Oklahoma Code § 10-7505-5.3

Title 10. Children: Contents of home study
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
A.  A home study satisfying Section 7505-5.1 or 7505-5.2 of this
title must include at a minimum the following:
1.  An appropriate inquiry to determine whether the proposed
home is a suitable one for the minor; and any other circumstances
and conditions which may have a bearing on the adoption and of which
the court should have knowledge; and in this entire matter of
investigation, the court is specifically authorized to exercise
judicial knowledge and discretion;
2.  Documentation of at least one individual interview with each
parent, each school-age child and any other household member, one
joint interview, a home visit, and three written references;
3.  Verification that the home is a healthy, safe environment in
which to raise a minor, as well as verification of marital status,
employment, income, access to medical care, physical health and
history; and
4.  A review of a criminal background check and a child abuse
and neglect information system check.
a. A background check shall be required for adoptive
parents and all other household members eighteen (18)
years of age and older, consisting of a review of a
national fingerprint-based criminal background check,
a search of the Department of Corrections’ files
maintained pursuant to the Sex Offenders Registration
Act, and a search of the child abuse and neglect
information system maintained for review by authorized
entities by the Department of Human Services.
b. A Department of Public Safety Motor Vehicle Report
shall be required for adoptive parents and all other
adult household members when the child to be adopted
is in the legal custody of the Department of Human
Services.
c. For each adoptive parent or other household member
eighteen (18) years of age or older who has not
maintained continuous residency in the state for five
(5) years prior to the home study or home study
update, a child abuse registry check shall be required

from every other state in which the prospective
adoptive parent or other adult household member has
resided during such five-year period.
d. Each prospective adoptive parent or other household
member eighteen (18) years of age or older shall be
required to cooperate with the requirements of the
Department of Human Services and the Oklahoma State
Bureau of Investigation with regard to the criminal
background check and child abuse check.
B.  A home study which is being updated or brought current in
accordance with subsection A of Section 7505-5.1 of this title shall
document appropriate inquiry into changes in the family situation
since the last home study, a home visit, at least one joint
interview, information on any children added to the family,
experiences, if any, of the adoptive parents as parents since the
last study, verification of current physical health, and three
current letters of reference.
C.  An updated home study as described in subsection B of this
section shall include a review of criminal background checks and
child abuse and neglect checks as described in subsection A of this
section.  However, when a national fingerprint background check has
been done within the five (5) years previous to the completion of
the updated home study and the results are available for review,
then a name-based search of the records of the Oklahoma State Bureau
of Investigation on the adoptive parents and other household
residents eighteen (18) years of age or older for whom the
fingerprint background check has been performed shall satisfy the
requirements for a criminal background check for purposes of a home
study update.
D.  1.  A preplacement home study or update which is being used
solely for purposes of international adoption shall not require a
national fingerprint-based criminal background search in addition to
the one required by the United States Citizenship and Immigration
Services.
2.  Such an international home study shall contain a review of a
state criminal background check, a search of the Department of
Corrections’ files maintained pursuant to the Sex Offenders
Registration Act, and a search of the child abuse and neglect
information system maintained for review by authorized entities by
the Department of Human Services.
3.  An international home study or home study update as
described in this section must include a statement that the home
study recommendation is for international adoption purposes only and
may not be used as the basis for a domestic adoption without the
addition of a review of the results of a national fingerprint-based
criminal background search if such would be required by subparagraph
c of paragraph 4 of subsection A of this section.

E.  The report of such home study or home study update shall
become a part of the files in the case and shall contain a definite
recommendation for or against the proposed adoption and the reasons
therefor.
F.  Following issuance of an interlocutory decree of adoption,
or if the interlocutory decree is waived, prior to issuance of a
final decree, the investigator conducting the home study or another
investigator who meets the qualifications specified in Section 7505-
5.4 of this title, shall observe the minor in the proposed adoptive
home and report in writing to the court on any circumstances or
conditions which may have a bearing on the granting of a final
adoption decree.  If the interlocutory decree was not waived, the
investigator must certify that the final examination described in
this subsection has been made since the granting of the
interlocutory order.  This supplemental report shall include a
determination as to the legal availability or status of the minor
for adoption and shall be filed prior to the final decree of
adoption.
Added by Laws 1997, c. 366, § 31, eff. Nov. 1, 1997.  Amended by
Laws 1998, c. 415, § 24, emerg. eff. June 11, 1998; Laws 1999, c.
396, § 18, emerg. eff. June 10, 1999; Laws 2007, c. 196, § 5, eff.
July 1, 2007; Laws 2012, c. 242, § 1; Laws 2021, c. 352, § 1, eff.
Nov. 1, 2021.

‹ Prev All Oklahoma sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.