DISCLAIMER: Jim wants to make everyone aware that any of the "lame-ness" of this blog is totally MY doing, and he is in no way responsible. That said....
Looking at the adoption timeline probably means absolutely ZERO to people who have not spent the past year or two immersed in state department websites and other random cyber-locations that differ from the People.com of which I've grown so fond. Here's a little mini-lesson to help it all make sense:
CIS: This stands for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, more commonly referred to as U.S. Immigration
I-600A: This is a form for USCIS that allows for advance processing of classifying an orphan as an immediate relative. Essentially, it allows us to be cleared by immigration here without specific children assigned, so that when we receive a referral we can move forward immediately upon acceptance of that referral. In Ethiopia, we'll file the I-600 which specifies the actual children we are adopting.
Referral: We will be contacted by our placement agency, Wide Horizons for Children, when we are matched with children. Basically, we have to wait until we are next on the list for children within our request range. In our case, we are open to a sibling group of two or three children aged 5 and under. The tricky part is that the children would either have to be around a year younger than Tessa, our youngest, or the oldest sibling could have a birthday between Mark and Tessa with the other sibling(s) being younger than Tessa. We'll receive photographs, lab test results, measurements, and any additional medical and birth family information that's available. At that time we'll have, I believe, 10 days to have a physician review the records with us and accept the referral.
Home study: This consisted of a lot of paperwork, including elements such as an adoption education component, local police clearance, FBI fingerprint clearance, medical reports on the current members of our household, multiple interviews with our local social worker (from Lutheran Social Services of Illinois) and culminated with a 10 or so page paper outlining basically our whole life since birth and stating our social worker's approval of us as adoptive parents.
Dossier: This is the "final" packet of paperwork that gets sent to our agency and will be eventually forwarded to the Ethiopian government to move through the courts there once our referral is accepted.
Wow, are you totally jacked by all of this new-found information?!?! Don't worry, there's plenty more to come.....
4 comments:
Better late then never, I always say! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to the Melton Family. It's exciting to see the family growing by leaps and bounds. You can't mistake Mark for being Jim's son nor Tessa for being Kathy's. How much more alike to their parents can they be? :-) It's great to hear you're adding to your family, we are too. We are going to be first time grandparents. Becky is a little over a month along in her pregnancy. She is going to see the doctor next week so we'll get some more information at that point. Anyway, I'm glad that all is well with everyone and we pray for you and your new arrivals. They will certainly be loved, there's no doubt about that!
Great disclaimer by a great wife! Not only are you an excellent person who is great to be around, you are truly gifted at blogging!!!
What an exciting adventure! Your new kids are going to be so blessed to be joining such a happy family! I'm looking forward to the updates and can't wait to meet "more Meltons"!
Good words.
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