[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 170 (Tuesday, November 29, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6526-S6527]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL ADOPTION MONTH
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I wish to spend a few moments talking about
National Adoption Month.
I thank the Senator from Maryland and my colleagues for letting me
talk for a few minutes about an issue that I think every single Member
of the Senate cares about. The month of November is National Adoption
Month. It
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gives us the opportunity to recognize the recent celebration of
National Adoption Day, which was November 19.
As cochair of the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute, I
have had the opportunity to work with so many of our Members and
understand the broad bipartisan support for what we need to do to be
looking at and more dedicated to adoption and to child welfare issues.
Last year, Senator Klobuchar and I came to this new role as the
Senate's cochairmen of this caucus. I am pleased to be working with her
on a resolution that would support National Adoption Month and National
Adoption Day again this year.
We also have the good fortune to work with Members of the House. The
idea that every child deserves to grow up in a loving, safe family is
something I think we can all agree on.
We have a lot of agreement, while we have been working with Members
of the Congress, on adoption issues over the last year. Just last week,
Senator Klobuchar, Congressman Trent Franks, Congresswoman Brenda
Lawrence, and others, along with me, finalized a comment letter to the
U.S. Department of State expressing concern over new international
adoption regulations.
We have specifically highlighted the negative impact some of the
Department's proposed changes could have on the adoption process.
Lately, the adoption process seems to have become more complicated
internationally, and we need to make it less complicated.
We worked--many Members, including the Members I just mentioned--very
hard on behalf of families who have currently been trying to resolve
pending adoption cases from a number of countries, most recently
finalizing adoptions out of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nepal,
Uganda, Guatemala, and other countries as well.
In June Senator Klobuchar and I introduced the Vulnerable Children
and Families Act, which would help more children living without
families or in institutional care to find permanent homes by enhancing
our U.S. diplomatic efforts rather than making those efforts more
difficult. We need to enhance what we do as a country. We need to
enhance what we do through the State Department to where we are more
focused on international child welfare, ensuring that intercountry
adoption to the United States becomes a more viable and more fully
developed option.
I am also continuing to support legislation to ensure that American
families have the resources and support they need so that adoption
domestically works. Specifically, there is the Adoption Tax Credit
Refundability Act and the Supporting Adoptive Families Act.
Before I conclude, I want to make a few comments to highlight three
stories of foster children in Missouri who are currently waiting to get
the family they would hope to have forever. According to the Missouri
Heart Gallery, more than 1,200 Missouri children are in need of
permanent homes. One of those children is Jason, age 15, who is an
expressive young guy and, in his own words, ``likes to play soccer when
it is not too hot.'' He also likes art and music. He feels like he is
creative. He is looking for a supportive family to call his own, one
who will also help him stay in contact with his brothers and sisters.
Michelle, who is 9 years old, loves to dance and hopes to have her
own pets in the future. However, she will tell you she would really
rather have a dog than a cat. But what she would really like to find is
a family--a family where she could have sisters, a family who would
allow her to stay in touch with her biological sister as well.
Lastly, Terrance, age 13, and Terion, age 10, are brothers with a
special bond. When you first meet Terrance, he appears shy, but after
getting to know him, he really has an incredible sense of humor. He
enjoys listening to music, sports, and playing outside. Terion has a
smile that just goes on and on. He is very active. He has been on a
Little League Baseball team, and he loves to bowl. The brothers are
strongly committed to each other. They have a strong bond to each
other, beyond just the normal bond of brothers. They want to find a
home where they can stay forever and stay together.
Last year, I shared the stories of these two siblings on the Senate
Floor. They are still looking for a family to call their own. Like so
many children across the United States, Jason, Michelle, Terrance, and
Terion are in need of a permanent, safe, loving home as a launching pad
for their lives.
I am an adoptive parent. I am always encouraged to see families
giving children the most important gift one can give somebody else, and
that is a family. I urge my colleagues to join Senator Klobuchar and me
in marking November as National Adoption Month by passing this
resolution.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
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