BILL REQ. #:  H-4060.1 



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SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 2211
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State of Washington62nd Legislature2012 Regular Session

By House Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Ormsby, Upthegrove, and Hunt)

READ FIRST TIME 03/01/12.   



     AN ACT Relating to adoptees' access to information, including original birth certificates; and amending RCW 26.33.330, 26.33.340, 26.33.345, and 26.33.020.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

Sec. 1   RCW 26.33.330 and 1996 c 243 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) All records of any proceeding under this chapter shall be sealed and shall not be thereafter open to inspection by any person except upon order of the court for good cause shown, or except by using the procedure described in RCW 26.33.343 or 26.33.345. In determining whether good cause exists, the court shall consider any certified statement on file with the department of health as provided in RCW 26.33.347.
     (2) The state registrar of vital statistics may charge a reasonable fee for the review of any of its sealed records.

Sec. 2   RCW 26.33.340 and 1993 c 81 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
     Department, agency, and court files regarding an adoption shall be confidential except as provided for in RCW 26.33.345 and except that reasonably available nonidentifying information ((may)) shall be disclosed upon the written request for the information from the adoptive parent, the adoptee, or the birth parent. If the adoption facilitator refuses to disclose nonidentifying information, the individual may petition the superior court. Identifying information may also be disclosed through the procedure described in RCW 26.33.343 and 26.33.345.

Sec. 3   RCW 26.33.345 and 1993 c 81 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) The department of social and health services, adoption agencies, and independent adoption facilitators shall release the name and location of the court where a relinquishment of parental rights or finalization of an adoption took place to an adult adoptee, a birth parent of an adult adoptee, an adoptive parent, a birth or adoptive grandparent of an adult adoptee, or an adult sibling of an adult adoptee, or the legal guardian of any of these.
     (2) The department of health shall make available a noncertified copy of the original birth certificate of a child to the child's birth parents upon request.
     (3) ((For adoptions finalized after October 1, 1993,)) After receiving a request from an adoptee who is eighteen years of age or older, the department of health shall ((make available)) provide the adoptee with a noncertified copy of the adoptee's original birth certificate ((to the adoptee after the adoptee's eighteenth birthday)) unless the birth parent has filed ((an)) a valid affidavit of nondisclosure pursuant to this section.
     (4)(a) Regardless of when the adoption was finalized, a birth parent may file with the department of health an affidavit of nondisclosure pursuant to this section.
     (b) An affidavit of nondisclosure filed by a birth parent for an adoption finalized prior to October 1, 1993, is valid for ten years from the date the affidavit is filed.
     (c) An affidavit of nondisclosure filed by a birth parent for an adoption finalized on or after October 1, 1993, is valid for five years from the date the affidavit is filed, unless the affidavit was filed before the effective date of this section. An affidavit of nondisclosure filed before the effective date of this section for an adoption finalized on or after October 1, 1993, is valid until July 1, 2017.
     (5)(a) A birth parent may renew his or her affidavit of nondisclosure by filing a new affidavit with the department of health before the expiration of the previously filed affidavit. A birth parent may continue to renew his or her affidavit of nondisclosure or file a new affidavit of nondisclosure if a previously filed affidavit has expired.
     (b) If a birth parent does not renew his or her affidavit of nondisclosure before the expiration date, the affidavit of nondisclosure is deemed expired and is no longer valid. An affidavit of nondisclosure is deemed expired and no longer valid upon the death of the birth parent. A personal representative or agent of a deceased birth parent may not file an affidavit of nondisclosure on the deceased birth parent's behalf.
     (6) Regardless of whether a birth parent has filed an affidavit of nondisclosure, a birth parent may file with the department of health a contact preference form. The contact preference form must indicate whether the birth parent desires or does not desire contact with the adoptee. Nothing in this section precludes a birth parent from subsequently filing another contact preference form to rescind the previous contact preference form and state a different preference.
     (7) If a birth parent files an affidavit of nondisclosure or a contact preference form, the birth parent must also file a medical history form with the department of health.
     (8)(a) If the department of health provides a noncertified copy of the original birth certificate to an adoptee under this section, the department of health must also provide the adoptee with a copy of any contact preference form and the medical history form filed by the adoptee's birth parent. If the department of health does not provide a noncertified copy of the original birth certificate because a valid affidavit of nondisclosure has been filed, the department of health must still provide the adoptee with the medical history form filed by the adoptee's birth parent.
     (b) If the department of health does not provide an adoptee with a noncertified copy of the adoptee's original birth certificate because a valid affidavit of nondisclosure has been filed, the adoptee may request, no more than once per year, that the department of health attempt to determine if the birth parent is deceased. Upon request of the adoptee, the department of health must make a reasonable effort to search public records that are accessible and already available to the department of health to determine if the birth parent is deceased. The department of health may charge the adoptee a reasonable fee to cover the cost of conducting a search.
     (c) The department of health may charge a fee not to exceed twenty dollars for providing a noncertified copy of a birth certificate to an adoptee.
     (9) The department of health must create the contact preference form and medical history form. The medical history form may not require the birth parent to disclose any identifying information about the birth parent. The department of health must modify the affidavit of nondisclosure form to include the birth parent's social security number.

