LOCAL
ADOPTION
How to Adopt a Child:
Adoption is defined as a socio-legal process
of providing a permanent family to a child
whose parents have voluntarily or involuntarily
relinquished parental authority over the
child.
Adoption is for children who cannot be reared
by their biological parents and who need
and can benefit from new and permanent family
ties. Adoption provides the same mutual
rights and obligations that exist between
children and their biological parents. It
comprises of social work and other professional
services that are required in the placement
of children in adoptive families.
Children whose parents are either absent
or unable to function as parents require
the protection of the State. Protection
of the child requires sufficient study to
make certain that the placement is suitable
and present no hazard to the child's growth
and development. The State through the Department
of Social Welfare and Development has a
concern in every adoption including those
by stepparents and relatives. Pre-Adoption
Services
Children
Eligible for Adoption
Qualifications
of Adoptive Parents
Requirements/Supporting
Documents
Process/Procedure
There are three types of adoption in
the Philippines:
1. Agency adoptions are those in which
a licensed adoption agency finds and develops
adoptive families for children who are
voluntarily or involuntarily committed.
The adoptive families go through the process
from application to finalization of the
child's adoption under the auspices of
the Department of Social Welfare and Development
or a licensed child-placing agency like
the Kaisahang Buhay Foundation. Through
this type of adoption, the legal rights
of the child, the parents who gave birth
to the child and the parents who will
adopt the child, are all equally protected.
2. Family or relative adoptions are those
where the biological parents make a direct
placement of the child to a relative or
a member of their extended family with
whom they relinquish their child.
3. Private or independent adoptions could
either be a direct placement to a family
known by the child's biological parents
or through the use of an intermediary
or a go-between. In an intermediary placement,
an individual knows of parents who want
to have their child adopted and arranges
such placement to a family or someone
who wants to adopt. These intermediaries
are generally well-meaning and have good
intentions. However, one must be wary
of "black market" placements which involve
an intermediary who brings together a
person who has a child and individuals
who want to adopt, for the sole purpose
of making a profit. This practice does
not consider the best interests of the
child nor the legal rights of biological
parents and adoptive parents.
The following are components of adoption:
- Recruitment of potential adoptive
families who may provide a home to
a child;
- Development of adoptive applicants
as parents to a particular child in
need of a home;
- Selection of a family who can best
contribute to the total development
of a particular child;
- Preparation of the child and family
prior to placement to insure acceptance
and readiness for the new relationship;
- Supervision of trial custody for
at least six months to facilitate
the child's adjustment in the family
prior to the completion of adoption;
- Preparation for removal of the child
from the adoptive home if the placement
disrupts while alternative plans are
being worked out;
- Finalization of adoption and termination
of service with issuance of the final
decree of adoption and amended birth
certificate;
- Organization of groups of adoptive
parents as part of support system;
and
- Post-legal adoption counselling
when adoptive family and adoptee need
further counselling related to information
about adoptee's background and search
for his/her biological parents.
Effects of Adoption
- Sever all legal ties between the
biological parent(s) and the adoptee,
except when the biological parent
is the spouse of the adopter;
- Deem the adoptee as a legitimate
child of the adopter;
- Give adopter and adoptee reciprocal
rights and obligations arising from
the relationship of parent and child,
including but not limited to;
- The right of the adopter to choose
the name the child is to be known;
and
- The right of the adopter and adoptee
to be legal and compulsory heirs of
each other.
INTER-COUNTRY
ADOPTION
How to Adopt a Child in the Philippines
:
Persons considering intercountry adoption
have a right to accurate information about
these adoptions and the process involved.
Such information will enable them to make
informed decisions on initiating and completing
such an adoption, the kind of child/ren
they can best parent, and whether they
are willing to make the lifetime commitment
which is required.
The Intercountry Adoption
Board (ICAB) is mandated by law ( Intercountry
Adoption Law of 1995 or Republic Act
8043) to be the Central Authority
on matters relating to the foreign adoption
placement of Filipino children to applicants
who are either former Filipinos or foreigners
permanently residing abroad. The Intercountry
Adoption (ICA) Law stipulates certain
eligibility requirements for adoptive
applicants intending to adopt a Filipino
child who may either be a relative or
non-relative.
In the Philippines, Filipino children
need to be made socio-legally free for
adoption prior to any kind of alternative
family placement. In line with the ICAB’s
mandated authority is the compliance
of the Philippines to an international
instrument, The Hague
Convention on the Protection of Children
and Co-operation in respect of Inter-country
Adoption, to which the Philippines
is a State Party and is denominated
as a Sending Country.
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Who is Eligible to Adopt?
