Monday, May 10, 2021

N-600K Fact Sheet

Overview

The N-600K form is used to apply for naturalization of a child who regularly resides outside of the U.S. with his U.S. citizen parent. For a child to be eligible for citizenship under the N-600K, they must: be under 18 years old, have at least one U.S. citizen parent, be residing outside of the U.S., be temporarily and legally present in the United States to complete the N-600K process for an interview, and have a U.S. citizen parent who has resided in the U.S. for five years or more. The form must be filed by the U.S. citizen parent on behalf the child. If the U.S. citizen parent does not meet the residency requirement or if they are deceased, a U.S. citizen grandparent may file for the child. Proof of residence is required to verify that the U.S. citizen parent or grandparent has lived in the U.S. for at least five years. All forms and supporting documents and filing fee will be mailed to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) at the address designated on the Application for Citizenship and Issuance of Certificate Under Section 322 | USCIS. If your N-600K application is approved by USCIS, your child will be able to receive a Certificate of Citizenship at the interview.

The criteria listed below (A – C) must be met for adopted child to be eligible for naturalization under Section 322 of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA). Section D explains the procedure to file the N-600-K form.

Orphans Adopted Abroad Who Continue to Live Abroad with their U.S. Citizen Parents

A. Typical scenarios would be U.S. families living abroad, such as dual citizens, business people, and foreign missionaries. U.S. military members on orders are exempt and can use the Section 320 procedure.

B. Applicable Law: Child Citizenship Act of 2000 (CCA), Pub. L. No. 106-395, 114 Stat.1631, Section 322 of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952

C. Families may use provisions of Section 322 of the INA if they meet the following criteria:

1. U.S. citizen parent or grandparent, who was physically present in the U.S. or outlying possessions for at least five years, at least two of which were after the age of 14;

2. Child is under age 18 by the time the entire process is completed;

3. Child is residing outside the U.S. in the legal and physical custody of the applying parent;

4. Child temporarily present in the U.S. pursuant to a lawful admission and is maintaining such lawful status; AND

5. Child must meet “orphan” definition or “adopted child” or “adoptable child” definition.

D. Section 322 Procedure:

1. U.S. citizen parent or grandparent or legal counsel files form N-600-K with supporting documentation and filing fee at the address listed on the form at Application for Citizenship and Issuance of Certificate Under Section 322 | USCIS.

The interview can take place at any USCIS field office (in the U.S., not abroad);

2. Preliminary adjudication within 5 to 6 months—if approved, the applicant receives an approval notice on Form G-56. The time frame depends on which field office is selected for the interview.  Some offices have much longer processing times.

3. U.S. citizen parent takes approval notice to nearest U.S. Consulate or Embassy, which issues B-2 visa for child. If the child already has a B-2 visa, the step can be omitted. It’s quicker if the child already has a B-2 visitor’s visa.

4. U.S. citizen parent and child come to the USCIS district office that issued approval for interview.

5. Final approval issued at interview, oath administered to child, and Certificate of Citizenship issued.

6. Practice Tip: Beware of age-outs, because the oath must be administered before the child turns 18.

Common Problems

·         The wrong person signs the form.

o   Who should sign the form? The U.S. citizen parent should sign the form, as long as they meet the physical presence requirements. The parent must have been living in the U.S. or an outlying territory for at least 5 years, two of which were after the age of fourteen. If the parent does not meet this requirement, a U.S. citizen grandparent may sign instead. A U.S. citizen grandparent is also permitted to sign if the U.S. citizen parent is deceased.

·         Wrong filing fee submitted or check not made out correctly to U.S. Department of Homeland Security

·         No passport style photos submitted (Tip, have them taken abroad and then emailed to a U.S. photo service where they are printed out and the attorney mails them with the completed application and filing fee)

·         Filing too early.

o   If the child does not qualify as an “orphan” or “Hague adoptee”, you must wait until the adoption is finalized, plus two years of legal custody and two years of joint residence. These two-year periods may run concurrently or overlap but you can't file until the last time frame is completed.

·         Insufficient evidence of two years of physical custody.

o   It is necessary to track all the addresses and provide the lease or rental agreement plus documents showing that address, the child's name, and the adoptive parents' names on them.

·         Insufficient evidence of the U.S. citizen parent's residence in the U.S. for five years.

o   Usually high school and/or college transcripts can solve this issue.

·         Not using Fed-Ex or UPS to mail your form.

o   These delivery services are more secure and will give you proof of receipt.

