OAR 413-120-0000
Definitions


Unless the context indicates otherwise, the following definitions apply to OAR chapter 413, division 120:
(1) “Adoption” means a legal or administrative process that establishes a permanent legal parent-child relationship between a child and an adult who is not already the child’s legal parent and terminates the legal parent-child relationship between the adopted child and any former parent.

(2)

“Adoption agency” means an organization providing the services under any one of the following subsections:

(a)

Identifying a child for adoption and arranging an adoption.

(b)

Securing the necessary consent to relinquishment of parental rights and to adoption.

(c)

Performing a background study on a child or a home study on a prospective adoptive parent and reporting on such a study.

(d)

Making determinations of the best interests of a child and the appropriateness of adoption placement for a child.

(e)

Monitoring a case after placement until final adoption.

(f)

When necessary because of disruption before final adoption, assuming custody and providing child care or other social services for a child pending an alternative placement.

(3)

“Adoption committee” means a group of individuals convened by Department staff to make recommendations to an Adoption Decision Specialist (ADS) regarding adoptive resources for a child.
(4) “Adoption decree” means a decree which a court issues, pursuant to a petition for adoption, setting forth the facts of the case and ordering that from the date of the decree the child, to all legal intents and purpose, is the child of the petitioner.

(5)

“Adoption home study” means a written report documenting the result of an assessment conducted by the Department, a licensed adoption agency, or another public agency to evaluate the suitability of an individual or individuals to adopt and make a lifelong permanent commitment to a child or children.

(6)

“Adoption placement selection” means a decision made by the Department that an individual or individuals have been identified as the adoptive resource for the child.

(7)

“Adoptive resource” means an individual or individuals selected by the Department, another public child welfare agency, or a licensed adoption agency as the adoptive family for a child where no administrative review was requested within the timeframe allowed for such a request or, if a review was requested, the selection was sustained by that review and the review is complete.

(8)

“Adoption transition” means activities related to the placement of a child or sibling group under consideration in the home of the family selected as the adoptive resource.

(9)

“ADS” means an Adoption Decision Specialist, who is a Department employee appointed by the Adoption Program Manager to attend an adoption committee and make an adoption placement selection for a child.

(10)

“Authorized designee” means a Department employee who is designated and authorized by the Department to receive and process criminal records check request forms from subject individuals, receive criminal records information from the Background Check Unit, and make fitness determinations as described in these rules.
(11) “Battery” means the use of physical force to injure, damage, or abuse or to cause offensive physical contact.

(12)

“Birth Relatives” means birth parents, grandparents, siblings and other members of the child’s birth family, pursuant to ORS 109.305 (Interpretation of adoption laws).
(13) “Central authority” means the entity designated as such by a Convention country that is authorized to discharge the duties imposed on Convention countries.

(14)

“Central authority functions” means any duty required to be carried out by a central authority or foreign authorized entity under the Convention.

(15)

“Certified family” means an individual or individuals who hold a Certificate of Approval from the Department to operate a home to provide care, in the home in which they reside, to a child or young adult in the care or custody of the Department.

(16)

“Child” means a person under 18 years of age.

(17)

“Child welfare mediator” means a neutral third party who meets or exceeds Department qualifications to provide mediation services for mediation participants in the cooperative adoption mediation process, and has a legal assistance mediation contract with the Department.

(18)

“Committee facilitator” means a Department staff member appointed as a member of the committee to facilitate a permanency committee or adoption committee meeting.
(19) “Concurrent permanent plan” means the alternate permanency plan whenever the child has been placed in substitute care when the goal of the permanency plan is to return the child to the parents. The “concurrent permanent plan” is developed simultaneously with the plan to return the child to the parents or legal guardians.
(20) “Consent to the Adoption”: The “Consent to the Adoption” documents that the adoptive parents have been investigated and approved by the Department and gives permission for the adoption.

(21)

“Contested case hearing” means a hearing conducted under ORS chapter 183 and applicable administrative rules.

(22)

“Convention” means the Convention on the Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoptions, concluded at The Hague, the Netherlands, on May 29, 1993, which went into effect in the United States on April 1, 2008.

(23)

“Convention adoption” means an adoption of a child who is a habitual resident in a Convention country by an individual in another Convention country when the child has been, is being, or will be moved between the two Convention countries for the purpose of adoption.

(24)

“Convention country” means a country that is a party to the Convention.

(25)

“Cooperative adoption mediation“ or ”Mediation“ means a process in which a trained neutral third party assists parties in voluntarily reaching mutually acceptable resolution of issues, as well as assisting the parties in establishing relationships built on mutual trust and respect. Throughout these rules, ”cooperative adoption mediation“ will be referred to as ”mediation".