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Any
foreign national or a Filipino
citizen permanently residing
abroad may file an adoption application
if he/she::
Is at least
twenty-seven (27) years of age
and is at least sixteen (16) years
older than the child to be adopted
at the time of the application,
unless the applicant is the parent
by nature of the child to be adopted
or is the spouse of such parent
by nature. A maximum of forty-five
(45) years age gap between the
adoptive child should be maintained
except in cases where the circumstances
will be favorable to the child;
Has the capacity to act and assume all the
rights and responsibilities incidental to parental authority
under his/her national law;
Has been married for three (3) years;
Has undergone appropriate counseling from an
accredited counselor in his/her country;
Has not been convicted of a crime involving
moral turpitude;
Is eligible to adopt under his/her national
law;
Can provide the proper care and support and
give the necessary moral values and example to the child and,
in the proper case, to all his/her other children;
Comes from a country with whom the Philippines
has diplomatic relations, maintains foreign adoption agencies,
and whose laws allows adoption; and
Files jointly with his/her spouse, if any,
who shall have the same qualifications and none of the disqualifications
to adopt as prescribed above.
The application
shall be filed with the ICAB through
the Central Authority (CA) on Inter-country
Adoption or an ICAB
accredited Foreign Adoption Agency
(FAA) or
Governmental Adoption Agency (GAA)
in the country where the applicant
resides.
Foreigners
who file their petition for adoption
in the Philippines under the Domestic
Adoption Act of 1998 or RA 8552,
the Court after finding the petition
to be sufficient in form and substance
and a proper case for inter-country
adoption, shall immediately transmit
the petition to the ICAB for appropriate
action. The ICAB shall then
act on the application following
the procedures described in the
Amended Implementing Rules and
Regulations.
These fees are provided
for by Article III Section 13 of
the Inter-Country Adoption Act of
1995 (RA 8043) and Section 29
and 40 of the Amended Implementing
Rules and Regulations on Inter-Country
Adoption. Effective February 2007,
the ICAB fees which applies to
all adoption categories (Regular
or Non-Relative, Relative, Special
Needs, Special Home Finding, Summer
Program and Medical Missions) are
as follows :
-
Adoption
Application Fee--$200.00 (non-refundable
upon endorsement of the Adoption
Application and Supporting
Documents)
-
Processing
Fee--US$2,000.00 for
single placement; US
$3,000.00
for sibling group of 2 or
more (as
of October 13, 2007)
-
Pre-adoptive
placement costs--
The amount varies from
one child to another depending
on what part of the Philippines
the child comes from and what
country he/she is going to.
Some Embassies of the Receiving
Countries charge visa fees
and require visa medical examinations while
others do not. The total amount
will be quoted by the ICAB in
the placement proposal. (Payment
upon acceptance of the matching
proposal)
- The finalized Local Adoption
cases requiring ICAB's ratification
has its own schedule of fees.
- The ICAB also supports the request
of the Association of the Child
Caring Agencies of the Philippines
(ACCAP) to increase its Child Care
Support Fund (CCSF) from US$ 500.00
to US$ 1,000.00 per placement.
- These new fees will not affect
prospective adoptive parents whose
adoption applications were received by
the ICAB prior to February
2007 and are currently awaiting
approvals and child proposals. This
means that once these families
receive a match, they will still
pay the processing fee of
US$ 900.00.
- All payments (except for the
CCSF which shall be addressed to
the child caring agency where the
child came from) shall be in the
form of a company check or
international bank draft and shall
be made payable to the Inter-country
Adoption Board. Personal checks,
travelers checks or cash WILL NOT
be accepted.
- No adoption application will
be processed and no Placement Authority
will be issued unless the corresponding
fees are received by the ICAB.
Adoption applicants
that have substantive Home Study
Report (HSR) and complete supporting
documents are reviewed and approved
within one month from receipt of
the adoption applicant/s' dossier.
On the other hand, adoption
application with lacking information
and/or documents are reviewed and
processed depending upon the submission/completion
by the Central Authority/Foreign
Adoption Agency (CA/FAA) of the requested
information and/or documents with
the corresponding delay in its approval.
The matching or child referral or allocation largely
depends on the stated child preference (i.e. child's age, gender and state
of health or extent of known background) of the Prospective Adoptive Parents
(PAPs). This usually takes nine (9) months to one (1) year after the
PAPs' approval. Willingness to accept a special needs child generally shortens
the waiting period for child allocation.
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Children Available for Inter-Country
Adoption
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Children available
for intercountry adoption placement
are those who cannot be placed with
an adoptive family in the Philippines.
(For relative adoption – only
up to the 4th degree
of consanguinity)
-
All children have
to be cleared for intercountry adoption
by the Competent Authority - Programs
and Projects Bureau of the Department
of Social Welfare and Development
(PPB DSWD)-Central Office.