What to Expect After Filing

Once you have filed your application, USCIS will send you an I-797 receipt notice. There will be a case number on the receipt and you should save this number. Anytime you inquire about your case, you will reference this case number. After USCIS reviews your N-600K application, they will schedule an interview for your child. To be present at the interview, the child must have proof of lawful entry to the United States. Usually, form I-94 (Lawful Record of Admission) is submitted as proof. Lastly, if everything is in order, USCIS will approve the child to receive a Certificate of Citizenship at the interview.

 Assistance from Our Office

        This article provides general information which should be verified at Application for Citizenship and Issuance of Certificate Under Section 322 | USCIS.  It cannot take the place of individual legal advice about your situation and does not create a client-lawyer relationship. To establish that relationship, please contact us to schedule your consultation at www.Lawadoption.com.

Sources:

“Completing the Adoption—it’s Not Over until PROOF of Citizenship is Obtained”, Prepared by Karen Stoutamyer Law, Esquire, © 2017, Seminar https://www.alllaw.com/articles/nolo/us-immigration/filing-citizenship-parentage-n-600k-application.html

https://www.americansabroad.org/naturalization-under-section-322/

Prepared by Alyssa Howes, Intern, and Karen S. Law, Esquire, of Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC © 2021

Disclaimer:

    This web site and the information contained within have been prepared by Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, nor does receipt of it constitute an attorney-client relationship. Viewers should not act upon information found here without seeking legal counsel. All photographs shown on this blog are depictions of clients and are not actual clients of this law firm. Copyright Karen S. Law, 2021.

Friday, April 9, 2021

Adopting an Undocumented Child


SIJS Application Pending

    Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) allows immigrant children in the state juvenile court system to obtain lawful permanent immigration status. There are specific requirements for a child to qualify for SIJS. The child must be under 21, unmarried, and be declared a dependent in juvenile court or an entity must be appointed as the child’s legal custodian. Although, if the state court loses jurisdiction over the child at 18, the deadline would be 18, not 21. According to federal law, an approved SIJS petition will not be revoked due to adoption or placement in a guardianship of the SIJS beneficiary. Moreover, the USCIS policy manual states that while it is normally required to have custody of the juvenile court for approval of the petition, there is an exception to this rule when the court loses custody due to the juvenile either being adopted or placed in a guardianship.

    Having an approved SIJS petition does not grant any status to the child, temporary or permanent. When a visa number becomes available to the child, the pending SIJS petition will allow them to apply for adjustment of status. Most children may apply to adjust status concurrently with their SIJS petition. The exception is children who are citizens of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and sometimes Mexico. For SIJ children the wait can be years. Additionally, an approved I-360 SIJS petition does not permit the child to receive a SSN, and also does not provide authorization for employment. Usually, the application for employment authorization which gives them a lawful permanent resident card and social security card are filed at the same time as the SIJS petition.

SIJ Status and Medicaid

    The Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) gives states the ability to provide medical coverage to children and pregnant women who are residing legally in the United States. Under this law, a child who has a pending application for SIJS is considered a lawfully residing alien. Provided that the child (under the age of 19) is in the United States legally and their status has not expired, they would be eligible for Medicaid. Medicaid does not require that a child with a status of SIJ apply for a SSN or provide proof of application to be eligible for coverage, so long as their status remains as SIJ. However, if their status changes to legal permanent resident (LPR), they would then be required to provide proof of SSN in order to remain eligible. Furthermore, if the child is still legally a non-immigrant by the age of 19, they lose their status as a qualified alien and would have to be re-evaluated as an adult immigrant. According to the Virginia Medical Assistance Eligibility manual, “Lawfully residing children under age 19 and pregnant women meet Medicaid and FAMIS/FAMIS MOMS alien requirements regardless of their arrival date or length of time in the US.”.

Family-Based Petition Process

    To be considered to be an adopted child under this alternative process, the child must have been under the age of 16 by the time adoption was finalized, and the parent(s) have had legal and physical custody of the child for at least 2 years. Both United States citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents are able to file a petition under this process. Given that their child meets the requirements to be considered an adopted child, they are able to file form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative with USCIS. Approval of the petition does not grant the child any immigration status. Once the petition is approved, the child may then apply for Legal Permanent Resident status which results in a lawful permanent resident card. There is an important caveat to the availability of this pathway to lawful status for children who are citizens of Hague Adoption Convention countries. If the adoptive parent is a US citizen, and the child is a citizen of another Hague Adoption Convention country, the state court does not have jurisdiction to finalize the adoption without compliance with strict notice to the Central Authority. The requirements for notice can be found here. The family law attorney must consult with an immigration attorney before the adoption is finalized.

