Sponsor Says HB 157 Would Preserve Sibling Ties for Children Adopted from Foster Care
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Summary
Rep. Andrew Gray introduced HB 157 to prevent adoption decrees from terminating legal sibling relationships and to require courts to document best-interest findings about post-adoption visitation; invited testimony will return due to unanswered implementation and confidentiality questions.
Juneau
Representative Andrew Gray introduced House Bill 157 at the April 15 House Judiciary Committee hearing, saying the bill responds to accounts from former foster youth who said legal severing of sibling ties during adoption harmed their sense of identity.
"Sibling relationships are among the most powerful and enduring connections a person can have," Gray told the committee, explaining HB 157 would clarify that an adoption decree does not terminate the legal relationship between adopted children and their siblings and would require courts to determine and document whether post-adoption visitation is in the childs best interest when the adoptee is a minor in state custody.
Staff Rosie Coet walked the committee through the bills sections: defining "sibling" to include those related by blood, adoption or marriage and those raised together in the same household for a period; clarifying that termination of parental or other relative relationships by adoption does not terminate sibling relationships; and specifying immediate effect if enacted.
Committee members pressed the sponsor on confidentiality and the bills practical implications. Representative Mina and others asked whether the bill would change who can see adoption-decree details and how courts would identify and document sibling relationships. Representative Vance cited the court systems fiscal note, which says implementation would require identifying who fits the sibling definition for all adoptees and would require courts to include best-interest determinations in adoption decrees and potentially decide on post-adoption visitation scope.
Gray said the bills origin is former foster youth testimony and that the intent is recognition and encouragement of sibling bonds while minimizing extra burdens on the Office of Childrens Services (OCS) and the courts. He said invited legal witnesses who can speak to confidentiality and practical mechanics were unavailable today and the committee would hold the bill for that invited testimony.
Public testimony Anna Redmond of Anchorage, calling in, testified in support. Redmond described sibling ties as essential to identity and wrote that maintaining sibling contact improves emotional regulation and long-term outcomes; she recounted personal losses and urged the committee to protect sibling bonds.
What happens next The committee paused further action on HB 157 and will return when invited witnesses (including legal counsel from relevant agencies) can address confidentiality and implementation questions; the sponsor indicated amendments are likely.
