An Act To Implement the Recommendations of the Family Law Advisory Commission Concerning Adoption and Minor Guardianship
PART A
Sec. A-1. 18-C MRSA §9-302, as enacted by PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. A, §2 and affected by PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14, is amended to read:
§ 9-302. Consent for adoption
(1) Whether the person or agency determined the needs and interests of the child;
(2) Whether the person or agency determined the ability of the petitioner and other prospective families to meet the child's needs;
(3) Whether the person or agency made the decision consistent with the facts;
(4) Whether the harm of removing the child from the child's current placement outweighs any inadequacies of that placement; and
(4-A) Whether an agency withholding consent to the petitioner consented to the adoption of the child by a person who is a preadoptive parent as defined in Title 22, section 4002, subsection 9-A or who was identified as an appropriate permanency placement in a court-approved permanency plan pursuant to Title 22, section 4038-B; and
(5) All other factors that have a bearing on a determination of the reasonableness of the person's or agency's decision in withholding consent; and
A petition for adoption must be pending before a consent is executed.
(1) Received notice and failed to respond to the notice within the prescribed time period;
(2) Waived the right to notice under section 9-201, subsection 3;
(3) Does not establish parentage of the child under section 9-201, subsection 9; or
(4) Holds no parental rights regarding the adoptee under the laws of the foreign country in which the adoptee was born;
(1) The District Court in which the action under Title 22, chapter 1071 is pending; and
(2) The guardian ad litem for the child.
PART B
Sec. B-1. 18-C MRSA §9-204, sub-§3, as amended by PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. A, §105, is further amended to read:
(1) Termination is in the best interest of the child; and
(2) Either:
(a) The parent is unwilling or unable to protect the child from jeopardy, as defined by Title 22, section 4002, subsection 6, and these circumstances are unlikely to change within a time that is reasonably calculated to meet the child's needs;
(b) The parent has been unwilling or unable to take responsibility for the child within a time that is reasonably calculated to meet the child's needs; or
(c) The parent has abandoned the child, as described in Title 22, section 4002, subsection 1-A.
In making findings pursuant to this paragraph, the court may consider the extent to which the parent had opportunities to rehabilitate and to reunify with the child, including actions by the child’s other parent to foster or to interfere with a relationship between the parent and child or services provided by public or nonprofit agencies.
Sec. B-2. 18-C MRSA §9-204, sub-§3-A is enacted to read:
PART C
Sec. C-1. 22 MRSA §4038-C, sub-§2, as amended by PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. C, §66 and affected by PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14, is further amended to read:
Sec. C-2. 22 MRSA §4038-E, as amended by PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. C, §67 and Pt. D, §1 and c. 411, §12 and affected by PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14, is repealed and the following enacted in its place:
§ 4038-E. Adoption from permanency guardianship
A permanency guardian may petition the District Court to adopt the child in the permanency guardian's care and to change the child's name upon the issuance of the adoption decree. The petition must be filed and adjudicated in accordance with Title 18-C, Article 9, except that the adoption may not be granted unless each living parent identified in the child protection action whose rights have not been terminated has executed a consent to the adoption pursuant to Title 18-C, section 9-202 or the court finds that such consent is not required pursuant to Title 18-C, section 9-302, subsection 2. A permanency guardian may not seek an order terminating the parental rights of a parent as part of a petition to adopt the child.
PART D
Sec. D-1. 18-C MRSA §5-211, as enacted by PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. A, §2 and affected by PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14, is repealed and the following enacted in its place:
§ 5-211. Transitional arrangement for minors; continued contact with former guardian after termination
(1) Is necessary to avoid a likelihood of harm to the minor resulting from severing the legal relationship with the former guardian;
(2) Would not significantly interfere with any parent-child relationship or with the parent's rightful authority over the minor; and
(3) Is in the best interest of the minor due to the existing relationship between the minor and the former guardian because the former guardian was a primary caregiver and custodian of the minor for a significant period of time.
Before ordering communication or contact pursuant to paragraph B the court shall grant due consideration to the specific objections of the parent to the entry of an order and determine whether ordering a period of transitional arrangements pursuant to subsection 1 is sufficient to mitigate harm to the minor. Except as Title 4, section 152, subsection 5-A may otherwise require, the court issuing the order for post-guardianship contact has continuing jurisdiction to modify, enforce or terminate the order and shall follow the procedure set forth in section 5-210.