(26)

“Current caretaker” means a foster parent who:

(a)

Is currently caring for a child in the care and custody of the Department and has a permanency plan or concurrent permanent plan of adoption; and

(b)

Has cared for the child or at least one sibling of the child for at least 12 months or for one-half of the child’s or sibling’s life if the child or sibling is younger than two years of age. Time spent caring for the child or sibling under this definition is calculated cumulatively.

(27)

“Criminal records check” means obtaining and reviewing criminal records as required by these rules and includes any or all of the following:

(a)

An Oregon criminal records check where criminal offender information is obtained from the Oregon State Police (OSP) using the Law Enforcement Data System (LEDS). The Oregon criminal records check may also include a review of other criminal records information obtained from other sources.

(b)

A national criminal records check where records are obtained from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) through the use of fingerprint cards sent to OSP and other identifying information. The national criminal records check may also include a review of other criminal records information.

(c)

A state-specific criminal records check where records are obtained from law enforcement agencies, courts, or other criminal records information sources located in, or regarding, a state or jurisdiction outside Oregon.
(28) “Department” means the Department of Human Services, Child Welfare.

(29)

“Disruption” means an approval by the Child Permanency Program Manager to end an adoption process after adoption placement selection but before the adoption is legally finalized.
(30) “Fitness determination” means the decision made by an authorized designee, with regard to information obtained through a criminal records check, to either approve or deny a subject individual under these rules. A subject individual who is approved following a criminal records based “fitness determination” may still be denied approval to be a relative caregiver, foster parent, adoptive resource or an other person in the household if the subject individual does not meet other requirements contained in Department rules governing relative care, foster care, and adoption.

(31)

“Foreign authorized entity” means a foreign central authority or an accredited entity authorized by the foreign country to perform central authority functions in Convention adoption cases.

(32)

“Foster parent” means an individual who operates a home that has been approved by the Department to provide care for an unrelated child or young adult placed in the home by the Department.
(33) “General applicant” means an individual who:

(a)

Is neither a relative or current caretaker; and

(b)

Has submitted a completed application to adopt a child.

(34)

“Hague adoption certificate” means a certificate issued by the Secretary of State in an outgoing Convention adoption certifying that the child has been adopted in the United States in conformity with the Convention and IAA.

(35)

“Hague custody declaration” means a declaration issued by the Secretary of State in an outgoing Convention adoption declaring that custody of the child for purposes of adoption has been granted in the United States in conformity with the Convention and IAA.
(36) “Home Study” means a written evaluation of the prospective adoptive parent’s suitability to adopt and parent a child who may be placed for adoption. The “home study” is completed prior to the filing of a petition to adopt, in accordance with the Department’s reporting format and standards, and states whether or not the prospective adoptive parents meet the minimum standards for adoptive homes as set forth in OAR 413-120-0190 (Purpose) to 413-120-0246 (Standards for an Adoptive Home and Release of an Adoption Home Study).
(37) “IAA” means the Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000, Public Law 106-279, 42 USC 14901 to 14954.

(38)

“ICPC” means the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children (see ORS 417.200 (Interstate Compact on Placement of Children)).

(39)

“ICWA” or “the Act” means the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, 25 U.S.C. §§1901-63.

(40)

“Incoming Convention adoption” means a case in which a child who is a resident of another Convention country has been, is being, or will be moved to the United States for placement and adoption.

(41)

“Indian child” means any unmarried person who is under age 18 and either:

(a)

Is a member or citizen of an Indian tribe; or

(b)

Is eligible for membership or citizenship in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member or citizen of an Indian tribe.
(42) “Legal Assistance Mediation Program” means, for the purpose of these rules, services contracted through the Department Legal Assistance program to assist the birth family and the identified adoptive family to participate in a cooperative adoption process that may result in a Post Adoption Communication Agreement (PACA).

(43)

“Legal Assistance Referral” means an attorney-client privileged document used to prepare the termination of parental rights petition and or trial preparation work.

(44)

“Legal assistance specialist (LAS)” means a central office Department staff who provides a vital link in the execution of the technical and legal processes of the alternative permanent plans for children whose best interests are not served by returning to their families of origin.
(45) “Legalization” means the process of giving an adoptive placement legal validity.
(46) “Mediation communications” means, as defined in ORS 36.110 (Definitions for ORS 36.100 to 36.238)(8):

(a)

All communications that are made, in the course of or in connection with a mediation, to a mediator, a mediation program or a party to, or any other person present at, the mediation proceedings; and

(b)

All memoranda, work products, documents and other materials, including any draft mediation agreement, that are prepared for or submitted in the course of or in connection with a mediation or by a mediator, a mediation program or a party to, or any other person present at, mediation proceedings.

