
WACAP Adoption Ethics FAQ
1. Would WACAP conceal a child’s medical, emotional or developmental
conditions from an adoptive parent?
Never. Parents always receive all the information WACAP has about a
child.
WACAP publicly distributes descriptions of waiting children through
our Web site and various publications, including our Waiting Child Photo
Album. These descriptions are brief, for two reasons: (a) to protect
sensitive information about the child; and (b) to list a lot of children
in limited space. But if you ask about a waiting child, WACAP will
privately send you all the information we have, including all known
conditions or special needs.
In a baby adoption, when a potential adoptive child is referred to
you, you’ll receive all available information about that child. This may
include a description, biographical details, a medical report, photos
and sometimes a video. According to state laws, we cannot share
identifying information such as birth parents’ names or the child’s
hospital number.
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2. Are children adoptable through WACAP legally eligible for adoption
and not stolen, sold or improperly relinquished?
Ethical adoptions are at the heart of WACAP’s work. We do everything
humanly possible to ensure that our adoptions are legal and the children
are legally free for adoption according to the requirements of the
Hague Convention on Intercountry Adoptions. We cooperate fully with
foreign governments, and work strenuously to obtain all licenses,
certificates, approvals and accreditations required to operate in the
countries and states from which we place children for adoption. WACAP
never works with unlicensed "adoption facilitators" or "independent
adoption agents"; instead, we work directly with government officials
and licensed professionals and charities. As adoption pioneers in China,
Russia and Romania, WACAP worked to help governments develop ethical and
safe adoption procedures before we began placing children for adoption.
In our 30 years of experience and more than 9,000 adoptions, not one
adoption has been found later to be illegal.
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3. What’s the difference between an adoption facilitator and an adoption
agency?
A facilitator is not licensed or authorized by the U.S. or foreign
government, which means there are no legal standards they must meet and
no oversight of their activities. If there are problems, there’s no
licensing authority to complain to. Facilitators work on a per-case
basis and receive a commission per child. Hence they have an incentive
to place as many children as possible. This creates a conflict of
interest between protecting the rights of children and birth parents on
one hand and maximizing profits on the other.
A reputable adoption agency, by contrast, is fully authorized and
accountable for its actions:
- Reputable agencies are licensed and accredited, both in the United
States and in the countries placing children for adoption.
- Reputable agencies abide by ethical standards. They take no
shortcuts, pay no bribes, work directly with the responsible
authorities and document every step of the adoption process.
- Reputable agencies serve children first and parents second.
- Reputable agencies pay their domestic and foreign staff a fixed
salary, no matter how many children they place. They provide support
to institutions and agencies in the child's birth country to serve
children who cannot be adopted.
- Reputable agencies work before, during and after the adoption to
evaluate the parents' readiness to adopt, help family members adjust
to each other, and track the child's progress after the adoption.
- Reputable agencies provide training and education to prepare
families for the challenges of adoption.
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4. What precautions does WACAP take to ensure children’s safety after
they are adopted?
WACAP thoroughly screens families who apply to adopt a child. Prior to
adoption, families must submit to a detailed homestudy and a criminal
background check. After the adoption, we require a series of
postplacement reports and visits to confirm the well-being of children
and families.
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5. What safeguards protect parents’ financial investment in a potential
adoption?
WACAP fees are not specific to a given child. If you decide not to
accept a child whose information is presented to you, you will be asked
to consider another child. You will have to wait until another child is
identified, but you don’t have to go back to the start of your entire
waiting period.
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6. Is there any possibility that an agency could make mistakes that
would nullify an adoption?
This is why an adopting family should choose an experienced agency. It’s
like any other professional field where know-how matters. The more
experience an adoption agency has, the more it can provide expert
services to its clients, good work and consistently high ethics and
practices to government officials, and mutually trusting relationships
to associate agencies here and abroad.
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7. Does WACAP bribe foreign officials? Does WACAP use bribes to
accomplish its work?
WACAP firmly believes that our work in international adoption can and
should be accomplished without bribing foreign officials. WACAP doesn't
pay bribes or ask adoptive families to pay them. Our fees include
donations to orphanages, but these funds are used to support children,
not to line anyone’s pockets.
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8. Does WACAP use photos of waiting children on the Web? What are the
rules?
