Public Act 90-0013
HB0951 Enrolled LRB9003306SMdv
AN ACT to amend the Adoption Act by changing Section 1.
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
Section 5. The Adoption Act is amended by changing
Section 1 as follows:
(750 ILCS 50/1) (from Ch. 40, par. 1501)
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-704)
Sec. 1. Definitions. When used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires:
A. "Child" means a person under legal age subject to
adoption under this Act.
B. "Related child" means a child subject to adoption
where either or both of the adopting parents stands in any of
the following relationships to the child by blood or
marriage: parent, grand-parent, brother, sister, step-parent,
step-grandparent, step-brother, step-sister, uncle, aunt,
great-uncle, great-aunt, or cousin of first degree. A child
whose parent has executed a final irrevocable consent to
adoption or a final irrevocable surrender for purposes of
adoption, or whose parent has had his or her parental rights
terminated, is not a related child to that person.
C. "Agency" for the purpose of this Act means a public
child welfare agency or a licensed child welfare agency.
D. "Unfit person" means any person whom the court shall
find to be unfit to have a child, without regard to the
likelihood that the child will be placed for adoption. The
grounds of unfitness are any one or more of the following:
(a) Abandonment of the child.
(b) Failure to maintain a reasonable degree of
interest, concern or responsibility as to the child's
welfare.
(c) Desertion of the child for more than 3 months
next preceding the commencement of the Adoption
proceeding.
(d) Substantial neglect of the child if continuous
or repeated.
(e) Extreme or repeated cruelty to the child.
(f) Two or more findings of physical abuse to any
children under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or
Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, the most
recent of which was determined by the juvenile court
hearing the matter to be supported by clear and
convincing evidence; a criminal conviction resulting from
the death of any child by physical child abuse; or a
finding of physical child abuse resulting from the death
of any child under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act
or Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(g) Failure to protect the child from conditions
within his environment injurious to the child's welfare.
(h) Other neglect of, or misconduct toward the
child; provided that in making a finding of unfitness the
court hearing the adoption proceeding shall not be bound
by any previous finding, order or judgment affecting or
determining the rights of the parents toward the child
sought to be adopted in any other proceeding except such
proceedings terminating parental rights as shall be had
under either this Act, the Juvenile Court Act or the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(i) Depravity.
(j) Open and notorious adultery or fornication.
(j-1) Conviction of first degree murder in
violation of paragraph 1 or 2 of subsection (a) of
Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or conviction of
second degree murder in violation of subsection (a) of
Section 9-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 of a parent of
the child to be adopted shall create a presumption of
unfitness that may be overcome only by clear and
convincing evidence.
(k) Habitual drunkenness or addiction to drugs,
other than those prescribed by a physician, for at least
one year immediately prior to the commencement of the
unfitness proceeding.
(l) Failure to demonstrate a reasonable degree of
interest, concern or responsibility as to the welfare of
a new born child during the first 30 days after its
birth.
(m) Failure by a parent to make reasonable efforts
to correct the conditions that were the basis for the
removal of the child from the parent, or to make
reasonable progress toward the return of the child to the
parent within 12 months after an adjudication of
neglected minor, abused minor or dependent minor under
the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(n) Evidence of intent to forego his or her
parental rights, whether or not the child is a ward of
the court, (1) as manifested by his or her failure for a
period of 12 months: (i) to visit the child, (ii) to
communicate with the child or agency, although able to do
so and not prevented from doing so by an agency or by
court order, or (iii) to maintain contact with or plan
for the future of the child, although physically able to
do so, or (2) as manifested by the father's failure,
where he and the mother of the child were unmarried to
each other at the time of the child's birth, (i) to
commence legal proceedings to establish his paternity
under the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 or the law of
the jurisdiction of the child's birth within 30 days of
being informed, pursuant to Section 12a of this Act, that
he is the father or the likely father of the child or,
after being so informed where the child is not yet born,
within 30 days of the child's birth, or (ii) to make a
good faith effort to pay a reasonable amount of the
expenses related to the birth of the child and to provide
a reasonable amount for the financial support of the
child, the court to consider in its determination all
relevant circumstances, including the financial condition
of both parents; provided that the ground for termination
provided in this subparagraph (n)(2)(ii) shall only be
available where the petition is brought by the mother or
the husband of the mother.