A full list of Hague Adoption Convention countries can be found here.


Sources:

Automatic Revocation. GovRegs.  

Chapter 2 - Eligibility Requirements. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.  

Family-Based Petition Process. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. 


Links:




Drafted by Alyssa Howes, intern at the Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC.

Disclaimer:

    This web site and the information contained within have been prepared by Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, nor does receipt of it constitute an attorney-client relationship. Viewers should not act upon information found here without seeking legal counsel. All photographs shown on this blog are depictions of clients and are not actual clients of this law firm. Copyright Karen S. Law, 2021.

Monday, January 4, 2021

COVID-19 and Adoption

     The COVID-19 pandemic has changed many aspects of the adoption process for both intercountry and domestic adoptions. This has been a challenging situation for prospective adoptive parents and adoption agencies to navigate. Many parents have had their plans of adopting a child put on hold this year because of the delays in the process. Prospective adoptive parents, social workers, adoption agencies, and adoption attorneys have all had to adapt to the situation in different ways. At this point in time, it is evident that the pandemic has already had significant effects on the adoption process. However, the long term affects that COVID-19 will have on adoption are less certain.

    This situation is especially complicated for parents who were planning on completing adoptions abroad. International flights are restricted, and some countries have temporarily closed their borders to non-citizens. Due to the travel restrictions, some parents have not yet been able to meet their adopted child or complete the Court process overseas. Embassies which issue the visa after the adoption process are closed except for emergency type services. The Department of State has worked to prioritize the processing of adoption visas with many Embassies. However, the Embassies in some countries are still at a standstill in processing adoption visas.

    As a result, those children are having to stay in foster homes or orphanages for much longer than planned, with no certain end date (Dodge, 2020). Unfortunately, there is currently no data available to determine how these children and their caregivers are faring during the pandemic (Fronek & Rotabi, 2020). The negative effects of institutionalization have been well documented. According to one study, children reared in institutions were more likely to develop psychiatric disorders such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anxiety, and depression compared to other children (McLaughlin et al., 2010). We have learned that children’s brains are irreversibly damaged the longer that they remain in institutional care. Attachment is very important for healthy child development, and institutionalized children often have problems forming attachments. The absence of a primary attachment figure early in life is likely what leads to the harmful mental health effects in institutionalized children (McLaughlin et al., 2012). One expected consequence will be that the adopted children will have greater needs for services upon their arrival in their homes to reverse this long-term damage.

    On the domestic side, certain aspects of the adoption process have had to change in order to adapt during the pandemic. Adoption agencies have had to become more flexible during the pandemic and find alternative ways of meeting with birth parents doing things in order to keep everyone safe. Home study and post-placement visits may occur over video call rather than in person due to COVID-19. Video calling is not ideal because the evaluation may not be as comprehensive as in person visit, but in some cases, it is the only available option.

    Birth mothers and prospective adoptive parents have also had to change the way they connect because they are unable to meet each other in person. Instead, they have had to meet and build their relationship via video calls, phone calls, and texting (Chertoff, 2020). Hospitals have new policies due to COVID-19, and many adoptive parents have not been able to be present for the birth of their adopted child; instead they may be on video call with the birth mother while she is at the hospital (Chertoff, 2020). Communicating only through video calls and phones may not be the ideal option during the adoption process, but we are fortunate to have this technology available as an alternative option.

    On the foster care side of adoptions, one would expect to find more families in crisis and a corresponding rise in children entering the foster care system due to abandonment, abuse or neglect. However, many times those children return to the homes of their birth families or are placed with other relatives. We would not expect to see those cases end in adoption for generally about two years. The other factor is the decline in reporting of abandonment, abuse and neglect because children are not physically attending schools in many locales. Child welfare agencies are responsible for protecting children from maltreatment, but they have little oversight and some of their methods are now ineffective due to the pandemic (Welch & Haskins, 2020).

    We do not yet have statistics on whether COVID-19 has negatively or positively changed the number of domestic adoptions. We can expect the number of intercountry adoptions to drop significantly during the next fiscal year. But, more important than numbers, we are greatly concerned for the welfare of children in need of permanent loving families who will now experience delays due to the pandemic.


