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I am in Colorado and wish for my new husband to adopt my two minor children. The biological father will not sign paperwork relinquishing rights, and I know that after 12 months of no contact I can claim abandonment. Question is, does anyone know if payment of child support by biological father through wage garnishment mucks up the "abandonment" issue? I wish I could figure out a way to cancel the child support to take this out of the mix, but I really am hoping that I can claim abandonment and terminate his rights anyway...any advice or information? My girls are ready for their "new" dad to be their "real" dad!
Hey, I adopted my 2 step kids last year. The child support is not going to matter at all, as long as he has not contact for a year you can terminate his rights. You may want to try asking him to just sign the papers he might would since it would mean that he would stop paying child support.
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My parents were married and divorced when I was two. He gradually stopped seeing me and paying support. My mother remarried a few years after the divorce. My step father adopted me within months of the remarriage. It's a long story as to why my father was absent, why my mother and step father served him with adoption papers, and why he was not seeing me or paying support. I had a step father who came to the plate and I loved, but I remembered my father and life before my step father was in it. As an adult adoptee, I have grieved over these decisions and my mother and adoptive father would give anything to have a do over with what they did based on what my own personal feelings were later in relation to what occurred. This was because biological family connections are very important to me and I was the victim of circumstances between people who were young and acted based on emotion and without a far reaching eye. I also later discovered my father's family was terribly upset with the decision and assumed their own connections were severed when my father's rights were taken. My grandmother was particularly beside herself. Some of their being hindered to persue their own contact with me was the fact that my mother's family was respected and did well and my father's family was uneducated and felt intimidated. I have been in contact again with my father and his family again, but I can never regain what I lost or potentially could have had. I feel as if my adoptive father would have been in my life and given me all he did without a piece of paper and I would have had the benefit of a father who might have later grown up and an extended family and cousins I would have never lost. PLEASE think carefully about step parent adoptions. Some are not necessary and can cause long term damage to the child who had no voice in its taking place. Please do all you can to encourage parental and extended family interaction with the child. Also consider the financial support. Money coming in for a child can pay for many things that might not be able to be afforded after an adoption. Paying child support is required and you can see it happens. Saying this, child support is the least of the benefits of having your own parent in your life. I am not saying all step parent adoptions are not good, but there are some that should never happen. Please think of the importance of heritage, extended family, and a parent who just needs to grow up. Also, please don't put your own prejudices and dislike of the parent in your decision making. It isn't about your own hurts and upset. Please resconsider since you have opposition from the father. If he appears to fight it in any way, I would let it go. Make him pay the support and create positive relations with him so you all can be a unified family of support for the child. When you adopt, your child loses their original name, identity, and even access to their original birth certificate. The child can be loved by the step parent without such a drastic measure.
littletraveler
My parents were married and divorced when I was two. He gradually stopped seeing me and paying support. My mother remarried a few years after the divorce. My step father adopted me within months of the remarriage. It's a long story as to why my father was absent, why my mother and step father served him with adoption papers, and why he was not seeing me or paying support. I had a step father who came to the plate and I loved, but I remembered my father and life before my step father was in it. As an adult adoptee, I have grieved over these decisions and my mother and adoptive father would give anything to have a do over with what they did based on what my own personal feelings were later in relation to what occurred. This was because biological family connections are very important to me and I was the victim of circumstances between people who were young and acted based on emotion and without a far reaching eye. I also later discovered my father's family was terribly upset with the decision and assumed their own connections were severed when my father's rights were taken. My grandmother was particularly beside herself. Some of their being hindered to persue their own contact with me was the fact that my mother's family was respected and did well and my father's family was uneducated and felt intimidated. I have been in contact again with my father and his family again, but I can never regain what I lost or potentially could have had. I feel as if my adoptive father would have been in my life and given me all he did without a piece of paper and I would have had the benefit of a father who might have later grown up and an extended family and cousins I would have never lost. PLEASE think carefully about step parent adoptions. Some are not necessary and can cause long term damage to the child who had no voice in its taking place. Please do all you can to encourage parental and extended family interaction with the child. Also consider the financial support. Money coming in for a child can pay for many things that might not be able to be afforded after an adoption. Paying child support is required and you can see it happens. Saying this, child support is the least of the benefits of having your own parent in your life. I am not saying all step parent adoptions are not good, but there are some that should never happen. Please think of the importance of heritage, extended family, and a parent who just needs to grow up. Also, please don't put your own prejudices and dislike of the parent in your decision making. It isn't about your own hurts and upset. Please resconsider since you have opposition from the father. If he appears to fight it in any way, I would let it go. Make him pay the support and create positive relations with him so you all can be a unified family of support for the child. When you adopt, your child loses their original name, identity, and even access to their original birth certificate. The child can be loved by the step parent without such a drastic measure.
Awesome post!!
Just chiming in to say my son benefitted from my DH's parenting for many years without a piece of paper. We discussed step-parent adoption early on....glad we did not for all the reason listed above.
Lack of document has never interfered from my DH parenting my son.....if it did, I can certainly understand why you would persue this option.
Good lucK!