Contact or communication by a parent with his or her
child that does not demonstrate affection and concern
does not constitute reasonable contact and planning under
subdivision (n). In the absence of evidence to the
contrary, the ability to visit, communicate, maintain
contact, pay expenses and plan for the future shall be
presumed. The subjective intent of the parent, whether
expressed or otherwise, unsupported by evidence of the
foregoing parental acts manifesting that intent, shall
not preclude a determination that the parent has intended
to forego his or her parental rights. In making this
determination, the court may consider but shall not
require a showing of diligent efforts by an authorized
agency to encourage the parent to perform the acts
specified in subdivision (n).
It shall be an affirmative defense to any allegation
under paragraph (2) of this subsection that the father's
failure was due to circumstances beyond his control or to
impediments created by the mother or any other person
having legal custody. Proof of that fact need only be by
a preponderance of the evidence.
(o) repeated or continuous failure by the parents,
although physically and financially able, to provide the
child with adequate food, clothing, or shelter.
(p) inability to discharge parental
responsibilities supported by competent evidence from a
psychiatrist, licensed clinical social worker, or
clinical psychologist of mental impairment, mental
illness or mental retardation as defined in Section 1-116
of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code,
or developmental disability as defined in Section 1-106
of that Code, and there is sufficient justification to
believe that the inability to discharge parental
responsibilities shall extend beyond a reasonable time
period. However, this subdivision (p) shall not be
construed so as to permit a licensed clinical social
worker to conduct any medical diagnosis to determine
mental illness or mental impairment.
(q) a finding of physical abuse of the child under
Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-21 of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and a criminal conviction
of aggravated battery of the child.
(r) a finding that at birth the child's blood,
urine, or meconium contained any amount of a controlled
substance as defined in subsection (f) of Section 102 of
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or a metabolite
of a controlled substance, with the exception of
controlled substances or metabolites of such substances,
the presence of which in the newborn infant was the
result of medical treatment administered to the mother or
the newborn infant, and that the biological mother of
this child is the biological mother of at least one other
child who was adjudicated a neglected minor under
subsection (c) of Section 2-3 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987, after which the biological mother had the
opportunity to enroll in and participate in a clinically
appropriate substance abuse counseling, treatment, and
rehabilitation program.
E. "Parent" means the father or mother of a legitimate
or illegitimate child. For the purpose of this Act, a person
who has executed a final and irrevocable consent to adoption
or a final and irrevocable surrender for purposes of
adoption, or whose parental rights have been terminated by a
court, is not a parent of the child who was the subject of
the consent or surrender.
F. A person is available for adoption when the person
is:
(a) a child who has been surrendered for adoption
to an agency and to whose adoption the agency has
thereafter consented;
(b) a child to whose adoption a person authorized
by law, other than his parents, has consented, or to
whose adoption no consent is required pursuant to Section
8 of this Act;
(c) a child who is in the custody of persons who
intend to adopt him through placement made by his
parents; or
(d) an adult who meets the conditions set forth in
Section 3 of this Act.
A person who would otherwise be available for adoption
shall not be deemed unavailable for adoption solely by reason
of his or her death.
G. The singular includes the plural and the plural
includes the singular and the "male" includes the "female",
as the context of this Act may require.
H. "Adoption disruption" occurs when an adoptive
placement does not prove successful and it becomes necessary
for the child to be removed from placement before the
adoption is finalized.
I. "Foreign placing agency" is an agency or individual
operating in a country or territory outside the United States
that is authorized by its country to place children for
adoption either directly with families in the United States
or through United States based international agencies.
J. "Immediate relatives" means the biological parents,
the parents of the biological parents and siblings of the
biological parents.
K. "Intercountry adoption" is a process by which a child
from a country other than the United States is adopted.
L. "Intercountry Adoption Coordinator" is a staff person
of the Department of Children and Family Services appointed
by the Director to coordinate the provision of services by
the public and private sector to prospective parents of
foreign-born children.
M. "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children" is
a law enacted by most states for the purpose of establishing
uniform procedures for handling the interstate placement of
children in foster homes, adoptive homes, or other child care
facilities.
N. "Non-Compact state" means a state that has not
enacted the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children.
O. "Preadoption requirements" are any conditions
established by the laws or regulations of the Federal
Government or of each state that must be met prior to the
placement of a child in an adoptive home.