Sources:

Chertoff, J. (2020, June 11). How COVID-19 Has Impacted the Adoption Community. Retrieved from https://www.parents.com/parenting/adoption/how-covid-19-has-impacted-the-adoption-community/

Dodge, D. (2020, April 01). How Coronavirus Is Affecting Surrogacy, Foster Care and Adoption. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/01/parenting/coronavirus-adoption-surrogacy-foster-care.html

Fronek, P., & Rotabi, K. S. (2020). The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on intercountry adoption and international commercial surrogacy. International Social Work, 63(5), 665-670. Retrieved from https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0020872820940008

McLaughlin, K. A., Fox, N. A., Zeanah, C. H., Sheridan, M. A., Marshall, P. J., & Nelson, C. A. (2010). Delayed maturation in brain electrical activity partially explains the association between early environmental deprivation and symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Biological Psychiatry, 68(4), 329-336.

McLaughlin, K.A., Zeanah. C.H., Fox, N.A., & Nelson, C.A. (2012). Attachment security as a mechanism linking foster care placement to improved mental health outcomes in previously institutionalized children. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry, 53(1), 46-55.

Welch, M., & Haskins, R. (2020, April 30). What COVID-19 means for America's child welfare system. Retrieved from https://www.brookings.edu/research/what-covid-19-means-for-americas-child-welfare-system/


Drafted by Alyssa Howes, intern at the Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC.

Disclaimer:

    This web site and the information contained within have been prepared by Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, nor does receipt of it constitute an attorney-client relationship. Viewers should not act upon information found here without seeking legal counsel. All photographs shown on this blog are depictions of clients and are not actual clients of this law firm. Copyright Karen S. Law, 2021.

Monday, November 9, 2020

Necessary Actions for Next Administration to Reverse the Dramatic Decline in Intercountry Adoption

 EXPLANATION OF PROBLEM:

On May 6, 2020, the U.S. Department of State (DOS) released its FY 2019 Annual Report on Intercountry Adoptions. The report shows that American families adopted only 2,971 children through intercountry adoption between October 1, 2018 through September 30, 2019. This is a decline of over 26% from the previous year, and over 13% decline from the year before that. Since DOS assumed responsibility for the oversight of intercountry adoption in 2008, the number of abandoned, orphaned, and vulnerable children around the world extends into the tens of millions, yet the number of children adopted by American citizens continues to decrease annually under their oversight, to a new historic low of 2,971.

The report fails to put the disastrous decline in perspective: There are millions of children without families worldwide who will benefit from intercountry adoption and tens of thousands of qualified American families who are willing to adopt them. The majority of orphans denied intercountry adoption are not finding equal or better solutions in their country of birth; on the contrary, they are living and dying in institutions in ever-growing numbers. Research conclusively shows that the majority of those who survive the orphanage experience will experience permanent emotional and physical harm and will age out into a world that will exploit them in horrible and degrading ways. There are countries that want to partner with the U.S. to find families for orphans, but unfortunately, the United States is unwilling to work with many countries around the world. 

AAAA has advocated that DOS make a full and accurate accounting to Congress, the White House, and the American people for the failing results of their intercountry adoption policies and procedures.

 

PROPOSED SOLUTIONS: 

