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How interesting that the Archdiocese of Boston has chosen March to announce that Catholic Charities would halt all adoptions rather than have the agency allow same-sex couples to adopt. Interesting in that March is Social Work Month - and we as a profession are compelled to speak out on the issue of same-sex adoptions too.
In the last 30 years, society has witnessed both a profound expansion in the definition of family as well as changes in adoption policy and practice. Prior to the 1970s, legal adoption generally involved the placement of healthy, newborn, Caucasian babies with middle to upper-middle class, infertile Caucasian couples.
The enactment of the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 facilitated the move of tens of thousands of children from foster care status into permanent adoptive families. In order to meet these new demands, child welfare officials recognized the importance of recruiting more diverse adoption petitioners including single people, those who are differently abled, ethnically diverse, and gay- and lesbian-headed households.
A 2005 report from the Department of Social Services found there are 2,630 children receiving out-of-home care - with a foster family or group home - with the goal of adoption. The good news is that 41 percent of these children are legally free for adoption and that the majority have been matched to a permanent family. The challenge remains for social workers and other child welfare professionals to recruit qualified adoptive applicants for the remaining hundreds of children who have no individual or family identified: 56 percent of these boys and girls have been in continuous care for two years or more.
It is, therefore, puzzling that the bishops should choose to limit the range of adoptive homes available to the state’s children based solely on one criterion: the sexual orientation of the petitioners.
Anyone who wishes to examine the 20 years of peer-reviewed studies on the emotional, cognitive and behavioral outcomes of children of gay and lesbian parents will find not one shred of evidence that children are harmed by their parents’ sexual orientation.
The empirical and clinical evidence suggesting same-sex parents are equivalent to heterosexual parents in their ability to care for children and provide loving homes is so compelling that there is a growing consensus among legal and child welfare experts that there is no rational basis to deny adoption to gay and lesbian couples solely on the basis of their sexual orientation.
Ultimately, there is no inherent “right” to adopt. Yet, at the same time all prospective adoptive parents should be given equal consideration and the sexual orientation of the parents should not be a determining factor in assessing suitability for adoptive parenting.
Even with so much evidence contradicting their position on this issue, the Catholic bishops are unmoved. They oppose gay and lesbian families formed through adoption, and they are entitled to their opinion. However, when their belief systems threaten to deprive children of the opportunity to be adopted into loving homes, it is time for us to say “Enough!”
Our tax dollars pay for the services provided to the state’s children through the public child welfare system, which then subcontracts with private organizations like Catholic Charities. Under the umbrella of private adoption agencies your tax dollars are still at work, so when the governor seeks to exempt Catholic Charities from Massachusetts’ anti-discrimination law, he is asking to allow our tax revenues to promote discrimination.cw-1
Not addressed by either the bishops or the governor is the untenable position in which Catholic Charities’ social workers would be placed. Bound by our Social Work Code of Ethics forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, social workers would be forced to choose between their obligations to their professional code and obedience to the church.
As social workers, celebrating our profession this month, we hope that reason will override ideology.
http://news.bostonherald.com/opinion/view.bg?articleid=129957&format=&page=3
And just a little background info:
BOSTON, February 20, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and a top government leader have told a group of bishops that their request that Catholic institutions be exempt from placing foster children with same-sex parents will be denied...
In compliance with the commonwealth’s so-called antidiscrimination laws, the Catholic adoption agency, Catholic Charities of Boston, has already placed children with same-sex couples over the past 20 years.
The bishops’ request was in stark contrast to the wishes of the agency itself, which voted unanimously in December to uphold the practice of placing children in homosexual homes.
Board members expressed “shock” to learn that a potential legal challenge of the antidiscrimination law from the bishop’s would be paid for from the budget of the agency. “I’m shocked,” said board member Donna DePrisco. “I find it hard to believe.” In what may appear to be an ulterior motive on the part of the bishop’s group, one anonymous board member said many on the board would resign if the bishop’s go ahead with their plan.....
Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo, Vatican head of the Pontifical Council for the Family, told Fides news service in May that allowing same sex couples to adopt children, “would destroy the child’s future, it would be an act of moral violence against the child.”
http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2006/feb/06022010.html
No abortion, no contraception, and now no adoption. Yay for family values!