Sec. 4   RCW 26.33.020 and 1993 c 81 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
     Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
     (1) "Alleged father" means a person whose parent-child relationship has not been terminated, who is not a presumed father under chapter 26.26 RCW, and who alleges himself or whom a party alleges to be the father of the child. It includes a person whose marriage to the mother was terminated more than three hundred days before the birth of the child or who was separated from the mother more than three hundred days before the birth of the child.
     (2) "Child" means a person under eighteen years of age.
     (3) "Adoptee" means a person who is to be adopted or who has been adopted.
     (4) "Adoptive parent" means the person or persons who seek to adopt or have adopted an adoptee.
     (5) "Court" means the superior court.
     (6) "Department" means the department of social and health services.
     (7) "Agency" means any public or private association, corporation, or individual licensed or certified by the department as a child placing agency under chapter 74.15 RCW or as an adoption agency.
     (8) "Parent" means the natural or adoptive mother or father of a child, including a presumed father under chapter 26.26 RCW. It does not include any person whose parent-child relationship has been terminated by a court of competent jurisdiction.
     (9) "Legal guardian" means the department, an agency, or a person, other than a parent or stepparent, appointed by the court to promote the child's general welfare, with the authority and duty to make decisions affecting the child's development.
     (10) "Guardian ad litem" means a person, not related to a party to the action, appointed by the court to represent the best interests of a party who is under a legal disability.
     (11) "Relinquish or relinquishment" means the voluntary surrender of custody of a child to the department, an agency, or prospective adoptive parents.
     (12) "Individual approved by the court" or "qualified salaried court employee" means a person who has a master's degree in social work or a related field and one year of experience in social work, or a bachelor's degree and two years of experience in social work, and includes a person not having such qualifications only if the court makes specific findings of fact that are entered of record establishing that the person has reasonably equivalent experience.
     (13) "Birth parent" means the biological mother or biological or alleged father of a child, including a presumed father under chapter 26.26 RCW, whether or not any such person's parent-child relationship has been terminated by a court of competent jurisdiction. "Birth parent" does not include a biological mother or biological or alleged father, including a presumed father under chapter 26.26 RCW, if the parent-child relationship was terminated because of an act for which the person was found guilty under chapter 9A.42 or 9A.44 RCW.
     (14) "Nonidentifying information" ((includes)) shall include if it is available, but is not limited to, the following information about the birth parents, adoptive parents, and adoptee:
     (a) Age in years at the time of adoption;
     (b) Heritage, including nationality, ethnic background, and race;
     (c) Education, including number of years of school completed at the time of adoption, but not name or location of school;
     (d) General physical appearance, including height, weight, color of hair, eyes, and skin, or other information of a similar nature;
     (e) Religion;
     (f) Occupation, but not specific titles or places of employment;
     (g) Talents, hobbies, and special interests;
     (h) Circumstances leading to the adoption;
     (i) Medical and genetic history of birth parents;
     (j) First names;
     (k) Other children of birth parents by age, sex, and medical history;
     (l) Extended family of birth parents by age, sex, and medical history;
     (m) The fact of the death, and age and cause, if known;
     (n) Photographs;
     (o) Name of agency or individual that facilitated the adoption.

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