  1.  We request that the White House articulate a clear foreign policy in support of intercountry adoption and direct both DOS and the entities that accredit adoption agencies to support this policy.
  2. We request an independent investigation into allegations that the current accrediting entity for adoption agencies, IAAME, holds a bias against intercountry adoption that drives its accrediting actions. Adoptions agencies report that they are held to ever changing “standards” not found in the law or any regulation or written policy.  Further, that these standards are not uniformly enforced against all agencies. That anonymous complaints are lodged against agencies which are not favored by the Office of Children’s Issues in retaliation for whistleblowing. These anonymous complaints then force the agencies to hire lawyers to defend themselves without a clear view of what they have done that violates any clear written law, policy or regulation. That their adoption services are shut down which prevents them from earning revenue while the complaint is evaluated.  That the high cost of defending these often spurious complaints has led to the financial ruin of these mostly nonprofit agencies.  That IAAME under the supervision of the Department of State requires every family to work with an accredited agency as a primary provider, even though the UAA and IAA explicitly say that families can act as their own primary provider. That with fewer agencies able to financially function, the adoptive families then cannot find another agency to serve as a primary provider.  IAAME has taken the position that the new agency will be responsible for all of the actions of the prior agency, which calls the accreditation of the new agency into question. In other words, by creating an environment whereby adoption agencies cannot function, IAAME under the supervision of the DOS has directly caused the precipitous decline in intercountry adoption. Families with completed adoptions cannot bring their children home. 
  3. Require that the DOS put out requests for statements of interest for additional accrediting agencies and designate at least one other national accrediting entity within six months in addition to any/all qualified state government authorities that desire and are qualified to serve as the accrediting entity for adoption service providers in their state. This will ensure that the existing accrediting entity has more accountability.
  4. Require that any adverse action directed toward an adoption agency by an accrediting entity be explicitly tied to a written regulation or policy promulgated after appropriate review and comment. 
  5. Issue an Executive Order that families can serve as their own primary provider if their original primary provider is no longer accredited for any reason and there are no adoption services willing to act as primary provider for fear of losing their accreditation. That would eliminate the transfer issue when an agency closes for families who have completed adoptions.
  6. Issue an Executive Order that families can act as their own primary provider if they are adopting a relative and there are no adoption services to perform. In a relative placement, the child has already been identified, there is no real concern that the child is being placed for adoption without the knowledge or consents of the birth parents, the prospective adoptive parents are already aware of the child’s medical and social history due to the family relationship, and the foreign government makes the determination of the appropriateness of a relative placement in light of its laws and customs.  Further, intercountry adoption relative placements rarely disrupt, which would require that the agency assume custody until another placement can be made.  Most intercountry adoptions are completed adoptions and the agency is not required to assume custody in a completed adoption anyway, only in a foster care type placement. Nor would the agency be required to monitor the case until the adoption was finalized because the adoption is finalized in the foreign country. The only adoption service which requires the involvement of an accredited agency to protect the parties is the performance of a home study on the prospective adoptive parents and that could be done by an exempt agency. Alternatively, the family could still be required to identify a home-study agency that is accredited to perform the home-study and to provide post-placement supervision when it is required for finalization or by the placing country. However, they would be able to act as their own primary providers for the remaining adoption services. This proposal would ensure that the home-study and post-placement processes are appropriately completed by accredited agencies while also acknowledging that meaningless ”protections” for relative adoptions only create barriers that harm children, birth parents and adoptive families.
  7. Require USCIS to prioritize the adjudication of Form I-130 Petitions for adopted children.  The current processing time is over two years.  As a result, U.S. citizens are stranded overseas with their adopted children.  This is simply unacceptable for these vulnerable children and their families.

 


[1] The six adoption services are:

1.             Identifying a child for adoption and arranging an adoption;

2.             Securing the necessary consent to termination of parental rights and to adoption;

3.             Performing a background study on a child or a home study on a prospective adoptive parent(s), and reporting on such a study;

4.             Making non-judicial determinations of the best interests of a child and the appropriateness of an adoptive placement for the child;

5.             Monitoring a case after a child has been placed with prospective adoptive parent(s) until final adoption; or

6.             When necessary because of a disruption before final adoption, assuming custody and providing (including facilitating the provision of) child care or any other social service pending an alternative placement. 22 CFR 96.2 Definitions.

 

Drafted by Attorney Karen Law, staff member of the Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC.

Disclaimer:

This web site and the information contained within have been prepared by Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, nor does receipt of it constitute an attorney-client relationship. Viewers should not act upon information found here without seeking legal counsel. All photographs shown on this blog are depictions of clients and are not actual clients of this law firm. Copyright Karen S. Law, 2020.

Monday, November 2, 2020

Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2019

     The Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2019 is a bipartisan bill which would grant citizenship to all adoptees of U.S. citizen parents. Since the Child Citizenship Act of 2000 was passed, most foreign-born children adopted by American parents are automatically granted United States citizenship. However, before the bill was passed, obtaining citizenship status for an adopted child involved a separate process. For one reason or another, some families with adopted children never went through the process of obtaining citizenship for their adopted child. This would cause many issues when the child eventually became an adult, as they were legally considered a non-citizen. It is estimated that between 25,000 and 49,000 adoptees were never granted United States citizenship (Medina, 2019). They were adopted by American parents between the 1950’s and 1980’s when intercountry adoption was less regulated. Also, at the time, many adoptive parents were not adequately educated on the legal process of adoption. These adoptees are at risk of being deported, having trouble finding employment, losing access to certain services, and many other issues. They are essentially living their lives as though they are illegal immigrants, because of their legal status. In 2000, the Child Citizenship Act was successful in granting automatic citizenship to many child adoptees. However, this bill has a loophole which excluded adoptees who were over 18 at the time it was passed. The Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2019 aims to correct the shortcomings of the Child Citizenship Act.

