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Thursday, April 17, 2025

Children’s Authority exec urges parents to consider adoption

by

Carisa Lee
964 days ago
20220826
Acting adoption manager at the Children’s Authority, Renee Neptune

Acting adoption manager at the Children’s Authority, Renee Neptune

A man­age­ment mem­ber at the Chil­dren’s Au­thor­i­ty is urg­ing peo­ple to con­sid­er adop­tion as an op­tion.

Her ap­peal comes as the coun­try has seen two in­ci­dents re­cent­ly in which chil­dren suf­fered as a re­sult of the cir­cum­stances in which their par­ents found them­selves.

In the last week, lit­tle McKen­zie Hope Rechi­er was stran­gled to death while a days-old ba­by was aban­doned in a garbage bag at the San Fer­nan­do Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal.

De­spite this, act­ing Adop­tion Man­ag­er at the Chil­dren’s Au­thor­i­ty, Re­nee Nep­tune, said as of yes­ter­day, there were no chil­dren wait­ing to be adopt­ed.

“Right now, we don’t have a big pool of chil­dren read­i­ly avail­able for adop­tion,” Nep­tune told Guardian Me­dia.

Since the Au­thor­i­ty’s in­cep­tion in 2015, 83 chil­dren have been adopt­ed and cur­rent­ly, there are 200 ap­pli­ca­tions pro­cess­ing. “For this year so far, in terms of adop­tions, we’ve had let’s say 15, 16 adop­tions grant­ed by the court thus far,” she said.

She said in the last sev­en years they have not had any failed place­ments and she en­cour­aged par­ents to con­sid­er adop­tion as an op­tion.

“We can as­sure them that the per­sons who­ev­er the child would have been placed with, those fam­i­lies would have gone through our process...they can rest as­sured that this child will be placed in a home that is safe, car­ing lov­ing a sta­ble en­vi­ron­ment,” Nep­tune said.

Nep­tune said this process may be emo­tion­al­ly chal­leng­ing for a par­ent and may re­quire a lev­el of self­less­ness but not­ed that the au­thor­i­ty walks the par­ent through the process.

“We do pro­vide that sup­port for them, where­as if they need to get coun­selling be­fore they make that de­ci­sion...they have that time pe­ri­od where they can de­cide,” she said.

She said there are three ma­jor stake­hold­ers in­volved in the adop­tion process—the prospec­tive adop­tive par­ent, the adoptee and the birth par­ent. And there are two pri­ma­ry types of adop­tion—open and closed.

Open adop­tion is a form of adop­tion in which the bi­o­log­i­cal par­ents and the adop­tive par­ents know each oth­er, or the child knows the adop­tive par­ent and in­volves the adop­tion of an iden­ti­fied child.

A closed adop­tion is a form of adop­tion where the bi­o­log­i­cal and the adop­tive fam­i­ly do not know each oth­er and nei­ther has any iden­ti­fy­ing in­for­ma­tion about the oth­er, so there is no con­tact. In a closed adop­tion, the child is matched with a prospec­tive adopter based on their re­quest­ed child pro­file.

“Some­times, it’s a mix­ture of both open and closed adop­tions, where we get ap­pli­ca­tions not just for per­sons to have a child placed with them but there al­so have fam­i­lies, let’s say a neigh­bour who has been car­ing for the child from birth,” she said.

There may al­so be oth­er op­tions such as fam­i­ly sup­port or tem­po­rary fos­ter care.

Nep­tune said if a par­ent feels like they can­not take care of their chil­dren any­more, they can email the au­thor­i­ty at adop­tion@ttchil­dren.org or call 627-0748 ext. 40023-40025. If this is not pos­si­ble, they can vis­it the Chil­dren’s Au­thor­i­ty and re­quest to speak with a med­ical so­cial work­er, doc­tor, or nurse.

She said ac­tion will be tak­en based on the ur­gency of the case.

“It will be re­ferred to our emer­gency re­sponse team and our reg­istry unit who will act on this mat­ter...so chil­dren can be placed in tem­po­rary fos­ter care or in a com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dence,” she said.

She con­firmed that the adop­tion process is lengthy but said this was to en­sure that chil­dren are placed in fit homes. Nep­tune said there is no time­frame for the process, as each ap­pli­ca­tion is dif­fer­ent.

How­ev­er, she as­sert­ed that they want to en­cour­age peo­ple to adopt and al­so to con­sid­er adop­tion for their chil­dren.

“It’s a very thor­ough process, so we con­duct sev­er­al in­ter­views, they have to un­der­go psy­cho­log­i­cal screen­ing as­sess­ments, se­cu­ri­ty back­ground checks, they have to bring in doc­u­ments for us ... let’s say med­icals, fi­nan­cial doc­u­ments,” she ex­plained.

For ap­pli­cants keen to adopt a child, Nep­tune asked that thee bear with the au­thor­i­ty be­cause they want to en­sure the place­ment is not on­ly good for the child but for the ap­pli­cant (prospec­tive adop­tive par­ents) as well. Sep­tem­ber is al­so des­ig­nat­ed as Adop­tion and Fos­ter Care Aware­ness Month and Nep­tune said the au­thor­i­ty will host sev­er­al aware­ness cam­paigns so the pub­lic can learn more on adop­tion as an op­tion.


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