(47)

“Mediation participants” means persons who will be working directly with the mediator in the cooperative adoption mediation process and who will be responsible for the creation and implementation of any PACA that results.
(48) “OSP” means the Oregon State Police.

(49)

“Other criminal records information” means information obtained and used in the criminal records check process that is not criminal offender information from OSP. “Other criminal records information” includes but is not limited to police investigations and records, information from local or regional criminal records information systems, justice records, court records, information from the Oregon Judicial Information Network, sexual offender registration records, warrants, Oregon Department of Corrections records, Oregon Department of Transportation’s Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division information, information provided on the background check requests, disclosures by a subject individual, and any other information from any jurisdiction obtained by or provided to the Department for the purpose of conducting a fitness determination.

(50)

“Other person in the household” means any individual described in one or more of the following subsections:

(a)

An individual 18 years of age or older, who is not in the care and custody of the Department pursuant to ORS 418.015 (Custody and care of needy children by department), who is living in the home of:

(A)

An applicant to adopt a child in the custody of the Department as described in OAR 413-120-0190 (Purpose) to 413-120-0246 (Standards for an Adoptive Home and Release of an Adoption Home Study); or

(B)

An applicant to be a foster parent, relative caregiver, or adoptive resource as described in OAR 413-200-0301 (Purpose and Applicability of Certification Standards) to 413-200-0396 (Requirements Regarding Contested Case Hearings).

(b)

A respite care provider.

(c)

A person who volunteers or is employed by a foster parent or relative caregiver to assist with the care of the children placed in the home.

(d)

Any of the following individuals if there is reason to believe the individual may pose a risk to children placed in the home: A member of the household under 18 years of age, a babysitter, or a person who frequents the home.

(51)

“Outgoing Convention adoption” means a case in which a child in the United States has been, is being, or will be moved to another Convention country for placement and adoption.
(52) “Parties” means those participants whose signatures are necessary for the PACA to be implemented and are subject to enforcement of ORS 109.305 (Interpretation of adoption laws).

(53)

“Permanency committee” means a group of individuals who are responsible for making a recommendation regarding a permanency plan or a potential permanency resource when the child or young adult likely is not returning to his or her parent.

(54)

“Permanency plan” means a written course of action for achieving safe and lasting family resources for the child. Although the plan may change as more information becomes available, the goal is to develop safe and permanent family resources with the parents, relatives, or other individuals who will assume legal responsibility for the child during the remaining years of dependency and be accessible and supportive to the child in adulthood.
(55) “Petition for Adoption” means a petition, filed in circuit court by any person, for leave to adopt another person.
(56) “Placement Report” means a comprehensive written report and recommendation to the court prepared after the filing of a petition and after the child is placed for the purpose of adoption. The report is completed in accordance with the Department’s prescribed reporting format and includes information about the child’s background and placement; medical and genetic history; birth parents’ history; status and adjustment of the child in the adoptive home; and status and adjustment of the child’s prospective adoptive parents.

(57)

“Post-adoption communication” means the manner and frequency of contact and communication between the birth family and the child and/or the birth family and the adoptive family.

(58)

“Post Adoption Communication Agreement (PACA)” means a written agreement for post-adoptive communication, signed by birth parents and adoptive parents and is based on an informed decision-making process by the mediation participants. The content of the agreement is based on the best interest of the child.

(59)

“Post-placement supervision” means the supervision of a child following placement with an adoptive resource.

(60)

“Prospective adoptive parents” means the parents, family members, or other people who reside in the residence, or the physical home location of the family, who have been studied and approved by a foreign authorized entity to adopt a child in the legal and physical custody of the Department and with whom the Department has made an official decision to place the child in the family home for the purpose of adoption.
(61) "RCWAC" means the Refugee Child Welfare Advisory Committee.

(62)

“Receiving Convention country” means a Convention country in which a child who is the subject of an outgoing adoption will be placed for the purpose of adoption.

(63)

“Refugee child” has the meaning given that term under ORS 418.925 (“Refugee child” defined).
(64) “Relative” means any of the following:

(a)

An individual with one of the following relationships to the child or young adult through the parent of the child or young adult unless the relationship has been dissolved by adoption of the child, young adult, or parent:

(A)

Any blood relative of preceding generations denoted by the prefixes of grand, great, or great-great.

(B)

Any half-blood relative of preceding generations denoted by the prefixes of grand, great, or great-great. Individuals with one common biological parent are half-blood relatives.

(C)

An aunt, uncle, nephew, niece, first cousin, and first cousin once removed.

(D)

A spouse of anyone listed in paragraphs (A) to (C) of this subsection, even if a petition for annulment, dissolution, or separation has been filed or the marriage is terminated by divorce or death. To be considered a “relative” under this paragraph, the child or young adult must have had a relationship with the spouse prior to the most recent episode of Department custody.

(b)

An individual with one of the following relationships to the child or young adult:

(A)

A sibling, also to include an individual with a sibling relationship to the child or young adult through a putative father.

(B)

An individual defined as a relative by the law or custom of the tribe of the child or young adult if the child or young adult is an Indian child under the Indian Child Welfare Act or in the legal custody of a tribe.

(C)

An individual defined as a relative of a refugee child or young adult under OAR 413-070-0300 (Purpose) to 413-070-0380 (Refugee Child Welfare Advisory Committee).

(D)

A stepparent or former stepparent if the child or young adult had a relationship with the former stepparent prior to the most recent episode of Department custody; a stepbrother; or a stepsister.

(E)

A registered domestic partner of the parent of the child or young adult or a former registered domestic partner of the parent of the child or young adult if the child or young adult had a relationship with the former domestic partner prior to the most recent episode of Department custody.

(F)

The adoptive parent or an individual who has been designated as the adoptive resource of a sibling of the child or young adult.

(G)

An unrelated legal or biological father or mother of a half-sibling of the child or young adult when the half-sibling of the child or young adult is living with the unrelated legal or biological father or mother.

(c)

An individual identified by the child or young adult or the family of the child or young adult, or an individual who self-identifies, as being related to the child or young adult through the parent of the child or young adult by blood, adoption, or marriage to a degree other than an individual specified as a “relative” in paragraphs (A) to (C) of subsection (a) of this section unless the relationship has been dissolved by adoption of the child, young adult, or parent.

(d)

An individual meeting the requirements of at least one of the following:

(A)

An individual not related to the child, young adult, or parent by blood, adoption, or marriage:
(i)
Who is identified as a member of the family by the child or young adult or by the family of the child or young adult; and
(ii)
Who had an emotionally significant relationship with the child or young adult or the family of the child or young adult prior to the most recent episode of Department custody.

(B)

An individual who has a blood relationship to the child or young adult as described in paragraphs (A) to (C) of subsection (a) of this section through the birth parent of the child or young adult, but the prior legal relationship has been dissolved by adoption of the child, young adult, or birth parent, and who is identified as a member of the family by the child or young adult or who self-identifies as a member of the family.

(e)

For eligibility for the guardianship assistance program:

(A)

A stepparent is considered a parent and is not a “relative” for the purpose of eligibility for guardianship assistance unless a petition for annulment, dissolution, or separation has been filed, or the marriage to the adoptive or biological parent of the child has been terminated by divorce or death.

(B)

A foster parent may only be considered a “relative” for the purpose of eligibility for guardianship assistance when:
(i)
There is a compelling reason why adoption is not an achievable permanency plan;
(ii)
The foster parent is currently caring for a child, in the care or custody of the Department or a participating tribe, who has a permanency plan or concurrent permanent plan of guardianship;
(iii)
The foster parent has cared for the child for at least 12 of the past 24 months; and
(iv)
The Department or tribe has approved the foster parent for consideration as a guardian.

(65)

“Relative caregiver” means an individual who operates a home that has been approved by the Department to provide care for a related child or young adult who is placed in the home by the Department.

(66)

“Respite care” means a formal planned arrangement to relieve a certified family’s responsibilities by an individual temporarily assuming responsibility for the care and supervision of a child or young adult in the home of the respite provider or certified family. “Respite care” must be less than 14 consecutive days.
(67) “Secretary of State” means the Secretary of the United States Department of State, the central authority for the United States.

(68)

“Sibling” means one of two or more children or young adults who are related, or would be related but for a termination or other disruption of parental rights, in one of the following ways:

(a)

By blood or adoption through a common parent;

(b)

Through the marriage of the legal or biological parents of the children or young adults; or

(c)

Through a legal or biological parent who is the registered domestic partner of the legal or biological parent of the children or young adults.

(69)

“Subject individual” means an individual who:

(a)

Applies to adopt a child in the custody of the Department as described in OAR 413-120-0190 (Purpose) to 413-120-0246 (Standards for an Adoptive Home and Release of an Adoption Home Study);

(b)

Applies to be a foster parent, relative caregiver, or adoptive resource as described in OAR 413-200-0301 (Purpose and Applicability of Certification Standards) to 413-200-0396 (Requirements Regarding Contested Case Hearings); or

(c)

Is an other person in the household.

