(1) REQUESTING A SEARCH.
(a) To initiate a search, a requester shall
submit a completed application form to the department.
(b) The requester may specify that the search
be restricted to only that adoption record information available within the
agency's internal files.
(c) Before
acting on a request for birth parent identity and location, the department or
agency shall require adequate identification to ensure that the requester is
indeed the adoptee and is 21 years of age or over.
(d) A request for medical or genetic
information shall be given priority attention by the department or agency and
search activities immediately initiated if the request is accompanied by a
written statement from a physician certifying that there is a medical emergency
for which the information is required.
(e) Requesters' applications shall be acted
upon in the order that the applications are received, except that requests
under par. (d) shall have priority over other requests.
Note: Application forms may be obtained from and are to be
submitted to: Adoption Records Search Program, Division of Safety and
Permanence, P.O. Box 8916, Madison, Wisconsin 53708-8916.
(2) ADOPTION SEARCH PROCEDURES.
(a)
1. The
department or agency shall diligently conduct adoption searches for birth
parents. A search is not considered complete until a birth parent has been
located and contacted or all reasonable means for locating and contacting a
birth parent are exhausted, unless the requester has specified under sub. (1)
(b) that the search be restricted.
2. A search shall be initiated by the
department or agency on the date that all of the following have been completed:
a. The completed and signed application has
been received;
b. The identity of
the requester is confirmed; and
c.
The initial fee required under sub. (3) (c) for the first hour of service has
been received.
3. The
department or agency shall complete the search and inform the requester of the
results within 6 months after initiating the search, unless:
a. A request involves searching for
information from sources outside the department or agency and not readily
accessible to department or agency staff;
b. A search is delayed by one or both birth
parents who want additional time before signing or submitting an affidavit to
the department or agency; or
c. A
search has been completed by the department or agency without a birth parent
being located, and the requester asks that additional efforts be made by the
department or agency.
(b) To the extent allowed by law, adoption
search activities shall include, but are not limited to, checking:
1. The current address on file at the
department or agency;
2. Known
close birth relatives who may know the location of the birth parent;
3. Directories;
4. Motor vehicle records;
5. Marriage and death certificates;
6. The family's physician;
7. Occupational licensing boards if
applicable to the birth parent's occupation;
8. Church records;
9. Public agency records;
10. Divorce records; and
11. Probate records.
(c) Employees of the department or agency
conducting an adoption search for birth parents may not inform anyone other
than the birth parents about the purpose of the search.
(d) When it appears that a sought-after birth
parent has been identified and located, the searcher shall first attempt to
make contact with the birth parent by telephone. If the presumed birth parent
has no telephone or cannot be contacted by telephone, the searcher shall
attempt contact through either a home visit or a letter.
1. Whether the searcher attempts contact by
letter or home visit, the contact shall be handled in a sensitive
manner.
2. If a letter is used, the
specifics of the search shall not be revealed in the event that another member
of the household opens the mail.
Note: Copies of sample, non-specific letters are available
from: Adoption Records Search Program, Division of Safety and Permanence, P.O.
Box 8916, Madison, Wisconsin 53708-8916.
(e) Adoption search program information shall
be provided to all birth parents contacted under this subsection in accordance
with s.
48.433(7) (b), Stats.
(f) Upon completion of an adoption search,
the agency shall provide the requester and the department with the same written
correspondence which includes:
1. The search
activities utilized and the types of information resulting from the search
activities; or
2. The circumstances
relating to the agency's inability to locate the birth parent or the birth
parent's refusal to provide information.
(3) FEE FOR ADOPTION SEARCH.
(a) The department or the agency designated
by the department to conduct the adoption search shall charge the requester a
fee to cover the costs incurred in conducting the search. The fee shall reflect
the amount of effort put into the search for the birth parents or birth parent
information and not the results or amount of information the department or
agency is able to gather. The fee may include the actual cost of locating,
certifying, removing identifying information, copying and mailing existing
information maintained in the internal files of the department or agency. The
initial fee submitted under sub. (2) (a) 2. c. with an application for a search
shall be deducted from the fee charged under this subsection. The fee charged a
requester for existing record information may not exceed a total of $150.
Note: The department or agency cannot guarantee that birth
parents will be found or that, if found, the birth parents will file the
required affidavit granting authorization for disclosure of birth parent
identity and location.
(b)
The adoption search fee shall be an hourly amount which shall represent the
actual cost to the department or agency to provide the service, except that
actual costs for making copies of record information may be billed to the
requester in addition to the hourly fee. The following items may be included in
the fee:
1. Salary and fringe benefit
expenses of personnel needed to operate and manage the search activity
(professional staff, clerical staff, and supervisory personnel);
2. A proportionate share of overhead expenses
attributable to the search activity; and
3. Special documentable expenses such as
travel expenses and long distance telephone costs if these expenses are not
included in the regular rate. These expenses shall be the actual amount paid
out by the agency or the department for the special item.
Note: Examples of overhead expenses that can be taken into
account when computing fees are rental of space and equipment, utility costs,
local telephone costs, depreciation of buildings and equipment, interest
payments, materials, supplies and postage.
(c) The department or agency shall require a
minimum charge up to the amount charged for one hour of service for any
adoption search activity undertaken for a client, including acting on a request
for disclosure of existing adoption record information.
(d) Each agency shall inform the department
of the hourly fee that it charges for adoption search services. Agency and
department fees may be adjusted whenever costs for providing the service
change. Fees shall be recomputed at least once a year.
(e) The department or agency may require an
advance payment of not more than $100 for the initiation of an adoption search.
If the advance payment exceeds the fee times the number of hours of service
plus special expenses, the department or agency shall refund any overpayment to
the requester. When the hours of service plus special expenses equal the
advance payment, the requester shall be notified that he or she has the option
of either accepting the adoption search information obtained to date or making
an additional advance payment for continuation of adoption search
activities.
(f) The department or
agency may waive all or part of any fees described in this subsection when the
department or agency finds that the requester does not have the sufficient
means to pay for the search.