P. "Abused child" means a child whose parent or
immediate family member, or any person responsible for the
child's welfare, or any individual residing in the same home
as the child, or a paramour of the child's parent:
(a) inflicts, causes to be inflicted, or allows to
be inflicted upon the child physical injury, by other
than accidental means, that causes death, disfigurement,
impairment of physical or emotional health, or loss or
impairment of any bodily function;
(b) creates a substantial risk of physical injury
to the child by other than accidental means which would
be likely to cause death, disfigurement, impairment of
physical or emotional health, or loss or impairment of
any bodily function;
(c) commits or allows to be committed any sex
offense against the child, as sex offenses are defined in
the Criminal Code of 1961 and extending those definitions
of sex offenses to include children under 18 years of
age;
(d) commits or allows to be committed an act or
acts of torture upon the child; or
(e) inflicts excessive corporal punishment.
Q. "Neglected child" means any child whose parent or
other person responsible for the child's welfare withholds
or denies nourishment or medically indicated treatment
including food or care denied solely on the basis of the
present or anticipated mental or physical impairment as
determined by a physician acting alone or in consultation
with other physicians or otherwise does not provide the
proper or necessary support, education as required by law, or
medical or other remedial care recognized under State law as
necessary for a child's well-being, or other care necessary
for his or her well-being, including adequate food, clothing
and shelter; or who is abandoned by his or her parents or
other person responsible for the child's welfare.
A child shall not be considered neglected or abused for
the sole reason that the child's parent or other person
responsible for his or her welfare depends upon spiritual
means through prayer alone for the treatment or cure of
disease or remedial care as provided under Section 4 of the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
R. "Putative father" means a man who may be a child's
father, but who (1) is not married to the child's mother on
or before the date that the child was or is to be born and
(2) has not established paternity of the child in a court
proceeding before the filing of a petition for the adoption
of the child. The term includes a male who is less than 18
years of age.
(Source: P.A. 88-20; 88-550, eff. 7-3-94; 88-691, eff.
1-24-95; 89-235, eff. 8-4-95.)
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-704)
Sec. 1. Definitions. When used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires:
A. "Child" means a person under legal age subject to
adoption under this Act.
B. "Related child" means a child subject to adoption
where either or both of the adopting parents stands in any of
the following relationships to the child by blood or
marriage: parent, grand-parent, brother, sister, step-parent,
step-grandparent, step-brother, step-sister, uncle, aunt,
great-uncle, great-aunt, or cousin of first degree. A child
whose parent has executed a final irrevocable consent to
adoption or a final irrevocable surrender for purposes of
adoption, or whose parent has had his or her parental rights
terminated, is not a related child to that person, unless the
consent is void pursuant to subsection O of Section 10.
C. "Agency" for the purpose of this Act means a public
child welfare agency or a licensed child welfare agency.
D. "Unfit person" means any person whom the court shall
find to be unfit to have a child, without regard to the
likelihood that the child will be placed for adoption. The
grounds of unfitness are any one or more of the following:
(a) Abandonment of the child.
(b) Failure to maintain a reasonable degree of
interest, concern or responsibility as to the child's
welfare.
(c) Desertion of the child for more than 3 months
next preceding the commencement of the Adoption
proceeding.
(d) Substantial neglect of the child if continuous
or repeated.
(d-1) Substantial neglect, if continuous or
repeated, of any child residing in the household which
resulted in the death of that child.
(e) Extreme or repeated cruelty to the child.
(f) Two or more findings of physical abuse to any
children under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or
Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, the most
recent of which was determined by the juvenile court
hearing the matter to be supported by clear and
convincing evidence; a criminal conviction or a finding
of not guilty by reason of insanity resulting from the
death of any child by physical child abuse; or a finding
of physical child abuse resulting from the death of any
child under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or
Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(g) Failure to protect the child from conditions
within his environment injurious to the child's welfare.
(h) Other neglect of, or misconduct toward the
child; provided that in making a finding of unfitness the
court hearing the adoption proceeding shall not be bound
by any previous finding, order or judgment affecting or
determining the rights of the parents toward the child
sought to be adopted in any other proceeding except such
proceedings terminating parental rights as shall be had
under either this Act, the Juvenile Court Act or the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(i) Depravity.
