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Survey: Adoption by gays gaining favor
AP | 10/29/03 | DAVID CRARY

Posted on 10/29/2003 12:16:54 AM PST by kattracks

NEW YORK (AP) — About 60 percent of the nation's adoption agencies now accept applications from gays and lesbians, though resistance remains strong among many church-affiliated agencies, a new survey by a leading adoption institute says.

Adam Pertman, executive director of the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, predicted the holdouts would grow fewer in number as more homosexuals try to become parents.

"We started out near zero, and just within the last decade we're up to 60 percent," Pertman said. "The reality on the ground is way outpacing the policy debate."

Debate over parenting by gays has been an important element in the broader dispute over whether to permit same-sex marriage. Opponents of gay adoption say children do best growing up with both a mother and father, and they contend same-sex marriages would make it easier for gays to adopt. Supporters say gays, whether single or as a couple, can provide a loving home for children who otherwise would be in institutions or foster care.

The Donaldson Institute survey did not attempt to estimate the number of children adopted by gays; instead, it surveyed 307 adoption agencies — 277 private and 30 public — regarding their policies.

According to the survey, 60 percent of the agencies accept applications from self-identified gays and lesbians, and 40 percent of the agencies have placed children with such parents.

The agencies most likely to place children with homosexuals were either public, private and secular, or Jewish- and Lutheran-affiliated, the institute said. Other agencies that were affiliated with religious denominations were less likely to welcome applications from gays, it said.

Attitudes also varied according to the agencies' focus. The institute said agencies specializing in children with special needs or in international adoptions were relatively more open toward gays.

About half the agencies said they routinely informed birth parents before placing a child with a gay adoptive parent. About one-fourth of the agencies said some birth parents had objected to such a placement or specifically asked that their child not be placed in a gay-led household.

Though a majority of agencies worked with lesbians and gays, only 19 percent made specific efforts to seek them out, the survey found.

Overall, the institute said the findings were good news for gays who want to become parents.

"For homosexuals wishing to become parents, the results paint a more encouraging picture than is often portrayed or perceived," the survey summary said. "Although stereotypes and misconceptions still perpetuate policy and practice... the willingness of adoption agencies to accept gay and lesbian adults as parents means more and more waiting children are moving into permanent, loving families."

Data for the survey was collected in 2001 and 2002, then compiled and assessed for the adoption institute by David Brodzinsky, a psychology professor and adoption expert at Rutgers University.

Florida is the only state that explicitly bans adoption by any gay person; its law is being challenged by gay foster parents backed by the American Civil Liberties Union. Mississippi bans adoption by gay couples, while Utah forbids adoption by any unmarried couple, including gay couples.

In August, the American Bar Association approved a recommendation that all states and courts allow gay partners and unmarried heterosexual couples to adopt children together.

Such adoptions give both parents legal rights and allow children to qualify for inheritance and other benefits from both parents. Currently, many states allow only one unmarried adult to adopt a child, even if the child will live with two adults who act as parents.

The spread of gay adoption had been opposed by many conservative organizations, who say the practice puts gay-rights objectives ahead of children's best interests.

"Unmarried and homosexual partners simply cannot provide the stability that married heterosexual couples can give," says a position paper on the issue by Concerned Women for America.

Officials in Florida have taken a similar stance in defending their ban. Attorney General Casey Walker argued in court that the state has a right to legislate its "moral disapproval of homosexuality" and its belief that children need a married mother and father.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: homosexualadoption; homosexualagenda

1 posted on 10/29/2003 12:16:54 AM PST by kattracks
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To: kattracks
What a misleading article! It intones the general public is in favor or gays adopting kids, but it is the politicized adoption agencies, hamstrung by laws, that are just allowing gays to adopt.
2 posted on 10/29/2003 12:22:48 AM PST by KC_Conspirator (This space for rent)
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To: KC_Conspirator
Ditto.
3 posted on 10/29/2003 12:37:36 AM PST by Ruth A.
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To: kattracks
Officials in Florida have taken a similar stance in defending their ban. Attorney General Casey Walker argued in court that the state has a right to legislate its "moral disapproval of homosexuality" and its belief that children need a married mother and father.

Now if the state would only legislate its "moral disapproval of killing by starvation."

4 posted on 10/29/2003 12:41:27 AM PST by drlevy88
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To: KC_Conspirator
Yep, it's a headline from the Liberal media that "doesn't exist".

http://www.maynardije.org/news/diversityheadlines/
5 posted on 10/29/2003 12:47:14 AM PST by JoJo Gunn (Liberalism - Better Living through Histrionics ©)
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To: kattracks
The surprising thing to me is the average American public has been able to hold out even this long. Even the continual waves of the water will erode even the strongest rock. The continual waves of main stream media propaganda are wearing down even the most moral people. It's a scientific psychological principle that cannot be denied. If the media were pushing the opposite message, then the results would be reversed. The answer, in my opinion, is for conservatives to get involved again in all levels of politics, including local politics and take back the positions where the decisions that affect us from our day to day lives are made. It took us forty years to lose the institutions and it might take another forty years to take them back but we need to start doing it.
6 posted on 10/29/2003 12:47:19 AM PST by Free2Be49 (A wise man's heart inclines him toward the right, but a fool's heart toward the left. Ecc. 10:2 RSV)
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To: kattracks
what they don't say is that many social workers who decide these cases are gay...I know of two Christian families who were denied adoption on minor details that had nothing to do with the family's fitness:

One was an ex nun and her husband, denied because they were too "rigid" in answering the questions about what they would do if their teenaged child wanted to go on the pill, and the devout couple said they would discuss with their child that it was wrong, and not allow it. The social worker turned them down for being too "rigid"...

another a pastor and his wife denied because they were not the right "minority" even though the tribe supported their adoption of a special needs child.

Later, the lesbian white social worker handling the case made a snide remark to the tribal social worker saying that she didn't feel right for a Chrisitan to adopt an Indian child. (the child's mother was born again Christian). The Indian social worker replied sweetly: Ah, but you see, we support the adoption because we have freedom of religion on our reservation...
7 posted on 10/29/2003 1:15:09 AM PST by LadyDoc (liberals only love politcially correct poor people.)
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