WACAP strictly follows all the laws of the states or foreign countries
we work with during an adoption. With international adoptions, each
country has rules governing how and whether waiting children can be
shown on the Internet, and WACAP strictly adheres to them. WACAP’s
secure Web site does not use children’s names and indicates only the
continent where the child lives.
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9. How important is it for an agency to be licensed or accredited?
Being licensed or accredited reflects the agency’s long-term commitment
to finding adoptive families for children. When an organization seeks
licensing, it must prove to the licensing body that it has standards of
operation in place. Becoming licensed or accredited also opens up the
agency’s business records to scrutiny, which prevents problems due to
negligence or purposeful wrongdoing.
Sometimes a country’s licensing or accreditation requirements will
change, and adoptions from that country will be temporarily "placed on
hold" or "slowed down" while we work to comply with the new
requirements. WACAP does not take shortcuts around these compliance
issues.
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10. How important is the length of time an agency has been handling
adoptions or the number of adoptions they’ve handled?
Adoption is a complex process involving a myriad of arrangements and
relationships. In international adoptions, the need to translate between
two languages makes it even more complex. The longer an adoption agency
has been in business and the more adoptions it has handled, the more you
can rely on its staff for their knowledge and experience as well as
their established professional relationships with authorized domestic
agencies and foreign governments.
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11. How important is it to work with a nonprofit agency?
There are numerous reasons to work with a nonprofit agency for your
adoption:
- Nonprofit agencies have passed a government evaluation certifying
that their purpose is charitable. Since they serve the common good,
they are exempt from federal taxes.
- Nonprofit agencies are governed by a board of directors, so there
are a number of people at the top working to ensure that the agency
behaves appropriately.
- People make charitable contributions of funds and services to
nonprofit agencies. Some of the work of the nonprofit may be
partially underwritten by charitable donations, so the services you
receive as an adoptive parent may cost you less.
- Some countries abroad with children who need homes may work only
with nonprofit adoption agencies, so if you want to adopt from those
countries, you must choose a nonprofit agency.
- WACAP is accredited by the nonprofit Council on Accreditation
(COA), a national organization that evaluates nonprofits and gives
its "seal of approval" to agencies that engage in COA-defined "best
practices."
- A for-profit agency exists to make money for its owners. The
decisions and practices of any such agency are guided, at least in
part, by the bottom line. In contrast, a nonprofit agency such as
WACAP is driven by its vision and mission of doing what is right for
children, without any profit motive.
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12. What safeguards prevent parents’ names from being shared with a
birth family? With mailing lists?
U.S. state laws require confidentiality and prohibit agencies from
exchanging contact information between adoptive families and birth
parents. Only two circumstances allow birth parents and adoptive
families to have contact: (a) domestic "open adoptions," where both
parties agree beforehand to share contact information; and (b) after an
adopted child reaches adulthood, he/she may petition a court to seek out
the birth parents.
WACAP’s records, as well as our database of family information, are
private and secure. We never sell mailing lists to third parties.
Occasionally we have accepted requests from researchers or respected
publishers to send items that will benefit adoptive families on our
list—but in those cases we make the mailing arrangements ourselves, so
that families’ names are never out of our control.
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13. What are the red flags a parent should pay attention to?
The relationship between adoptive parents and their agency should be
based on trust, so concealing information—on either side—is always a red
flag. Parents should receive information up front about the adoption
process and costs, and should receive a child’s information before the
adoption takes place. WACAP never offers a "don’t ask, don’t tell"
policy about a family’s or child’s history. Other red flags include the
following:
- rushing the family, e.g., saying that a certain adoption
opportunity will not be available unless the family acts now, or
especially, pays now;
- requiring the whole fee up front, or threatening to stop the
process without this fee;
- not revealing how children come into orphanage care and become
eligible for adoption;
- being unable or unwilling to put families in touch with one
another for information and support.
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14. How can I check out an agency?
- Contact the U.S. State Department in Washington,
D.C., online or by phone at 202-647-4000. Ask if they have any
concerns about the international agency you are considering.
- Contact the U.S. Embassy in the capital city of the foreign
country you are considering. Ask about specific agencies working in
adoption and child welfare in that country.
- Contact the authority responsible for licensing adoption agencies
in your home state. Ask about an agency’s status and whether there
are unresolved questions or complaints about an agency.
- Ask the agency to put you in touch with parents who have recently
adopted children through its program.
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