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Adoption Support Groups in Maine
For Adopting Families
If you are a pregnant woman please visit pregnancy support groups.
If you are a birth mother please visit adoption support groups for birth mothers in Maine.
If you are an adopting family looking for support groups in Maine you are in the right place. After reviewing this page you may also want to visit child
adoption resources in Maine.
We understand there are many reasons that you may be looking for support groups. To better assist you and make sure your questions and concerns are addressed, in addition to listing the adoption support groups for Maine listed at the bottom of the page,
we have provided additional resource information that we feel you may be looking for. To find more information on these subjects, simply click the blue links.
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Starting the Adoption Process |
Among the most common things you, as an adopting family, may be looking for is information on "how to
adopt a child" whether to use an adoption facilitator, whether to engage in a private
adoption or adoption agency, the limitations and requirements for adoption, what to consider in selecting
an adoption agency, where to find licensed adoption agencies in Maine, and the laws relating to what you can and cannot
do when adopting a child in Maine. |
Child Adoption Laws in Maine |
Understanding the child adoption laws in Maine can greatly increase your chances
of successfully adopting a child. Important legal concerns include the giving of support or gifts to a birth mother or birth father, fees paid to an adoption agency, attorney, or other intermediary, the legality of using an adoption facilitator, the legal
rights of the birth parents and the adopting family,
and the critical issues of a disruption and the ending the biological parental rights (called a Consent, Relinquishment or Surrender). For example,
using our most recent update, in Maine:
*Use of Advertising in Adoptive Placements: Advertising for adoption services or soliciting adoptions is prohibited, except that licensed child-placing agencies may advertise in accordance with rules adopted by the department.
*Birth parent expenses allowed include actual cost of legal services related to consent, prenatal, postnatal, counseling and birthing medical costs for the mother, foster care for the child, reasonable living expenses for the birth
mother and the child, counseling and legal fees for the birth father, and fees to the placing agency.
*Consent can be executed any time after the child's birth. A petition for adoption must be pending before consent is executed.
*Revocation of Consent: A consent or release will not be valid until 3 days after if has been executed. Except as noted below, a consent or a surrender and release is then final and irrevocable when duly executed. |
Who and Where to Adopt |
You may be looking for the differences in the waiting period, effort, cost,
and success rates involved in adopting children within your state or in other states (domestic adoption) or even from other countries (international
adoption) in order to determine which type of adoption will work for you. Some specific choices you may want to consider, as the waiting lists
tend to be shorter, are special needs adoption, bi-racial and trans-racial
adoption, and older children (generally from one to 15 years of age) from the Maine child welfare and foster care systems. The more open you are in the
type and age of child you are looking to adopt the better your chances of success. You should also decide before contacting an adoption agency whether you want an open
adoption or closed adoption. |
Helping Hands |
In addition to the adoption support groups shown below, there are many sources of help available to you in Maine. For example, we are always happy to take your calls and offer you help and information
(contact us). There are local and private as well as state and federal government resources
that can provide financial and medical information and
help. Maine also has the Maine adoption exchange or photo listing program and an Maine
adoption contact office. |
Parenting Your Adopted Child |
You may also be looking for information on special problems in raising an adopted child and
being the best possible parent you can be. This may include explaining adoption to your child, family, friends and others. It could also include dealing with
special emotional and developmental
issues, or adoption and school problems, or issues involving adoption
therapy and finding a therapist who specializes in working with adopted children and their families. Then again you may be looking for
information on infant nutrition or birth records or
one of a myriad of other questions. |
Support Groups for International Adoption |
If you are specifically interested in an international adoption support group, you may want to visit the support groups for Russian
adoption, as well as the groups for Guatemala adoption and China
adoption. |
National Level Adoption Support Groups |
American Adoption Congress is composed of individuals, families and organizations committed to adoption reform.
Families for Russian and Ukrainian Adoption (FRUA) is for families who have adopted, or are in the process of adoption, from Russia and former Soviet Union countries.
Families with Children from China is a non-denominational organization of families who have adopted children from China.
Guatemala Adoptive Families Network initiates and supports the adoption of Guatemalan children.
National Adoption Center attempts to facilitate the adoption of children in the U. S., particularly children with special needs and those from minority cultures.
North American Council on Adoptable Children is committed to meeting the needs of waiting children and the families who adopt them.
Our Chinese Daughters Foundation (OCDF) is a non-profit foundation that supports families with children adopted from China.
Resolve is dedicated to providing education, advocacy, and support to those who face infertility.
The Child Welfare Information Gateway provides information on all aspects of both domestic and international adoption. |
Adoption Support Groups in Maine |
Adoptive Families Peer Support Group
PO Box 52
Stacyville, ME 04777
Phone: (207) 365-4895
Adoptive and Foster Families of Maine
294 Center Street
Unit 1
Old Town, ME 04468
Phone: (207) 827-2331
Toll-Free: (800) 833-9786
Adoptive Parent Peer Support
1st Parish Congregational Church, School St.
Gorham, ME 04038
Phone: 207-642-3978
ASC ME Peer Support Grp/Portland
USM Luther Bonney Hall, Rm. 410
Portland, ME Phone: 207-842-6642
Central ME Area Adoption Group
7 Noyes St.
Waterville, ME 04901
Phone: 207-873-6020
Chinese and American Friendship Association of Maine (CAMFAM)
PO Box 10372
Portland, ME 04104
Phone: (207) 871-7437
ME Foster Parent Association Peer Support Group
Blue Cross, 2 Gannett Dr
South Portland, ME 04106
Phone: 207-797-3264
ME Foster Parent Association
PO Box 834
Waterville, ME 04903-0834
Phone: 207-872-2265
Multi-Cultural Family Group
87 Spring St.
Portland, ME 04103
Northern ME Adoption Support Network
RFD #2, Box 3320
Houlton, ME 04730
Phone: 207-532-7584
[ Return to Support Groups ]
[ Return to Help For Families ]
[ Return to Adopting Families ]
[ Return to Adoption Services Home Page ] |
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