child” with “adopted person” as
adopted children and young people under the age of 18 years are not entitled to
access identifying information without approval in writing from each adoptive
parent and each birth parent. The requirement of approval from the latter
assumes, in accordance with open adoption that there has already been an
exchange of personal information.
Clause 61 (3) – Records of
adoptions
This clause refers to the obligation upon a private adoption
agency (if in operation) to provide the chief executive with the particulars of
persons associated with the application for an adoption order –
“adopted person” substitutes for “adopted child” and the
author of the report on the proposed adoption is re-referenced to clause
39D.
Clause 68 – Restriction on entitlement to apply
Sub
clauses (1), (3), (4) (a) and (b), (5)and (7) substitute “adopted
child” with “adopted person” as above in clause 60
(1).
Sub clause (2) (a) specifies “step parent” as a
clarification, rather than “a person mentioned in section 18 (2).
Clause 70 – Objection to contact – adoptions before Adoption
Amendment Act 2009 (No 2)
This clause sets out the provisions
under the Act, to make an objection to contact, which will apply only in
relation to an adoption order made before the commencement of the Bill. The
language used is simplified for the purpose of clarity.
Clause 71
– Contact veto by person other than adopted person – adoptions
before Adoption Amendment Act 2009 (No 2)
This clause sets out the
provisions under the Act, to lodge a contact veto, which will apply only
in relation to an adoption order made before the commencement of the Bill.
The language used is simplified for the purpose of clarity.
Clause 72
– New note
A new note to subsection (1) makes it clear that contact
veto provisions will only apply to orders made before the commencement
of the Bill. Thus the provision under “counselling services”, that
information subject to a contact veto may only be passed on to an applicant
after they have attended a counselling interview with an approved counsellor,
will only apply to orders made before the commencement of the Bill.
Clause
73 – Declaration that contact not be attempted
This clause
reaffirms that counselling must be provided to any applicant before information
is released to them, if there was an objection to contact or a contact veto
lodged about an adoption made prior to the commencement of the Bill.
The applicant is also required under this clause to sign a declaration
that they will not attempt to either directly or indirectly contact the person
who lodged the objection.
This clause respects the expectation of privacy
that, in the past, persons who wished to have no contact with other parties to
an adoption order, may have relied upon.
Clause 74 - Birth details of
adopted person born overseas
As above “child” and
“adopted child” are substituted with “person” and
“adopted person”.
Clause 77 – Family Information
Service
This is a new clause heading, replacing the “Adoption
Information Service”. This former title of the unit that administers
this part of the Bill may be misleading and does not truly reflect the work of
the unit. Counseling and mediation services are offered to all parties to an
adoption and reunions may be arranged between them. A more appropriate title is
the Family Information Service.
Clause 91 – Interfering with
upbringing of child
Sub clause (b) specifies “step parent”
as a clarification, rather than “a person mentioned in section 18 (2).
Clause 104 – Registration of orders and
Clause 106
– Particulars of interstate orders
Substitution of
“child” with “person”.
Clause 108A –
Financial support of adopted children and young people
This clause
introduces new provisions. Section 56 (3) of the Act prevents the chief
executive from providing financial support to an adoptive family after an
adoption order has been made.
The amendments allow financial assistance
to be provided in cases where adoption would be in the child or young
person’s best interests but financial considerations may be a barrier to
this happening.
This clause limits financial support to be provided on
behalf of a child or young person, who prior to the adoption was the subject of
a daily care responsibility or long term care responsibility provision, under
the Children and Young People Act 20008.
It is envisaged this
type of assistance would be appropriately offered in instances such
as:
• a financially disadvantaged foster family, who have cared for the
child for a number of years, applying to adopt that child; or
• where a
child with high and complex needs has a plan of adoption that may not be able to
be effected due to expected exceptional care and medical costs.
The
extent of the assistance would be at the discretion of the chief executive and
subject to regular review.
Clause 113 – Contents of reports not to
be disclosed
This clause reflects the structural changes to the Bill.
The report about a proposed adoption provided to court the by the chief
executive is now referred to as a Section 39D report rather than a report
pursuant to Section 19 of the 1993 Act.
Clause 121 –
Regulation-making power
In this clause “children” sis
substituted with “people” to reflect that the Bill is concerned with
promoting the well-being of adopted people throughout their
lives.
Part 20 Transitional – Adoption Amendment
Act 2009 (No 2)
This part provides for the transitional
arrangements for a period of up to two (2) years from the commencement of the
Adoption Act 2009 that are to be employed in relation to consents, placement,
access and applications for an adoption order made under the pre-amendment
Act.
Schedule 1 Convention on Protection of Children
and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption
This is a
new schedule which is to be applied under Division 4A of the
Bill.
Dictionary
New definitions are
provided in the Bill
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or
young person – an updated definition to replace “Aboriginal
child” and “Aborigine”, consistent with the definition in the
Children and Young People Act 2008.
adoption compliance certificate –a
certificate issued in accordance with article 23 of the Hague Convention, or in
accordance with the Commonwealth Bilateral Arrangements Regulations, is
considered evidence that an adoption was carried out in accordance with the
Convention and the laws of the overseas country.
adoption order – means an order for the adoption of
a person made under this Bill. This also applies to full and permanent adoption
orders made in another jurisdiction and recognised in the ACT under part
4A.
central authority – new inclusion, based on the
definition in article 6 of the Convention, applies only to Part 4A intercountry
adoption
child - to be used where age rather than
relationship with another is relevant. The Act refers to a child as being a
person under the age of 18 years but the Bill makes the distinction between a
child, being a person under 12 years of age and young people, persons between
the ages of 12 and 17 years – this distinction is in line with
contemporary practice and the Children and Young People Act
2008.
competent authority - prescribed in the
Convention, applies only to intercountry adoption
Commonwealth Bilateral Arrangements Regulation – means
the Family Law (Bilateral Arrangements – Intercountry Adoption)
Regulations 1998 (Cwth) which was entered into prior to People’s
Republic of China ratification of the Hague Convention and recognises the
adoption compliance certificate issued by PRC, that are different from
compliance certificates issued under the Hague
Convention.
