The Supreme Court in the US state of Maine has opened the way for gay adoption. On Thursday it overturned a lower court decision and allowed a lesbian couple to adopt two siblings who were their foster children. Meanwhile, in Colorado, a lesbian couple have become the first to avail of the state's new law allowing gay couples to adopt.
The Maine Supreme Judicial Court unanimously ruled Thursday that state law does not preclude Ann Courtney and Marilyn Kirby of Portland from adopting the children, a 10-year-old girl and her 6-year-old brother. Courtney and Kirby became the children’s foster parents in 2001; last year they filed petitions with the Cumberland County Probate Court to adopt.
Their petition was rejected, but the Maine Supreme Judicial Court concluded state law does not prohibit two unmarried people from together adopting a child and that probate court has jurisdiction over the matter.
Meanwhile in Colorado, a lesbian couple Ms Mary Ross and Ms Jeannie DiClementi, have become the first gay couple to adopt children together under a new state law. Colorado already permitted adoption by married couples or by singles - straight or gay. But for singles with partners, the partner has not been able to adopt unless the couple married, which gays can't legally do in Colorado.
But in May, Gov. Bill Ritter signed the so-called second-parent adoption law, which allows same-sex couples, as well as grandparents, aunts, uncles and other relatives, to jointly adopt children.
The couple, Ms Ross, 45, and Ms DiClementi, 57, were sought out by care workers for the adopted girls, aged four and 21 months, after the children had been neglected by their natural parents. Ms Ross is the great aunt of the two girls. According to social services, they were the only family members with the resources and stability to take the girls.
Colorado is the 10th state to allow same-sex couples, as well as grandparents, aunts, uncles and other relatives, to jointly adopt children. The bill's sponsor, House Majority Leader Alice Madden, said the adoption law will protect the rights of children being raised in nontraditional families by ensuring that they remain with one parent if something happens to the other.
31/08/07
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