Ohio Adoptee Rights Historical Document: HB 419 (1995-1996)
In conjunction with Ohio Adoptee Searches I have started a new blog: Ohio Adoptee Searches: News and Views on Ohio Adoptee Rights, Search, and Reunion. I’m old enough to remember when adoptee rights and search were two sides of the coin, and search tended to lead to activism. (Special thanks to BJ Lifton, Florence Fisher, and Jean Paton) No later than the mid-1980s, though, search had been co-opted by therapists and so-called reform organizations who packed the hearing room with nose blowers with beggars’ bowls, who despite their use of “rights” language, chose reunion over rights. And still do. The Internet, in many ways, has reinforced this victimization, through hundreds preaching-to-the-choir-misery-loves-company forums, Facebook pages, and blogs. Because I’m so damned old, this strikes me as nonsensical. Back in the day search was subversive. Today it’s become the dead end of change. To cut the the chase my OAS blog is a forum to stir the pot: educate Ohio adoptee searchers on issues, the politics and language of open records, the history of sealed records in Ohio and past attempts to rescind our tiered system to bring all adoptees under the pre-1964 open access law, practical knowledge on how to Continue Reading →