By Kassandra Meholick
Special to The CS&T

Archdiocesan Catholic Social Services has been assisting families, birth parents and adoptees for more than 100 years. The agency’s Adoption Services department believes in the innate dignity and value of every human life, and that every child is entitled to an environment in which he or she is loved and accepted unconditionally.

The adoption process is a major undertaking, emotionally and legally. Some birth mothers want to maintain contact with their children while some do not. Other mothers want to reserve the right to decide later.

Sometimes, years later, siblings want to learn more about their brother or sister who was adopted. The legal process for adoption should safeguard the interests of all parties involved, but the current law in Pennsylvania could use some improvement. {{more}}

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference is supporting Senate Bill 1360, revising the Adoption Act, as it significantly improves services for those involved in the adoption process.

The bill has two key components. First, it recognizes and establishes procedures for voluntary open adoption agreements, whereby a prospective adoptive parent can enter into a voluntary agreement with a birth relative of a child to permit continuing contact between the child and a birth relative.

“Some children who are older refuse adoption because they feel it’s disloyal to their birth parents that they still see,” said Kelly Bolton, director of Adoption Services for Catholic Charities in the Diocese of Harrisburg. “This helps children say it’s an OK deal because their birth parents are on board.”

Under the legislation, all parties involved must consent to having contact. According to Robert Montoro, supervisor of Adoption Services for archdiocesan Catholic Social Services, nearly all adoptions from birth facilitated by his agency have some form of contact between the birth parent and adoptive family prior to the birth of the baby. (For more information on adoption services in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, call 215-854-7050.)

The second part of the bill streamlines procedures for accessing adoption records and directs Pennsylvania’s Department of Public Welfare to establish a statewide confidential registry for the receipt, filing and retention of medical and social history information and authorization forms for all adoptions finalized or registered in Pennsylvania.

Adoption services in Pennsylvania follow a confidential intermediary system. An intermediary is a person certified by a judge to search for adoption information upon the request of an adoptee. Under current law, only adoptees can request information.

The revision allows for increased access so birth parents and other relatives of the parties involved, such as siblings, may also request information.

In recent years disheartening statistics have come to light that show an increase in abortions taking place in Pennsylvania. A life-affirming alternative to abortion is adoption. By working to improve the adoption process, we may help more mothers see adoption as a viable choice for their children.

The Pennsylvania Catholic Advocacy Network is urging state senators to support SB 1360. Visit, call or write your state senator, or log on to www.pacatholic.org/current issues/catholic-advocacy-network to join the Advocacy Network and send an e-mail message.

Meholick lives in the Diocese of Harrisburg. She is a senior at Kent State University in Ohio and just completed a summer internship with the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference.