Fostering Connections Resource Center

The Fostering Connections Resource Center gratefully acknowledges the National Conference of State Legislatures for sharing its tracking information about pending and enacted legislation. Please visit NCSL for additional information.

Enacted Adoption Legislation

Adoption Assistance

State: California

Bill: AB 154, Chapter 222; Status: Enacted

Summary: States the intent of the Legislature to conform state statutes with the federal Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 and to expend savings resulting from changes in eligibility for adoption assistance on services, including, but not limited to, postadoption assistance. Requires that the State Department of Social Services or a licensed adoption agency inform prospective adoptive families of their potential eligibility for a federal and state tax credit.

Sponsored by Assembly Member Evans


Adoption Services

State: California

Bill: AB 295, Chapter 427; Status: Enacted

Summary: Extends the availability of funds appropriated for adoption activities to specified counties to to provide preadoption and postadoption services to ensure the successful adoption of children and youth who have been in foster care 18 months or more, are at least nine years of age, and are placed in an unrelated foster home or in a group home.

Sponsored by Assembly Member Ammiano


State Adoption Services

State: California

Bill: AB 665, Chapter 250; Status: Enacted

Summary: Makes a change to provisions of existing law under which the State Department of Social Services may provide state adoption services and which requires the state to reinvest adoption incentive payments for placement of older children into the child welfare system in order to provide adoption services for older children.

Sponsored by Assembly Member Torrico


Child Welfare Services for Foster Care & Adoption

State: California

Bill: SB 597, Chapter 339; Status: Enacted

Summary: Makes amendments necessary to be consistent with the requirements set forth in the federal Fostering Connections Act. These include requiring the State Department of Social Services to exercise diligence to identify and provide notice to all adult grandparents and close relatives of the child; requiring the Department, in consultation with pediatricians, health care experts, and experts in and recipients of child welfare services to develop a plan for the ongoing oversight and coordination of health care services for a child in a foster care placement; and requiring the department or licensed adoption agency to provide information regarding the federal adoption tax credit for any individual who is adopting or considering adopting a child in foster care.

Sponsored by Senator Liu


Adoption Subsidy

State: Michigan

Bill: HB 4159; Status: Enacted

Summary: Modifies the adoption support subsidy to include that the department may pay a support subsidy to an adoptive parent if specific requirements are met including that the adoptee is a child with special needs. Determines that the maximum amount of the subsidy shall be equal to the rate that the child received in the family foster care placement or the rate the child would have received if they had been in a family foster care placement. If adoption assistance is to be paid, the department and the adoptive parent or parents shall enter into an adoption assistance agreement. Provides for extension of the agreement for an adoptee under 21 if certain requirements are met including that the adoptee has not completed high school or a GED program and the adoptee is regularly attending high school or a program for children with disabilities on a full-time basis and is progressing toward achieving a high school diploma, certificate of completion, or GED.

Sponsored by Representative Smith


Parent Child Relationship

State: Texas

Bill: HB 1151, Chap. 1118; Status: Enacted

Summary: Extends adoption assistance to a childŐs adoptive parents after age 18 and until age 21. Establishes that the department shall include training in trauma-informed programs and services in any training the department provides to foster parents, adoptive parents, kinship caregivers, and department caseworkers. The department shall pay for the training provided under this section with gifts, donations, and grants and any federal money available through the Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008. Extends foster care payments after a youth is age 18 until age 22. Develops the permanency care assistance program which will provide for the reimbursement of the nonrecurring expenses a kinship provider incurs in obtaining permanent managing conservatorship of a foster child; the program must conform to the requirements for federal assistance as required by the Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008.

Sponsored by Representative Thompson


Child Abuse

State: Texas

Bill: SB 2080, Chap. 1238; Status: Enacted

Summary: Develops the permanency care assistance program which authorizes foster care payments for relative caregivers who meet the eligibility criteria under federal and state law and department rule. Permanency care assistance may be extended after age 18 and until age 21 if the original agreement was first entered after the youth was age 16. Extends adoption assistance to a childŐs adoptive parents after age 18 and until age 21 if the original adoption assistance agreement was first entered after the youth was age 16. Allows the department to continue to pay the cost of foster care after a youth is age 18 until age 22.

Sponsored by Senator Uresti

Pending Adoption Legislation

Fostering Connections to Success Act

State: California

Bill: AB 12; Status: Pending

Summary: Requires the department to amend its foster care state plan to extend care to specified individuals up to 21 years of age. Requires the court to ensure that the child's transitional case plan is reviewed periodically and includes a plan for the child to meet one or more criteria that would allow the child to remain a nonminor dependent, and to ensure that the child has been informed of his or her right to seek the termination of dependency jurisdiction. Extends the Adoption Assistance Program (AAP) to include children under 21 years of age who turned 16 years of age before the adoption assistance agreement became effective.

Sponsored by Assembly Members Beall and Bass, with principal co-author, Senator Liu


Income Tax Credit for Adoption Costs

State: California

Bill: AB 47; Status: Pending

Summary: Amends the Personal Income Tax Law to increase the credit limitation to a new maximum amount with respect to the adoption of a minor child who is over a specified age or who was living in a group home or residential treatment facility for a specified period prior to the time the adoption was completed. Creates additional incentives for prospective adoptive parents to adopt older foster youth by removing monetary barriers that might otherwise hinder the adoption of these older foster youth

Sponsored by Assembly Member Ma


Fostering Connections to Success Act

State: California

Bill: AB 12; Status: Pending-Carryover

Summary: Requires the department to amend its foster care state plan to extend care to specified individuals up to 21 years of age. Requires the court to ensure that the child's transitional case plan is reviewed periodically and includes a plan for the child to meet one or more criteria that would allow the child to remain a nonminor dependent, and to ensure that the child has been informed of his or her right to seek the termination of dependency jurisdiction. Extends the Adoption Assistance Program (AAP) to include children under 21 years of age who turned 16 years of age before the adoption assistance agreement became effective.

Sponsored by Assembly Members Beall and Bass, with principal co-author, Senator Liu