(j) Open and notorious adultery or fornication.
(j-1) Conviction of first degree murder in
violation of paragraph 1 or 2 of subsection (a) of
Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or conviction of
second degree murder in violation of subsection (a) of
Section 9-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 of a parent of
the child to be adopted shall create a presumption of
unfitness that may be overcome only by clear and
convincing evidence.
(k) Habitual drunkenness or addiction to drugs,
other than those prescribed by a physician, for at least
one year immediately prior to the commencement of the
unfitness proceeding.
(l) Failure to demonstrate a reasonable degree of
interest, concern or responsibility as to the welfare of
a new born child during the first 30 days after its
birth.
(m) Failure by a parent to make reasonable efforts
to correct the conditions that were the basis for the
removal of the child from the parent, or to make
reasonable progress toward the return of the child to the
parent within 12 months after an adjudication of
neglected minor, abused minor or dependent minor under
the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(n) Evidence of intent to forego his or her
parental rights, whether or not the child is a ward of
the court, (1) as manifested by his or her failure for a
period of 12 months: (i) to visit the child, (ii) to
communicate with the child or agency, although able to do
so and not prevented from doing so by an agency or by
court order, or (iii) to maintain contact with or plan
for the future of the child, although physically able to
do so, or (2) as manifested by the father's failure,
where he and the mother of the child were unmarried to
each other at the time of the child's birth, (i) to
commence legal proceedings to establish his paternity
under the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 or the law of
the jurisdiction of the child's birth within 30 days of
being informed, pursuant to Section 12a of this Act, that
he is the father or the likely father of the child or,
after being so informed where the child is not yet born,
within 30 days of the child's birth, or (ii) to make a
good faith effort to pay a reasonable amount of the
expenses related to the birth of the child and to provide
a reasonable amount for the financial support of the
child, the court to consider in its determination all
relevant circumstances, including the financial condition
of both parents; provided that the ground for termination
provided in this subparagraph (n)(2)(ii) shall only be
available where the petition is brought by the mother or
the husband of the mother.
Contact or communication by a parent with his or her
child that does not demonstrate affection and concern
does not constitute reasonable contact and planning under
subdivision (n). In the absence of evidence to the
contrary, the ability to visit, communicate, maintain
contact, pay expenses and plan for the future shall be
presumed. The subjective intent of the parent, whether
expressed or otherwise, unsupported by evidence of the
foregoing parental acts manifesting that intent, shall
not preclude a determination that the parent has intended
to forego his or her parental rights. In making this
determination, the court may consider but shall not
require a showing of diligent efforts by an authorized
agency to encourage the parent to perform the acts
specified in subdivision (n).
It shall be an affirmative defense to any allegation
under paragraph (2) of this subsection that the father's
failure was due to circumstances beyond his control or to
impediments created by the mother or any other person
having legal custody. Proof of that fact need only be by
a preponderance of the evidence.
(o) repeated or continuous failure by the parents,
although physically and financially able, to provide the
child with adequate food, clothing, or shelter.
(p) inability to discharge parental
responsibilities supported by competent evidence from a
psychiatrist, licensed clinical social worker, or
clinical psychologist of mental impairment, mental
illness or mental retardation as defined in Section 1-116
of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code,
or developmental disability as defined in Section 1-106
of that Code, and there is sufficient justification to
believe that the inability to discharge parental
responsibilities shall extend beyond a reasonable time
period. However, this subdivision (p) shall not be
construed so as to permit a licensed clinical social
worker to conduct any medical diagnosis to determine
mental illness or mental impairment.
(q) a finding of physical abuse of the child under
Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-21 of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and a criminal conviction
of aggravated battery of the child.
(r) a finding that at birth the child's blood or
urine contained any amount of a controlled substance as
defined in subsection (f) of Section 102 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, or a metabolite of a
controlled substance, with the exception of controlled
substances or metabolites of such substances, the
presence of which in the newborn infant was the result of
medical treatment administered to the mother or the
newborn infant, and that the biological mother of this
child is the biological mother of at least one other
child who was adjudicated a neglected minor under
subsection (c) of Section 2-3 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987, after which the biological mother had the
opportunity to participate in a drug counseling,
treatment, and rehabilitation program.
