There is no state interest in keeping original birth certificates sealed from adult adoptees to which they pertain. Nor does the state have a right or duty to mediate and oversee the personal relationships of adults. Those who claim a statutory right to parental anonymity through sealed records to them promote statutory privilege and state favoritism. 30,000 Connecticut adoptees were left behind in 2015. The passage of SB972 brings them back.
Continue readingCategory: News
TxARC HB2725 Non-Action Alert:
ep Thompson’s office has not yet received the request so we ask that you wait to call to request a hearing date until that request is received.
Continue readingBastard Nation Testimony on Florida HB597–Vote NO
The core problem though is that H597 posits birth record access as an individual personal desire or cute curiosity rather than a civil right and political issue. H597 conflates “reunion” with rights. Through the FARR mandate, and even a reunion requirement outside of FARR, it holds Florida adoptees and their families hostage to archaic laws and customs. The bill treats adult adoptees like children, promotes continued shame in adoption, and maintains the iron lock of the state on our birth records and personal autonomy. None of this is related to adoptee civil rights and is an insult to every Florida adoptee. It is about Big Government.
Continue readingAdoptee Rights Law Center/Bastard Nation Joint Action Alert: Florida HB597–Vote No
The bill creates a paternalistic forced reunion system in order for an adoptee to access her or his own Original Birth Certificate–or rather in this case, a summary of it. It contends birth record access is about an individual personal desire or curiosity rather than a civil right and political issue by conflating “reunion” with rights. It keeps Florida adoptees and their families hostage to archaic laws and customs, promotes continued shame in adoption, and maintains the iron lock of the state on our birth records and personal autonomy.
Continue readingBastard Nation Action Alert: Do Pass. Connecticut SB972–Joint Judiciary Committee
Please follow the instructions for testimony-submission below. Out-of-state testimony is welcome and you are not required to attend the hearing.
Continue readingMeet Annette O’Connell, Bastard Nation’s new treasurer
Annette is a New York powerhouse and we are thrilled to have her on board
Continue readingTexas: HB2725 clean access bill introduced! Help us win Texas!
Last week Texas Representative Gina Calanni introduced HB2725, a bill to restore the right of OBC access to all Texas adoptees with no restrictions or conditions. Bastard Nation, as an indidvidual organization, and as a founding member of the Texas Coalition for Adoptee Rights supports this bill whole-heartedly.
Continue readingNew York: Want to know the difference between the Weprin/Montgomery bill and the others. Check out this FAQ
The New York Adoptee Rights Coalition has published The Essential FAQ about the New York Bills. Please go over and read this simple outline–then support our A5494/S3419 Weprin/Montgomery bill.
Continue readingOpen Letter from New York Adoptee Rights Coalition to New York State Adoption Equality
In our recent meeting with you and others in Albany, Assembly Member Weprin requested that all advocacy groups—including the American Adoption Congress, NYSAE, and Unsealed Initiative—unite with us to pursue enactment of the Weprin/Montgomery bill. In an unprecedented response, the AAC and Unsealed Initiative agreed and committed to the bill, as did the New York Adoptee Rights Coalition and its partners. You and NYSAE, however, continued to insist on pursuing a competing bill that has little support in the legislature and will cause confusion among legislators and advocates as the Weprin/Montgomery bill moves ahead.
Continue readingBastard Nation Action Alert: West Virginia Senate Judiciary Committee. SB300 OBC access. Restricts and discriminantes. Vote No or Amend to cover all, not some
SB300, a restrictive OBC access bill, is currently in the West Virginia Senate Judiciary Committee. As of this writing, it is not scheduled for a hearing, but we urge that you write the committee to let members know that the bill, which grants OBC access for some of the state’s adoptees, but not all, is discriminatory and not acceptable.
Continue reading