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FAQs & Tips
Adoption
Foster Care


Adoption

Commonly Asked Questions about Ohio Adoptions  (Ohio)

Adoptions Raise “Right to Know” Questions (Ohio)

Ohio Law Permits Adult Adoptions
Ohio law allows adults who are totally and permanently disabled or mentally retarded to be adopted.  In addition, Ohio law permits adult adoption for any adult who has established a relationship with adoptive parents through a child-foster caregiver or child-stepparent relationship as a minor, assuming the adult child consents to the adoption. 

Demystifying International Adoptions

Insurance May Cover Medical Expenses in Adoption Cases

Using An Adoption Agency (BBB Tips)

Adoption FAQs (Nolo.com)
Slow loading but worth the wait! 

Publications From The National Adoptions Clearinghouse
Fact sheets, Statistics, Legal resources, National and International Adoptions, IRS/Tax Information, agency listings and more.

International Adoptions
Guidelines, facts and updates on how to adopt children from other countries.

US Citizens Adopting While Living Abroad

For More Help See
Adoption Laws

Specific Agencies
Complaints & Accountability 

Fathers' Rights

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Foster Care

Foster Parent Adoption: What Parents Should Know

North American Council On Adoptable Children
Tells how to adopt children in foster care.

State By State Foster Care Links

Contains FAQs & resources for foster parents, state-by-state listing of foster child organizations.

For More Help See
Adoption Laws
Specific Agencies 
Complaints & Accountability

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Specific Adoption Agencies (Links)

Adoption Agencies

Foster Care Agencies

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Adoption Agencies

The Kinship Permanency Incentive Program (Ohio)
Financial Help for relatives or non relatives who take over the full time substitute care of a child not their own. To qualify you must
have a long-standing relationship or bond with the child or family. Caretakers will receive an initial payment of $1,000 per child to defray the costs of initial placement and may receive five hundred dollars per child at each six-month interval to support the stability of the child's placement in the home up to a maximum of $3,500.  Participation in this program does not preclude these families from receiving Child Only TANF benefits; time-limited incentive payments are in addition to TANF benefits. 

USA Adoption Resources By State
Provides state-by-state listing of adoption agencies and lawyers.  

Adoption And Finding Your Birth Parents (All 50 States & DC)

Adopting Abroad
(The Global Adoption Network)
This unique alliance of adoption agencies has developed special procedures that allow them to work together using the same resources abroad. By sharing their resources, these agencies reduce competition and, consequently, the cost of international adoptions.

International Adoption Agencies

Adoption.com  
Offers community education, recruits and prepares families for the adoption process, matches children with approved parents, supervises adoption placement, and coordinates post placement services.

The National Council For Adoption (202) 328-1200
Association of attorneys and agencies promoting domestic and international adoption.  They also will guide prospective adoptive parents through the process and pitfalls.
 

National Adoption Center (800) 862-3678
Adopting in the US. This service brings children online through photographs and descriptions and offers a wealth of information that will help you learn more about adoption.    

National Adoption Information Clearinghouse
As part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the clearinghouse lists adoption agencies, experts, literature, laws and crisis pregnancy centers among other things.  For $10 you can receive a 115 page book called "Adoption Guide To The Internet" which lists over 1000 adoption related Web sites.   

For More Help See
FAQs & Tips
Adoption Laws
Complaints & Accountability

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Foster Care Agencies

State By State Foster Care Links
Contains FAQs & resources for foster parents, state-by-state listing of foster child organizations.

Ohio AIRS Statewide Social Services Directory (Call 211 to speak to a live person)
Thousands of links to Help agencies in your county.

United Way Help Line  (For All 50 States, DC & Puerto Rico)
Choose Ohio, select your city, and look up help agencies galore!!! Their stellar search engine can lead you to any social service topic you can think of.  Just type in the words "Children and (the name of your topic)".

For More Help See
FAQs & Tips
Adoption Laws
Complaints & Accountability

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Adoption Laws

The Kinship Permanency Incentive Program (Ohio)
Financial Help for relatives or non relatives who take over the full time substitute care of a child not their own. To qualify you must
have a long-standing relationship or bond with the child or family. Caretakers will receive an initial payment of $1,000 per child to defray the costs of initial placement and may receive five hundred dollars per child at each six-month interval to support the stability of the child's placement in the home up to a maximum of $3,500.  Participation in this program does not preclude these families from receiving Child Only TANF benefits; time-limited incentive payments are in addition to TANF benefits. 

Adoption Legal Info In All 50 States & DC (JEEP)
Scroll down for legal information and government and non-profit help in Ohio.

Adoption Statutes (All 50 States & Territories)
Links to just about every adoption law on the state and federal level and has key court rulings.

International Adoptions
Guidelines, facts and updates on how to adopt children from other countries.