(70)

“Substitute care” means the out-of-home placement of a child or young adult who is in the legal or physical custody and care of the Department.

(71)

“Substitute caregiver” means a relative caregiver, foster parent, or provider who is authorized to provide care to a child or young adult who is in the legal or physical custody of the Department.
(72) “U.S. State Department” means the United States Department of State.
(73) “Violence” means the use of physical force to injure, damage, or abuse.
(74) “Weighing test” means the process in which an authorized designee considers available information to make a fitness determination when a subject individual has potentially disqualifying convictions, arrests, or conditions.
(75) “Young adult” means an individual aged 18 through 20 years.
413‑120‑0000
Definitions
413‑120‑0010
Purpose
413‑120‑0016
Confidentiality
413‑120‑0020
Adoption Placement Selection Options
413‑120‑0021
Adoption Placement Selection by Caseworker
413‑120‑0025
Composition of an Adoption Committee
413‑120‑0035
Invitation to and Notification of Adoption Committee
413‑120‑0053
The Adoption Committee
413‑120‑0057
Adoption Placement Selection, Notification, and Documentation
413‑120‑0060
Review of the Adoption Placement Selection
413‑120‑0100
Purpose
413‑120‑0110
Values
413‑120‑0115
Procedures
413‑120‑0142
Purpose
413‑120‑0145
Values
413‑120‑0155
Conditions for Not Filing a Petition for Adoption
413‑120‑0160
Right to Use Expedited Process
413‑120‑0165
Requirements Prior to Proceeding to Legalization of the Adoption
413‑120‑0170
Attorney Fees
413‑120‑0175
Court Filing Requirements
413‑120‑0190
Purpose
413‑120‑0220
Adoption Application Requirements
413‑120‑0222
Conflict of Interest for Adoptive Applicants
413‑120‑0225
Conditions that Require Additional Approval or Termination of the Department’s Adoption Application Process
413‑120‑0240
Status Notification of Adoption Applications
413‑120‑0243
Prioritization of an Adoption Home Study Application
413‑120‑0246
Standards for an Adoptive Home and Release of an Adoption Home Study
413‑120‑0400
Purpose
413‑120‑0440
Circumstances in which a Criminal Records Check Must Occur and Types of Records Checks Required
413‑120‑0450
Disqualifying and Potentially Disqualifying Criminal Convictions
413‑120‑0455
Potentially Disqualifying Arrests
413‑120‑0457
Weighing Test
413‑120‑0460
Contesting a Fitness Determination
413‑120‑0475
Record Keeping, Confidentiality
413‑120‑0600
Purpose
413‑120‑0620
Values
413‑120‑0625
Roles and Responsibilities
413‑120‑0628
Criteria for Using the Cooperative Adoption Mediation Process
413‑120‑0630
Post Adoption Communication Agreements (PACAs)
413‑120‑0635
Cooperative Adoption Planning Through Legal Assistance Mediation Services
413‑120‑0700
Purpose
413‑120‑0720
Department Efforts to Place with Relatives, Current Caretakers and to Place Siblings Together
413‑120‑0730
Order of Preference for Identification of Potential Adoptive Resources
413‑120‑0735
Current Caretaker or Relative Caregiver Request for an Adoption Home Study
413‑120‑0750
Recruitment Efforts
413‑120‑0760
Identification of a Child’s Potential Adoptive Resources
413‑120‑0800
Purpose
413‑120‑0830
Department Actions Prior to Placement
413‑120‑0840
Early Adoption Transition
413‑120‑0860
Placement and Post-placement Supervision
413‑120‑0870
Disruption
413‑120‑0880
No Delay in Placement
413‑120‑0900
Purpose
413‑120‑0910
Duty to Provide Information to Convention Case Registry
413‑120‑0920
Adoption of a Child Immigrating to the United States (Incoming Convention Adoption)
413‑120‑0925
Adoption of a Child Emigrating from the United States (Outgoing Convention Adoption)
413‑120‑0930
Transition, Travel, Placement, and Registration Requirements
413‑120‑0940
Post-Placement Supervision
413‑120‑0945
Finalization and Post-Finalization Duties
413‑120‑0950
Adoption Assistance
413‑120‑0960
Disclosure to the Adoptive Family
413‑120‑0970
Hague Custody Declarations
Last Updated

Jun. 24, 2021

Rule 413-120-0000’s source at or​.us