The "Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance" is hereby enacted into law and entered into with all other jurisdictions legally joining therein in form substantially as follows:
ARTICLE I. FINDINGS
The party states find that:
1. in order to obtain adoptive families for children with special needs, prospective adoptive parents must be assured of substantial assistance, usually on a continuing basis, in meeting the high costs of supporting and providing for the special needs and services required by such children;
2. the states have a fundamental interest in promoting adoption for children with special needs because the care, emotional stability and general support and encouragement required by such children to surmount their physical, mental or emotional conditions can be best, and often only, obtained in family homes with a normal parent-child relationship;
3. the states obtain advantages from providing adoption assistance because the customary alternative is for the state to defray the entire cost of meeting all the needs of such children;
4. the special needs involved are for the emotional and physical maintenance of the child and medical support and services; and
5. the necessary assurances of adoption assistance for children with special needs, in those instances where children and adoptive parents are in states other than the one undertaking to provide the assistance, require the establishment and maintenance of suitable substantive guarantees and workable procedures for interstate payments to assist with the necessary child maintenance, procurement of services and medical assistance.
ARTICLE II. PURPOSES
The purposes of this compact are to:
1. strengthen protections for the interests of the children with special needs on behalf of whom adoption assistance is committed to be paid, when such children are in or move to states other than the one committed to make adoption assistance payments; and
2. provide substantive assurances and procedures which will promote the delivery to children of medical and other services on an interstate basis through programs of adoption assistance established by the laws of the party states.
ARTICLE III. DEFINITIONS
As used in the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance, unless the context clearly requires a different construction:
1. "child with special needs" means a minor who has not yet attained the age at which the state normally discontinues children's services or twenty-one, where the state determines that the child's mental or physical handicaps warrant the continuation of assistance, for whom the state has determined the following:
(a) that the child cannot or should not be returned to the home of his parents;
(b) that there exists with respect to the child a specific factor or condition such as ethnic background, age, membership in a minority or sibling group or the presence of factors such as medical condition or physical, mental or emotional handicaps because of which it is reasonable to conclude that such child cannot be placed with adoptive parents without providing adoption assistance; or
(c) that, except where it would be against the best interests of the child because of such factors as the existence of significant emotional ties with prospective adoptive parents developed while the child is in the care of such parents as a foster child, a reasonable but unsuccessful effort has been made to place the child with appropriate adoptive parents without providing assistance payments;
2. "adoption assistance" means the making of payment or payments for maintenance of a child, which payment or payments are made or committed to be made pursuant to the adoption assistance program established by the laws of a party state;
3. "state" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands or a territory or possession of the United States;
4. "adoption assistance state" means the state that is signatory to an adoption assistance agreement in a particular case;
5. "residence state" means the state of which the child is a resident by virtue of the residence of the adoptive parents; and
6. "parents" means either the singular or plural of the word "parent".
ARTICLE IV. ADOPTION ASSISTANCE
A. Each state shall determine the amounts of adoption assistance and other aid which it will give to children with special needs and to their adoptive parents in accordance with its own laws and programs. The adoption assistance and other aid may be made subject to periodic reevaluation of eligibility by the adoption assistance state in accordance with its laws. The provisions of this article and of Article V are subject to the limitation set forth in this subsection.
B. The adoption assistance and medical assistance services and benefits to which the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance applies are those provided to children with special needs and to their adoptive parents from the time of the final decree of adoption or the interlocutory decree of adoption, as the case may be, pursuant to the laws of the adoption assistance state. In addition to the content required by subsequent provisions of this article for adoption assistance agreements, each such agreement shall state whether the initial adoption assistance period begins with the final or interlocutory decree of adoption. Aid provided by party states to children with special needs during the preadoptive placement period or earlier shall be under the foster care of other programs of the states and, except as provided in Subsection C of this article, shall not be governed by the provisions of that compact.
