The deadly earthquake that leveled Haiti's capital more than …
Aaron Ivey sings as his daughter, Story, 2, sits on his lap. Ivey adopted Story from Haiti in October 2009, but is still waiting for his son Amos, 4, who is still in the country (Matt Flener/KXAN)
Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide returned home …
Updated: Monday, 18 Jan 2010, 5:26 PM MST
Published : Monday, 18 Jan 2010, 11:33 AM MST
AUSTIN (KXAN/AP) - Thousands of kids in Haiti now may be without parents, and many
people across the world and in Austin, Texas are wondering how to
care for them.
But with the pressing need, adoption advocates are urging
patience.
"I would advise you to wait and pray," said Jamie Ivey
in a blog
post, who just recently adopted a daughter from Haiti, and is
waiting on her adopted son, Amos, 4, to come home from the
country.
On his blog, Ivey's husband Aaron, urged patience as well.
"Right now, it’s impossible for these orphanages in Haiti to process new adoptions, as all efforts are in 'survival mode,'" Ivey said.
Chris and Necole Marlow are looking to adopt from Haiti after the earthquake. The Marlows run a non-profit group called Help End Local Poverty.
"We were thinking about countries like Ethiopia and Uganda," said Chris Marlow.
But when the news came last week that Haiti needed help, Marlow said his family had a change of heart to adopt from that country.
"I think now is the time to think about it," said Marlow. But he, too, recommended an approach that helps with immediate needs first.
"If you just donate a simple five dollars to an organization that you trust, that can make an immediate impact now, and that can be the same kid that's adopted in six or seven months," Marlow said.
Adoption experts say the kids that surface after a natural disaster may still have mothers and fathers that are still alive.
"In the immediate aftermath of a disaster, it is often difficult
to ascertain that a child is truly an orphan," said Martha Osborne,
a contributor to the adoption advocate site
RainbowKids.com. "It is not
ethical to place a child for adoption unless it is clear that no
parent able to care for that child will be found."
In 2009, the U.S. State Department approved 330 adoptions
from Haiti.
Many parents, like the Iveys, are in the final stages of
their Haitian adoptions.
The
U.S.
Department of Homeland Security, Friday, said it is considering
a Humanitarian Parole for pending adoption cases.
"The State Department continues to make adoptions a priority
and we are continuing to work on adoption cases," DHS officials
said in a recent blog post.
The Haitian government considers those waiting to bring
children home legal parents. The adoptions are finalized in Haiti,
but it can still take months to bring children home.
Since the earthquake, the process has come to a near stand
still, as adoption advocates report the buildings holding many of
the adoption papers are destroyed.
Executive director Kathleen Strottman of the Congressional
Coalition on Adoption Institute said staffers from more than 30
congressional offices met Friday with the State Department and
other agencies involved in foreign adoptions.
Strottman said that the State Department is considering what is an appropriate use of its authority to ensure the children are safe. Many families have been pushing for emergency visas that would allow the children to come to the United States.
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