Here’s the scoop:
As we were told by our adoption agency, Anna Zane was born
in the car en route to the hospital. The ambulance arrived roughly 10-15
minutes after she was born. Anna, along with her birthparents, was taken to the
hospital. Upon arriving, her birthparents informed the nurse they were choosing
adoption for Anna. The hospital caseworker then phoned Hope Cottage. After 48
hours, the birthparents relinquished their rights and Hope Cottage became the
conservators/legal guardians for Anna.
Unbeknownst to Hope Cottage, the hospital gave Anna’s
birthmother paperwork for her to complete to file Anna’s birth certificate. The
hospital cannot file that paperwork because Anna was not technically born in
the hospital. Her birthmother never completed the paperwork. Hope Cottage never
filed for the birth certificate because they assumed the hospital filed since
that is usually what happens.
Fast-forward six months. Anna’s adoption in finalized on
September 30; we become Anna’s legal parents, her name is legally changed to
Anna Zane Youree. At that point, we filed for an amended birth certificate. It
took FOUR months for the state to notify us that no original birth certificate
was ever filed; and thus, we cannot receive an amended one.
We’ve called the state offices. The hospital. The adoption
agency. And everyone says someone else should take care of it. Today, after
spending more time than I cared to, at the vital statistics office of Dallas
County, we were told as far as they knew we, as adopted parents couldn’t file
the birth certificate. And if we did not have the information about the actual
birth, including the street on which Anna was born, a birth certificate could
never be filed for her. But they have left messages with the “bosses” in Austin
to figure out who has the legal right to file an original birth certificate for
Anna now that the adoption has been finalized, if one can be filed at all.
Anna can’t secure a SS card, a bank account, virtually anything
without a birth certificate. It’s like she’s not even a citizen of this
country!
To top it off, if we do not get this resolved before her
first birthday on February 17, extensive legal ramifications will occur. Not
only will the red tape increase, along with the cost, but—as we’ve been
told—Anna will never be allowed to obtain a passport. She could never leave the
country.
As you might imagine we are experiencing a number of
emotions: anxiety, anger, frustration, and fear. Oh, how I wish my faith felt
stronger.
Please, please join us in prayer for a timely resolution and
the ability to file Anna’s birth certificate.
1 comment:
oh, Emily, that is crazy. I will definitely be praying for all of that to be resolved by her birthday.
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