Commonwealth Central Authority – is the
Attorney General’s Department.
Convention - also referred to as the Hague Convention
– at Schedule 1 of the Bill.
Convention country - as
further described in Commonwealth Family Law (Hague convention on
Intercountry Adoption) Regulations 1998, regulation
4.
Country - a structural clarification, which
transfers this meaning under part 4 of the Act into the definitions
section.
intercountry adoption - a definition not
previously provided, as prescribed under the
Convention.
non-citizen child or young person - a language
clarification, has the same meaning as non-citizen child, referred to in the
Commonwealth Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act
1946.
prescribed overseas jurisdiction - a
country that is not a signatory to the Convention, but with whom Australia has a
bilateral agreement relating to intercountry adoption.
register of
suitable people - Division 3.2 of the Bill “Who can adopt?”
makes a clear link between all categories of applicants needing to be entered
on the register of suitable people to be eligible seek an adoption order in the
ACT. This clarifies that the register is more than an administrative
tool.
responsible person – this definition, which
applies to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people is
updated, substituting its applicability to
“an Aboriginal child”
with relation to “an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander child or young
person”.
State central authority –
for the ACT means the chief executive of the Department of Disability
Housing and Community Services
step-parent – this
definition clearly identifies the separate provisions for step-parents under
clause 15 of Division 3.2 of the Bill “Who can adopt?”. This
clarification is an improvement on section 18 (2) which describes a step- parent
relationship without naming it.
young person – is
introduced as a new status consistent with contemporary child-centred practice
and the Children and Young People Act 2008.
Further amendments,
mentions of child, child’s and children
Throughout the Bill
“child” is substituted with “child or young person”
where this denotes the age of the individual rather than their descendancy
from/relationship with another.
Further amendments, mentions of
welfare and interests
References in the Act to “welfare and
interests” are replaced with “best interests” in the Bill as
this is the contemporary term used in child-centred practice.
Further
amendments, mentions of welfare
References in the Act to
“welfare” are replaced with “wellbeing” as this is the
contemporary term used in child-centred
practice.
Schedule 1 Consequential
amendments
This schedule deals with consequential amendments
required to other legislation and regulations as a result of the amendments made
in the Bill
Part 1.1 Adoption Regulation
1993
[1.5] Access to information
Section
10
This clause which refers
“Prescribed information – incest and sexual assault” is
omitted in the Bill.
Such information, while possibly distressing, is
important for an adopted person to understand. The circumstances of their
birth, and in the case of incest, may be vital medical
information.
People requesting information about an adoption are always offered
assistance and counselling – although this is voluntary - so that
difficult information can be presented in a sensitive manner.
[1.6] Maintenance of records
Section 13
New
provisions are substituted in the Bill:
• Specific provisions about
the retention of adoption records are no longer required as these are covered
under the Territory Records Act 2002 which governs the storage, retention
and disposal schedules for all records held by ACT Government agencies.
• The provision that all adoption records held by a private
adoption agency must be kept in a lockable, fire-resistant steel cabinet is
retained in the Bill as a private agency is not subject to regulation by the
Territory Records Act 2002.
[1.7] Schedule 2, item 1 - Reviewable decisions
This clause
inserts items in the list of reviewable decisions:
• 1 - refusal to
approve an application to be placed on the register of suitable persons to
adopt; and
• 1A – removal of a person’s name from the
register.
This clause is amended to make provision for the repeal of legislation and
instruments overtaken by the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal
Legislation Amendment Act 2008 (No 2). The decision to refuse or withdraw
approval to be placed on the Register of suitable persons to adopt becomes a
reviewable decisions before the Administrative and Civil Appeals Tribunal
(ACAT).
Part 1.2 Children and Young People Act
2008
[1.1] Care plans – stability
proposals
Section 456 (5)
This is a consequence of structural
amendment, replacing section 21 of the Act with clause 39G. This section refers
to the obligation upon the chief executive to include consideration of the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander child placement principle if adoption is
part of a proposal for long term placement for an Aboriginal or Torres Strait
Islander child or young person.
Part
1.3 Discrimination Act
1991
[1.2] Adoption
Section 25A (a), (b)) and
(c)
These amendments are consequential to clarifying and structural amendments
in the Act. They refer to exceptions under the Disability Act which allow the
chief executive to determine the suitability or unsuitability of people in
making a decision to approve persons to be placed on the register as suitable
for placement of a child or young person, placement of a child or young person
and removal from the register of suitable people.
Part 1.4 Parentage Act 2004
[1.3] Section 29 (3)
This amendment is a language simplification, substituting “Gifts
inter vivos” with “Gifts between living people”
Part 1.4 Testamentary Guardianship Act
1984
[1.4] Application of Act
Section 3
(2)
This amendment picks up a previously missed consequential amendment
at the time of the enactment of the Adoption Act. The Adoption of Children
Ordinance 1965 is replaced with the
Adoption Act 1993.
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