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Home / Waikato News

Foster duo seek status of parents

Simon Collins
By Simon Collins
Reporter·NZ Herald·
4 Jun, 2015 05:00 PM3 mins to read

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Wiremu and Sunny Bayliss say they must consult the birth mother of their foster daughter on all major decisions, including medical treatment and moving house or school. Photo / David Kerr

Wiremu and Sunny Bayliss say they must consult the birth mother of their foster daughter on all major decisions, including medical treatment and moving house or school. Photo / David Kerr

Petition wants law change to ease guardians' adopting.

Hamilton foster parents Wiremu and Sunny Bayliss have given an 8-year-old girl a safe "home for life", but are frustrated they can't make any major decisions without consulting her birth mother, who is always on the move.

The couple want to adopt the girl so they don't have to get the mother's permission every time the girl needs major medical treatment, changes schools or the family move.

They have been told adoption would be almost impossible under current law because the birth mother has refused consent, so they have gathered more than 1000 signatures on a petition to change the law.

"[The birth mother] is highly transient," Mr Bayliss said. "This year, she's had four different residences in two or three different towns around the Waikato."

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She has chronic alcohol and drug problems, he said.

The father has a conviction for a sexual offence against a minor and has no guardianship or access rights.

Home for Life status means the Baylisses, as guardians with the birth mother, must consult her on all "important matters affecting the child".

The couple are 39-year-old teachers but Mr Bayliss is out of work.

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"I'm looking out of town for work at the moment, but if we had to relocate, there is the potential for it to go to court," he said.

Mrs Bayliss is an American citizen so Mr Bayliss has been looking for work in the US, but they would not get a residence permit for the child unless they legally adopted her.

He said they took the child to meet her birth mother several times a year. "It usually happens because occasionally [the child] will ask to 'see my tummy mummy'."

He said the mother told them repeatedly she would consent to adoption, but after they arranged for her to see a lawyer she would not consent. Another lawyer said it could cost $15,000 to $20,000 to seek a court-ordered adoption.

"The lawyers are saying you'll have an easier time getting a law change to allow you to adopt a child from foster care than using the Adoption Act," Mr Bayliss said.

Social Development Minister Anne Tolley said the law had changed already. Last year's Vulnerable Children Bill created a new "special guardianship" order by which a Family Court judge will be able to share rights between guardians from July next year.

The Bayliss' petition is online at: facebook.com/Righttobelong

Between two stools

Foster care: Child, Youth and Family is the child's legal guardian and pays foster parents allowances of $146 to $204 a week for each child, plus clothing allowances of $78 to $132 a month, depending on the child's age.

Home for Life: Foster parents are legal guardians, usually with the birth parents, and get an unsupported child benefit at the same rate as foster parents but with no clothing allowance. They also get a $2500 lump sum at the start.

Adoption: Adoptive parents are sole legal guardians. The only support is family tax credits of $64 to $102 per child.

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