    If the Adoptee Citizenship Act is passed, it will grant citizenship to anyone who has been or will be adopted by a United States citizen, regardless of their current age. Meaning that those who were over 18 in February 2001 when the Child Citizenship Act took effect, would become United States citizens. This bill will help many adoptees who were left out of the Child Citizenship Act due to their birthday or their visa type.

    This legislation is so important because adoptees deserve the right to citizenship. In many cases, these adoptees have gone about their lives assuming that they are American citizens. They then discover that they are not citizens when they apply for jobs, try to obtain passports or updated driver’s licenses or social security cards. In 2016, the Washington Post reported that approximately 36 adoptees had been deported or were at risk of deportation because of criminal offences and their lack of citizenship status (Bahrampour, 2016). Most of these adoptees have lived in the United States for their entire lives and are fully integrated in American society. They are no different than a child who was born to American parents. This bill will help to make sure that adopted children have the same rights to citizenship as biological children. The lack of citizenship status effects many aspects of their lives, such as job stability and family life. Being an American is part of their identity and these adoptees deserve to be U.S. citizens. Adoptees not being considered U.S. citizens is an injustice that both sides of the political spectrum can agree needs to be corrected.

Drafted by Alyssa Howes, intern at the Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC 

Disclaimer: 

    This web site and the information contained within have been prepared by Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. This information is not intended to create, nor does receipt of it constitute an attorney-client relationship. Viewers should not act upon information found here without seeking legal counsel. All photographs shown on this blog are depictions of clients and are not actual clients of this law firm. Copyright Karen S. Law, 2020.


Sources:

Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2019, S.1554, 116th Cong., 1st Sess. (2019).

Bahrampour, T. (2016, September 02). They grew up as American citizens, then learned that they weren't. Retrieved from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/social-issues/thousands-of-adoptees-thought-they-were-us-citizens-but-learned-they-are-not/2016/09/02/7924014c-6bc1-11e6-99bf-f0cf3a6449a6_story.html?utm_term=.fe6449f0cde5

Congressman Smith and Congressman Woodall Introduce Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2019. (2019, May 14). Retrieved from https://adamsmith.house.gov/2019/5/congressman-smith-and-congressman-woodall-introduce-adoptee-citizenship-act-of-2019  

Medina, D. A. (2019, May 14). Some Adoptees Are Undocumented Because Their Parents Forgot to Fill Out a Form. Now Congress Is Taking Action. Retrieved from https://theintercept.com/2019/05/14/adoption-citizenship-bill/

La Corte, M., & Schneider, R. (2020, September 17). Congress Should Fix A Loophole That Denied Citizenship To Some International Adoptees. Retrieved from https://www.niskanencenter.org/congress-should-fix-a-loophole-that-denied-citizenship-to-some-international-adoptees/

Monday, December 16, 2019

Step Parent

Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC 
Ashburn, Virginia 20147
(703) 723-4385
Facebook: Law Offices of Karen S. Law, PLC
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FELLOW, ACADEMY OF ADOPTION AND   
ASSISTED ATTORNEYS REPRODUCTION
         

 Step Parent Fact Sheet 


How much does a Step Parent Adoption cost?  

The usual legal fees are $1700, with the consent, abandonment, or death of the non-custodial parent. If the case is actively contested by a nonconsenting birth parent, the legal fees will be much higher. 

For every case, there also will be additional out of pocket fees depending on the particular case, i.e. printing costs, mailing costs, publication, filing fees, birth certificate fees etc. 


How long will a Step Parent Adoption take in Virginia? 

Between one to four months once the legal pleadings are filed with the Court.


Can you describe the process? 

1. Informational meeting with Adoption attorney
2. Consider whether the biological parent must consent to adoption or has abandoned the child or is deceased
3. Attorney gathers information and Clients sign notarized pleadings
4. Attorney files the pleadings with the Court
5. Newspaper publication (required for nonconsenting birth parent)
6. Possible brief investigation by Social Services, a two month process
 7. Obtain the Final Order of Adoption—Court appearance is sometimes required
8. Obtain a new Birth Certificate with the child’s new name and the new parent listed as the parent - arrives in two to four months. 9. Client changes name of child on social security card

Where do you serve clients? 

We work with families within 60-minute travel distance from our office.  If you are outside this area, we may be able to provide a referral to another attorney.

How do we get Started? 

Schedule a consult by email to schedule@Lawadoption.com. The fee is $195 which is later deducted from the legal fees of $1700.