Texas Senate Jurisprudence Committee, March 22, 2011
SUBMITTED TESTIMONY
SB 287 access to identifying information for adoptions original birth certificate access
OPPOSE
Privilege is the opposite of right
Bastard Nation: the Adoptee Rights Organization is the largest adoptee civil rights organization in the United States. We support full, unrestricted access for all adopted persons, upon request, of their own true, unaltered original birth certificates (OBC). We oppose SB 287.
SB 287 is egregious in extremis. SB 287 is prospective. It contains a misnamed, linguistically confusing "contact preference form" (which has nothing to do with "preference" or "contact")that authorizes a natural parent to not only order the state registrar to withhold the OBC from the adoptee, but to override the "preference" of the other parent that it be released. Moreover, treating adult adoptees and their natural parent(s) as children at best, dangerous criminals at worst, SB 287 forces mandatory social service or mental health counseling on both parties simply because they want the OBC released.
SB 287 is a dirty bill.
- Clean bills, unlike SB 287 with its conditions and restrictions, provides equal OBC access to all adoptees retrospectively and prospectively, with no conditions or exceptions.
- Clean bills, unlike SB 287, contain no third party disclosure and contact vetoes.
- Clean bills, unlike SB 287, contain no mandatory counseling, registries, confidential state intermediaries, and other conditions that limit the free flow of information and treat the adopted differently from the not-adopted.
- Clean bills, unlike SB 287, have nothing to do with search and reunion, matters best left to individuals to act on without state mediation and control.
- Clean bills unlike, unlike SB 287 with it's "anonymous" medical registry, have nothing to do with adoptee/parent medical histories. The OBC, in fact, contains no medical information. A state demand for natural parent medical history, as included in SB 287, may be in violation of federal HIPAA provisions.
When adoptees are denied the right to their own birth certificates our other rights can be endangered. Since 9/11, especially, we are increasingly denied passports, drivers’ licenses, pensions, Social Security benefits, professional certification and licenses, and security clearances due to discrepancies on our falsified government-created amended birth certificates, and inability to present true documents sealed by the state to remedy the problems.
Adoptees without a genuine original birth record could soon be barred from running for public office. At least 10 states, including Texas (HB 295) have introduced legislation requiring presidential and vice-presidential candidates to present their original birth certificates to appropriate authorities to prove citizenship eligibility for office. Some of these bills go farther, mandating anyone running for office to prove citizenship through an original birth certificate. It is no stretch to think that someday soon adoptees could be barred from voting due to lack of “legal” identity over problematic amended birth certificates, and the perpetual sealing of the originals.
If passed, SB 287 with its restrictions and exclusionary rules, will guarantee that Texas adoptees will never be treated on an equal plane with the not-adopted. If passed, the damage done by SB 287 will take decades--if ever-- to untangle.
The Texas legislature should take action now to assure that its adopted population is not subjected to public and private scrutiny and discrimination due to birth certificate irregularities and seals; that all Texas adoptees receive equal treatment, protection, and due process Vote DO NOT PASS on SB 287. Kill this bill. Then come back with a clean bill that guarantees that all Texas adoptees will enjoy equal protection, due process, and dignity.
Submitted by Marley Greiner
Executive Chair
Bastard Nation: the adoptee rights organization
March 21, 2011
Bastard Nation is dedicated to the recognition of the full human and civil rights of adult adoptees. Toward that end, we advocate the opening to adoptees, upon request at age of majority, of those government documents which pertain to the adoptee's historical, genetic, and legal identity, including the unaltered original birth certificate and adoption decree. Bastard Nation asserts that it is the right of people everywhere to have their official original birth records unaltered and free from falsification, and that the adoptive status of any person should not prohibit him or her from choosing to exercise that right. We have reclaimed the badge of bastardy placed on us by those who would attempt to shame us; we see nothing shameful in having been born out of wedlock or in being adopted. Bastard Nation does not support mandated mutual consent registries or intermediary systems in place of unconditional open records, nor any other system that is less than access on demand to the adult adoptee, without condition, and without qualification.
3 comments:
"Texas: Bastard Nation Testimony in Opposition to SB 287" is as good as it gets. The testimony is a must read for any adoptee rights reformer. The reason BN opposes SB 287 is clear and straightforward.
Thanks, Joanne! Besides always fighting bad bills, we also need to promote just what a good bill is.
So if I know both my birth parents names I can get my OBC but if I don't then I have to play twister with the hopes that my birth parents weren't lazy and actually knew enough about the law to "grant" the state the right to pass on the information to me? Of course not excluding the fact that my adoption had to occur after Jan 2012 and I am at least 18.
Wow
Come on Texas, this isn't rocket science here, make it clean and simple give all your Adult Adoptees the same rights as non Adoptees.
Indiana Adoptee residing in Texas
aka Skrewd
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