1. Prime Minister Tony Abbott plans to overhaul adoption laws.
The Federal Government has plans to streamline processes to make inter-country adoption easier for Australian families.
An Inter-Country Adoption Support Agency is planned to open in April, and will include a 1800 hotline, website and dedicated Federal Government advocates to negotiate with foreign governments on behalf of prospective Australian parents, reports The Daily Telegraph.
The government is currently planning negotiations with the USA, Vietnam, Poland, Latvia, Kenya, Bulgaria and Cambodia to cut down on the average five-year wait prospective adoptive parents currently go through.
“Prospective parents have told me they simply don’t have anyone advocating for them,” Mr Abbott said. “This is all about helping the families who want a child, and the children who need a safe and loving family. Now there will be someone to guide them and support them.”
The plan includes funding for family support services to provide much needed help to parents and families involved in adoption.
“For those parents who want to adopt from overseas, we will make those processes simpler to navigate, with a central contact point,” Mr Abbott said.
There were 317 adoptions finalised in Australia in 2013-14 (domestic and intercountry). This is the lowest number on record, a fall of 9 per cent from the year before and 76 per cent lower than from 25 years ago (1989-90).
One of the most extraordinary adoption stories you’ll ever hear.