C. Every case of adoption assistance shall include an adoption assistance agreement between the adoptive parents and the agency of the state undertaking to provide the adoption assistance. Every such agreement shall contain provisions for the fixing of actual or potential interstate aspects of the adoption assistance, as follows:
(1) an express commitment that the adoption assistance shall be payable by the adoption assistance state without regard for the state of residence of the adoptive parents, both at the outset of the agreement period and at all times during its continuance;
(2) a provision setting forth with particularity the types of child care and services toward which the adoption assistance state will make payments;
(3) a commitment to make medical assistance available to the child in accordance with Article V of the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance; and
(4) an express declaration that the agreement is for the benefit of the child, the adoptive parents and the state and that it is enforceable by any or all of them.
D. Any services or benefits provided by the residence state and the adoption assistance state for a child may be facilitated by the party states on each other's behalf. To this end, the personnel of the child welfare agencies of the party states will assist each other and beneficiaries of adoption assistance agreements with other party states in implementing benefits expressly included in adoption assistance agreements. However, it is recognized and agreed that, in general, children to whom adoption assistance agreements apply are eligible for benefits under the child welfare, education, rehabilitation, mental health and other programs of their state of residence on the same basis as other resident children.
E. Adoption assistance payments, when made on behalf of a child in another state, shall be made on the same basis and in the same amounts as they would be made if the child were in the state making the payments.
ARTICLE V. MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
A. Children for whom a party state is committed, in accordance with the terms of an adoption assistance agreement, to make adoption assistance payments are eligible for medical assistance during the entire period for which such payments are to be provided. Upon application therefor, the adoptive parents of a child on whose behalf a party state's duly constituted authorities have entered into an adoption assistance agreement shall receive a medical assistance identification card made out in the child's name. The identification shall be issued by the medical assistance program of the residence state and shall entitle the child to the same benefits, pursuant to the same procedures, as any other child who is a resident of the state and covered by medical assistance, whether or not the adoptive parents are eligible for medical assistance.
B. The identification shall bear no indication that an adoption assistance agreement with another state is the basis for issuance. However, if the identification is issued on account of an outstanding adoption assistance agreement to which another state is a signatory, the records of the issuing state and the adoption assistance state shall show the fact and shall contain a copy of the adoption assistance agreement and any amendment or replacement therefor and all other pertinent information. The adoption assistance and medical assistance programs of the adoption assistance state shall be notified of the identification issuance.
C. A state which has issued a medical assistance identification card pursuant to the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance which identification is valid and currently in force, shall accept, process and pay medical assistance claims thereon as on any other medical assistance eligibilities of residents.
D. An adoption assistance state which provides medical services or benefits to children covered by its adoption assistance agreements, which services or benefits are not provided for those children under the medical assistance program of the residence state, may enter into cooperative arrangements with the residence state to facilitate the delivery and administration of such services and benefits. However, any such arrangements shall not be inconsistent with the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance nor shall they relieve the residence state of any obligation to provide medical assistance in accordance with its laws and that compact.
E. A child whose residence is changed from one party state to another party state shall be eligible for medical assistance under the medical assistance program of the new state of residence.
ARTICLE VI. JOINDER AND WITHDRAWAL
A. The Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance shall be open to joinder by any state. It shall enter into force as to a state when the duly constituted and empowered authority of the state has executed it or when enacted into law by the legislature of that state.
B. In order that the provisions of the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance may be accessible to and known by the general public and so that its status as law in each of the party states may be fully implemented, the full text of that compact, together with a notice of its execution, shall be published by the authority which has executed it in each party state. Copies of that compact shall be made available upon request made of the executing or administering authority in any state.
C. Withdrawal from the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance shall be by written notice sent by the authority which executed it to the appropriate officials of all other party states, but no such notice shall take effect until one year after it is given in accordance with the requirements of this subsection.
D. All adoption assistance agreements outstanding and to which a party state is signatory at the time when its withdrawal from the Interstate Compact on Adoption and Medical Assistance takes effect shall continue to have the effects given to them pursuant to that compact until they expire or are terminated in accordance with their provisions. Until such expiration or termination, all beneficiaries of the agreements involved shall continue to have all rights and obligations conferred or imposed by that compact and the withdrawing state shall continue to administer that compact to the extent necessary to accord and implement fully the rights and protections preserved hereby.
History: Laws 1985, ch. 133, § 1.