-
Children of either
sex are usually available but there
may be longer waiting period for
girls because of the Filipino culture
whereby families hold on to their
daughters since they are generally
more submissive, less difficult
to parent and can be relied upon
to care for their family of origin
even until parental senescence occurs.
-
The allowable age
of Filipino children for Intercountry
Adoption (ICA) is below 15 years
old. A child who is above 15 years
old may be processed for ICA when
the following circumstances prevail:
-
When the child
is a part of a sibling group
where one or more is below
15 years old;
-
If the application
for adoption of a child was
filed (in cases of relative
adoption) before the child
reached the age of 15;
-
Special
Home Finding was initiated
before the child’s
15th
birthday; and
-
Other situations
where the intent to adopt
was manifested before the
child reached 15.
-
The general ages
of children cleared for intercountry
adoption usually range from 6 months
to 10 years old.
-
Special Needs or
Hard to Place children include
-
older children
(usually boys or girls age 6
to 15 years old)
-
Sibling groups
of 3 or more
-
Children with
major medical/physical problems
-
Children with
major developmental/neurological
delay/handicap
Any adoption applicant
interested in adopting a Filipino child/ren
(either relative or non-relative) may
contact the nearest Central
Authority on Intercountry Adoption
of their country (if Ratifier or State
Party to The Hague Convention) or any
ICAB accredited
Foreign Adoption Agency who is responsible
in these Prospective Adoptive Parents
preparation and conduct of their Home
Study Report.
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Documentary Requirements:
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-
Home Study Report
-
-
-
Birth Certificate
of the Couple (if adopting a relative:
Birth Certificate of their common
ancestry delineating relationship
up to the 4th degree
of consanguinity)
-
Marriage Contract
-
Divorce Decree
(if applicable)
-
Physical and
Medical Evaluation Report
-
Psychological
Evaluation by a duly licensed
psychiatrist or psychologist.
-
Written Consent
to Adoption by the biological
and/or adopted children who are
10 years of age or over witnessed
by the social worker after proper
counseling, in the form of a sworn
statement.
-
Character Reference
from (a) Local Church Minister
or Priest; (b)Employer; (c) Members
of the immediate community (who
have all known the applicants
for at least 5 years).
-
Latest Income
Tax Return or any other documents
showing the financial capability
of the applicant.
-
Clearance issued
by the police or the proper government
agency of the place where the
applicant resides.
-
Certification
from the Justice Department
or other appropriate government
agency of the applicant’s
country that the applicant
is qualified to adopt under
their national law and that
the child to be adopted is
allowed to enter the country
for trial custody and to reside
there permanently once adopted.
-
Letter of Acceptance
of the Designated Guardian/s
-
Recent post card
size pictures of the applicant,
his immediate family and their
home/community
-
-
Self-Report Questionnaire
(OPTIONAL)
- Adoption Decree of the PAPs'
previously adopted Filipino
child
All documents must be
written, officially translated in English
and must be officially endorsed by the
Central Authority on Intercountry Adoption
or ICAB accredited Foreign Adoption
Agency to the ICAB in the Philippines.
All communications relating
to adoption application/s and/or child
referral shall be transmitted by the
Central Authority or by the ICAB accredited
Foreign Adoption Agency directly to
the ICAB. Likewise, all ICAB correspondence/communications
shall be transmitted directly to the
concerned Central Authority and/or the
Foreign Adoption Agency.
All the Philippine process
for Intercountry Adoption (ICA) does
NOT require the intervention
of a lawyer either in the Philippines
or from the applicant’s country
of residence.
Relative Adoption as applies to
inter-country adoption refers to
the adoption of Filipino child/ren
by relatives residing abroad within
the fourth (4th) degree of consanguity.
Modified Procedure for Relative
Adoption Cases (as approved by
the Board on August 30, 2007)
1. The Questionnaire
for Relative Adoptive Applicants
(ICAB Form No.2) which can be downloaded
from this website shall be submitted
by the prospective adoptive parents
(PAPs) to the Central Authorities
(CAs)/ Foreign Adoption Agencies(FAAs).
The CAs/FAAs shall endorse to ICAB
the completed Questionnaire for Relative
Adoptive Applicants (QRAA) with the
agency's assessment and recomendation
on the prospective adoptive parents.
2. If the
CA/FAA favorably recommends the PAPs,
the ICAB social worker will then
request the CA/FAA to proceed with
the preparation of the PAPs' dossier.
On the other hand, based on the significant
data on the child as indicated in
the QRAA, the assigned ICAB Social
Worker will request the DSWD - Field
Office (FO) to conduct the Child
Study Report with supporting documents.