E. "Parent" means the father or mother of a legitimate
or illegitimate child. For the purpose of this Act, a person
who has executed a final and irrevocable consent to adoption
or a final and irrevocable surrender for purposes of
adoption, or whose parental rights have been terminated by a
court, is not a parent of the child who was the subject of
the consent or surrender, unless the consent is void pursuant
to subsection O of Section 10.
F. A person is available for adoption when the person
is:
(a) a child who has been surrendered for adoption
to an agency and to whose adoption the agency has
thereafter consented;
(b) a child to whose adoption a person authorized
by law, other than his parents, has consented, or to
whose adoption no consent is required pursuant to Section
8 of this Act;
(c) a child who is in the custody of persons who
intend to adopt him through placement made by his
parents;
(c-1) a child for whom a parent has signed a
specific consent pursuant to subsection O of Section 10;
or
(d) an adult who meets the conditions set forth in
Section 3 of this Act.
A person who would otherwise be available for adoption
shall not be deemed unavailable for adoption solely by reason
of his or her death.
G. The singular includes the plural and the plural
includes the singular and the "male" includes the "female",
as the context of this Act may require.
H. "Adoption disruption" occurs when an adoptive
placement does not prove successful and it becomes necessary
for the child to be removed from placement before the
adoption is finalized.
I. "Foreign placing agency" is an agency or individual
operating in a country or territory outside the United States
that is authorized by its country to place children for
adoption either directly with families in the United States
or through United States based international agencies.
J. "Immediate relatives" means the biological parents,
the parents of the biological parents and siblings of the
biological parents.
K. "Intercountry adoption" is a process by which a child
from a country other than the United States is adopted.
L. "Intercountry Adoption Coordinator" is a staff person
of the Department of Children and Family Services appointed
by the Director to coordinate the provision of services by
the public and private sector to prospective parents of
foreign-born children.
M. "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children" is
a law enacted by most states for the purpose of establishing
uniform procedures for handling the interstate placement of
children in foster homes, adoptive homes, or other child care
facilities.
N. "Non-Compact state" means a state that has not
enacted the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children.
O. "Preadoption requirements" are any conditions
established by the laws or regulations of the Federal
Government or of each state that must be met prior to the
placement of a child in an adoptive home.
P. "Abused child" means a child whose parent or
immediate family member, or any person responsible for the
child's welfare, or any individual residing in the same home
as the child, or a paramour of the child's parent:
(a) inflicts, causes to be inflicted, or allows to
be inflicted upon the child physical injury, by other
than accidental means, that causes death, disfigurement,
impairment of physical or emotional health, or loss or
impairment of any bodily function;
(b) creates a substantial risk of physical injury
to the child by other than accidental means which would
be likely to cause death, disfigurement, impairment of
physical or emotional health, or loss or impairment of
any bodily function;
(c) commits or allows to be committed any sex
offense against the child, as sex offenses are defined in
the Criminal Code of 1961 and extending those definitions
of sex offenses to include children under 18 years of
age;
(d) commits or allows to be committed an act or
acts of torture upon the child; or
(e) inflicts excessive corporal punishment.
Q. "Neglected child" means any child whose parent or
other person responsible for the child's welfare withholds
or denies nourishment or medically indicated treatment
including food or care denied solely on the basis of the
present or anticipated mental or physical impairment as
determined by a physician acting alone or in consultation
with other physicians or otherwise does not provide the
proper or necessary support, education as required by law, or
medical or other remedial care recognized under State law as
necessary for a child's well-being, or other care necessary
for his or her well-being, including adequate food, clothing
and shelter; or who is abandoned by his or her parents or
other person responsible for the child's welfare.
A child shall not be considered neglected or abused for
the sole reason that the child's parent or other person
responsible for his or her welfare depends upon spiritual
means through prayer alone for the treatment or cure of
disease or remedial care as provided under Section 4 of the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
R. "Putative father" means a man who may be a child's
father, but who (1) is not married to the child's mother on
or before the date that the child was or is to be born and
(2) has not established paternity of the child in a court
proceeding before the filing of a petition for the adoption
of the child. The term includes a male who is less than 18
years of age.
(Source: P.A. 88-20; 88-550, eff. 7-3-94; 88-691, eff.
1-24-95; 89-235, eff. 8-4-95; 89-704, eff. 1-1-98.)
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that
text does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i)
the changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from
any other Public Act.
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.