Adoption requirements in the state of Louisiana are as follows:
Age: 21 for foster care adoption. 18 for private adoption.
Marital Status: Single, married, divorced, or widowed. If divorced, the couple must be legally divorced, not simply separated. Cohabiting, but not legally married, couples are not eligible to adopt from foster care. Louisiana law does not discuss second parent adoptions by same-sex partners. Therefore, there is no way to legally enforce LGTB adoption.
Finances: Must have “sufficient income to meet their own basic needs.”
Housing: Can own or rent. The housing must be a safe and sanitary environment with adequate room for entire family. For foster adopt, the home cannot be used as a boarding house, day care center, or other similar business.
Personality: Must be stable, not about to move, with no financial, marital, or emotional difficulties.
Experience: For foster adoption, must complete 21 hours of Model Approach to Partnership in Parenting (MAPP) training.
Other Requirements for foster adoption:
• Must have adequate, reliable transportation.
• Must be free of communicable disease.
• Must not use physical punishment.
Louisiana offers MAPP classes to help inform and prepare prospective adoptive parents for the job of watching over children. Adoptive parents can expect to spend three hours a week over a nine week period training to become licensed foster care providers.
DISQUALIFYING CRIMES: In this state, you may not adopt if you have substantiated incidences of abuse or neglect.
You must pass state and federal criminal background checks.
You may not adopt if you have been convicted of any of the following:
• First- or second-degree murder
• Manslaughter
• Kidnapping
• Criminal neglect of family
• Criminal abandonment
• Felony carnal knowledge of a juvenile, indecent behavior with juveniles, prostitution, soliciting for prostitutes, pandering, letting premises for prostitution, enticing persons into prostitution
• Contributing to the delinquency of juveniles, cruelty to juveniles
• Child desertion
• Cruelty to the infirm