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We live in North Carolina where facilitators are not licensed, but we may have found a facilitator to best suit our needs. I'm interested to see if anyone else has worked with this same scenario and how it was handled. What are our options?
child4us
We live in North Carolina where facilitators are not licensed, but we may have found a facilitator to best suit our needs. I'm interested to see if anyone else has worked with this same scenario and how it was handled. What are our options?
The law is you can't be a facilitator operating in your state. .like opening a busines there. .I know they've helped many families adoption in NC they will give them to you after your phone confernce...their references are very helpful!
Last update on March 2, 8:16 am by Sachin Gupta.
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Bonzie- that information is incorrect. NC does allow facilitators to operate there. They are unable to actually place children, but they work with agencies that can. They generally call themselves referral services, which allows them to be paid for their services.
oregongirl
Bonzie- that information is incorrect. NC does allow facilitators to operate there. They are unable to actually place children, but they work with agencies that can. They generally call themselves referral services, which allows them to be paid for their services.
Please be very careful about this!!! Regardless of working with a referral service, some States will still not allow the placement of a baby if a facilitator /referral service has been used at all. Please check with your attorney.
Sincerely,
Linny
I agree with Linny, you should always check if facilitators are allowed in your state. In this case the OP lives in the state in question and was hoping to adopt from a facilitator friendly state, so it is allowed.
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