Periodic follow-ups will be made
with the DSWD-FO.(The time frame
from request to ICAB's receipt of
the report will be 3-6 months. In
sitautions where the FO could not
prepare the Child Study Report within
the expected time frame in
view of heavy adoption caseload,
the ICAB social worker will assist
in the conduct of the CSR).
3. Once the ICAB
receives from the DSWD-FO the child's
dossier and the complete adoption
application dossier of the PAPs from
the CA or FAA, the ICAB social worker
will prepare an executive summary
on the case with his/her recommendation
on the child's adoptive placement
for the disposition of the Board.
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RATIFICATION OF FINALIZED
LOCAL/DOMESTIC ADOPTION CASES
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Former Filipino
citizens who are naturalized citizens
of their present country of residence
have the option to pursue their proposed
relative adoption cases through the
Philippine Regional Trial Courts
or Family Courts. Under the Philippine
Domestic Adoption Law ( Republic
Act 8552), these former Filipino
citizens are qualified to adopt in
the Philippines as long as their
prospective adoptive child/ren are
related to them within the 4th degree
by consanguinity or affinity. In
most cases, their adoption petitions
are granted by the Courts. However,
when they apply for their adopted
child/ren's visa, they are required
by their Embassies (except for non-Hague
countries) to secure the ICAB's Certificate
of Conformity to their local adoption
as well as the approval of the Central
Authority of their country of residence.
This is in compliance to Chapter
IV, Article 17 of The Hague Convention
on the Protection of Children & Cooperation
in Respect of Intercountry Adoption
(THC) which states that " Any decision
in the State of Origin (in this case,
the Philippines) that a child should
be entrusted to prospective adoptive
parents may only be made if - "(c)
the Central Authorities of both the
Sending Countries (in this case,
the ICAB) and Receiving States (in
this case, Adoptive Parents' country
of residence) have agreed that the
adoption may proceed."
As
the Central Authority on Inter-Country
Adoption in the Philippines,
the ICAB is required to issue a Certificate
of Conformity to the child/ren's
local adoption. Please note, however,
that the ICAB does not automatically
issues this document. The adoptive
parents need to apply for the ratification
of their local adoption cases.
Below are
our requirements in ratifying
local adoption cases:
For
the child/ren :
1. Certified
True Copy of the Adoption Decree
issued by the Philippine Court
2. Certified
True Copy of the Certificate of Finality
issued by the Clerk of Court
3. Child
Study Report
4. Amended
Birth Certificate
5. Deed
of Voluntary Commitment or Affidavit
of Consent signed by birthparents
6. Decree
of Abandonment (in casesof abandoned
children)
7. Affidavit
of Consent to Adoptionof Adoptee
( over 10 years old)
8. Two
most recent close-up photos, 2 whole
body size photos and at least 3 copies
of pictures of adoptee
with the PAPs.
For
the Adoptive Parent/s ( Please
refer to the list of ICA requirements)
Note: The adoptive
parents' application must be duly
endorsed by the Central Authority/Foreign
Adoption Agency(FAA) of the PAPs'
country of residence. There will
be an application fee of One Hundred
Dollars (US$100.00) through
a company check or international
bank darft made payable to
ICAB.
Procedure :
When all these
documents of both the child/ren and
the adoptive parents are received
by the ICAB, the social worker
assigned to the case will review their documents
to determine whether the local adoption
was done in accordance with the provisions
of both the Philippine Domestic Adoption
Law and The Hague Convention on the
Protection of Children and Cooperation
in Respect of Inter-country adoption;
Through
an Executive Summary of the case,
the ICAB social worker will present
its assessment and recommendation
on this finalized local adoption
for the disposition of the Board;
The
ICAB Secretariat will officially
inform the PAPs through their Central
Authority/FAA on the Board's decision
on the case;
Once
the case is ratified by the Board,
the adoptive parents through their
Central Authority/FAA shall pay the
Nine Hundred US Dollars (US$900.00)
processing fee to the ICAB;
Upon
receipt of the adoptive parents'
payment for the processing
fee, the ICAB will issue the Certificate
of Conformity to the finalized local
adoption both to the PAPs' Central
Authority and to the concerned Embassy;
The
PAPs or the child's guardian may
now coordinate with the concerned
Embassy for the issuance of the child/ren's
visa.
To
inquire or follow-up with the ICAB,
you can telephone, fax or e-mail:
Phone:
(632) 726-4568
(632) 721-9781
(632) 721-9782
Fax: (632) 727-2026
E-mail: adoption@icab.gov.ph
These
requirements and fees may change at
any time.
For more questions
on Inter-Country Adoption, check out http://www.icab.gov.ph.
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