Publications From The National Adoptions Clearinghouse
Fact sheets, Statistics, Legal resources, National and International Adoptions, IRS/Tax Information, agency listings and more.

http://www.adopting.com
Comprehensive listing of Internet resources on how to adopt a child.  It lists everything from adopting support groups and bulletin boards to photos of children seeking adoption and information on the rights of adoptees.

For More Help See
Fathers' Rights
FAQs & Tips
Complaints & Accountability


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Adoptees & Birth Parents

Birthparents-I Have A Name-Now What?
Step By Step What To Do. See Also People Search (Consumer-SOS)

National Find Family Registry For People with Disabilities
Open to people seeking each other even though just bits of information are available.
May help reunite those who lost touch with family members with disabilities for other reasons too, like divorce, foster care or adoption, personal problems or misfortune.

Searching For Birth Relatives-A Factsheet For Families

Concerned United Birthparents (800) 822-2777
National support and search organization for those affected by adoption.  

Search Registries Reuniting Adoptees & Their Birthparents (Consumer-SOS)

Tracing Your Genealogy
(Consumer-SOS)

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Fathers' Rights

Forms On Custody, Legitimation Visitation & Child Support (Consumer-SOS)

Putative Fathers Rights (All 50 States & DC)
Select Ohio and scroll down to adoption/putative fathers. Summary of a putative father's right to notice of adoption or termination proceedings when the child is relinquished for adoption at birth or shortly thereafter. This summary includes statutes addressing voluntary declaration of paternity requirements.

For More Help See
Adoption Laws
FAQs & Tips
Complaints & Accountability

Child Support/Custody &Visitation 

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Complaints & Accountability

www.theadoptionguide.com
For adoptive parents to check out complaints and investigative reports on agencies and facilitators.

For More Help See
Adoption Laws
FAQs & Tips
Lawyers, Courts, & Self Help

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Other Resources

Adoptees Internet Mailing List Home Page
Provides a centralized e-mail address so that adoptees can exchange information.  Every message sent to the list goes to all active members.  

http://www.adopting.org/
Has information on agencies, attorneys, books, articles and adoption-related cards and gifts.  

Adoption Info In All 50 states & DC (JEEP)
Scroll down for legal information and government and non-profit help in your state.

Directory Of Women's Groups By Subject & State (All 50 States & DC)
Use their search engine to locate over 9000 feminists groups and help agencies.

http://www.adopting.com
Comprehensive listing of Internet resources on how to adopt a child.  It lists everything from adopting support groups and bulletin boards to photos of children seeking adoption and information on the rights of adoptees.

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Search Registries 

The International Soundex Reunion Registry (702) 882-7755
This mutual consent registry provides free help to anyone separated from a blood relative by adoption, divorce or war.  If the agency gets a match, it will put both parties together.

Adoptees & Birthparents
Site helps reunite adoptees looking for their birth parents and birth parents seeking children they put up for adoption.  It includes a state by state list of adoptees and birth parents who are conducting such searches.

National Find Family Registry For People with Disabilities
Open to people seeking each other even though just bits of information are available.
May help reunite those who lost touch with family members with disabilities for other reasons too, like divorce, foster care or adoption, personal problems or misfortune.

http://www.adoption.com/reunion
Includes lists of searching adoptees and birth parents, along chat rooms and tips on tracing family histories.  

United Way Help Line  (For All 50 States, DC & Puerto Rico)
Choose Ohio, select your city, and look up help agencies galore!!!
Their stellar search engine can lead you to any social service topic you can think of.  Just type in the words "Children and (the name of your topic)".

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Tracing Your Genealogy

The following links may help you trace your family tree to your ancient ancestors.

www.usgenweb.org
Volunteers at this grass-roots site are transcribing genealogical data previously buried in musty libraries and county courthouses. Pending projects include a tombstone database and the transcription of all pension related materials from wars before 1900.

www.rootsweb.com
The grandfather of genealogy sites hosts the oldest e-mail list, ROOTS-L.  It's still the best place for rookies to find others researching shared surnames. 

www.familysearch.org
This easy to use database, managed by the Mormon Church, seems most helpful if you're of British or Finnish descent.

www.cyndislist.com
Cyndi Howells of Puyallup, Wash., maintains this portal linking to tens of thousands of sites.

www.nara.gov/genealogy
A guide to government records that are useful to genealogists, from the National Archives and Records Administration.

www.afrigeneas.com
Databases, discussion groups, and other tools for African-Americans.  


www.jewishgen.org

Similar content for those of Jewish descent.  

United Way Help Line  (For All 50 States, DC & Puerto Rico)
Choose Ohio, select your city, and look up help agencies galore!!!
Their stellar search engine can lead you to any social service topic you can think of.  Just type in the words "Children and (the name of your topic)".

For More See People Search

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Adoption and Foster Care-Ohio