Monday, January 31, 2005 12:23 PM
Marriage and Adoption law
By Maggie Gallagher
This week, the Supreme Court let stand a federal court’s opinion that
Florida’s state laws banning gay adoption are constitutional.
Florida said these laws would increase the likelihood that children will be
raised by married mothers and fathers.
A three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled this a legitimate
concern: “It is rational for Florida to conclude that it is in the best
interests of adoptive children, many of whom come from troubled and unstable
backgrounds, to be placed in a home anchored by both a father and a mother.”
The case highlights the importance of the upcoming battle over Bush’s
judicial appointments. The ruling stands only because the 11th Circuit Court
of Appeals deadlocked 6-to-6 over whether to have the full court rehear the
case. One of the judges to vote against the rehearing was William H. Pryor
Jr., whom the Senate Democrats filibustered and who thus serves only as a
temporary recess appointment.
Although it is good to know that in the 11th Circuit, at least, the idea that
children need moms and dads is not (yet) considered hate speech, one can seriously
question how well the Florida law serves its intended purpose. Why not instead
create preferences for married couples in adoption law?
Most people probably assume that married couples are already preferred, where
available, in adoptions.
But a forthcoming policy brief on adoption law by Joshua Baker (my colleague
at the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy) concludes: “Only two
states codify that presumption as any kind of a preference for married couples.”
States are twice as likely to “forbid ‘discrimination’ based
on marital status than to make any legal effort to place vulnerable children
in homes with a married mother and father.” (For a copy of the brief
and accompanying model legislation remedying the situation, e-mail Joshua@imapp.org.)
Perhaps social workers can be counted on in the absence of laws? Susan Esbenshade
once thought so. She and her husband had adopted one child by a troubled unwed
mother. When her child’s birth mother again became pregnant, Esbenshade
and her husband wanted to adopt that child, too (twins, as it turned out).
The birth mother requested this placement. But the Esbenshades say they were
(falsely) told by social workers in Mecklenburg County (North Carolina) that
the twins could not be placed in a home outside the county. In a letter to
Mecklenburg County Commissioner Bill James, Susan said she was “shocked”
to later discover “that DSS would place the twins in a home with two
men rather than placing them in a home with a mother and father and a biological
sibling.”
How could this happen? One reason may be that social workers tend to be deeply
committed to family diversity as an ideal. A 1996 study by Sarah Holbrook
studied the attitudes of more than 300 social workers.
They strongly supported “the rights of single people, gay men and lesbians,
and older women past menopause to have families.” Conversely, notes
the author, social workers were most likely to reject “the traditional
approach to families where couples are favored over single people” and
“where the ideal for a child is always a two-parent home.”
Why has social work, as a profession, been so uniquely deaf to the cries of
children hungering for absent fathers, or to the social science evidence that
generally support intact marriages as important for child well-being?
I don’t know for sure how common Susan Esbenshade’s story is.
I do know that even one case of a child being deprived of a loving married
mom and dad, not to mention her brother or sister, in pursuit of ideological
or political correctness is one too many.
State legislators and governors concerned about child welfare, take note --
and then act.
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