Oklahoma Code § 10A-1-4-813

Title 10A. Children And Juvenile Code: Postadoption agreements with birth relatives
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A.  1.  When the court, pursuant to Section 1-4-812 of this
title, finds that a deprived child should be placed for adoption,
nothing in the adoption laws of this state shall be construed to
prevent the petitioners for adoption of the child from voluntarily
entering into a written agreement with the birth relatives,
including a birth parent, to permit postadoption contact between the
birth relatives and the child.  The postadoption contact agreement
shall be issued by the court in a separate instrument at the time an
adoption decree is entered if the court finds the agreement is
voluntary, does not pose a threat to the safety of the child, and is
in the best interests of the child.
2.  For purposes of this section, "birth relative" means a
parent, stepparent, grandparent, great-grandparent, sibling, uncle
or aunt of a minor adoptee.  This relationship may be by blood or
marriage, provided a sibling relationship may be by whole or half
blood, marriage, or affinity through a common legal or biological
parent.  For an Indian child, birth relative includes members of the
extended family as defined by the laws or customs of the Indian
child's tribe or, in the absence of laws or customs, shall be a
person who has reached eighteen (18) years of age and who is the
Indian child’s great-grandparent, grandparent, aunt or uncle,
brother or sister, brother-in-law or sister-in-law, niece, nephew,

or first or second cousin or stepparent, as provided in the Indian
Child Welfare Act, United States Code, Title 25, Section 1903.
3.  If a child who is separated from a sibling is ordered to be
placed for adoption, the court shall order that the Department shall
take all of the following steps to facilitate ongoing sibling
contact or visitation:
a. provide information to prospective adoptive parents
about the importance of sibling relationships to the
adopted child and counseling on methods for
maintaining sibling relationships,
b. provide prospective adoptive parents with information
about siblings of the child; provided, the address
where the siblings reside shall not be disclosed
unless authorized by a court order for good cause
shown, and
c. encourage prospective adoptive parents to make a plan
for facilitating postadoptive contact between the
child who is the subject of a petition for adoption
and any siblings of that child.
4.  The terms of the postadoption agreement executed under this
section shall be limited to, but need not include, the following if
the child has an existing relationship with the birth relative:
a. provisions for visitation between the child and the
birth relatives,
b. provisions for contact between birth relatives and the
child or an adoptive parent, or both,
c. provisions for the adoptive parent to facilitate
sibling contact or visitation, and
d. provisions for the sharing of information about the
child.
5.  The terms of any postadoption agreement shall be limited to
the sharing of information about the child if the child did not have
an existing relationship with the birth relative.
B.  1.  A postadoption agreement is not legally enforceable
unless the terms of the agreement are contained in a written court
order entered in accordance with this section.
2.  An order must be sought and shall be filed in the adoption
action.  The order shall be issued by separate instrument at the
time an adoption decree is entered.
3.  The court shall not enter a proposed order unless the terms
of the order have been approved in writing by the prospective
adoptive parents, the birth relative who desires to be a party to
the agreement, the child, if twelve (12) years of age or older, and,
if the child is in the custody of the Department of Human Services,
a representative of the Department.  The child shall be represented
by an attorney for purposes of consent to the postadoption
agreement.

4.  The postadoption agreement approved by the court regarding
sibling contact or visitation shall be provided by the Department to
the adoptive parent or parents, foster parent, relative caretaker,
legal guardian of the child and siblings or others as necessary to
facilitate the sibling contact or visitation.
C.  Failure to comply with the terms of the postadoption
agreement as ordered by the court pursuant to this section shall not
be grounds for:
1.  Setting aside an adoption decree;
2.  Revocation of a written consent to an adoption after that
consent has become irrevocable;
3.  An action for citation of indirect contempt of court; and
4.  Preventing the adoptive parent or parents of the child from
changing residence within or outside the state.
D.  1.  Although the entry of the decree of adoption terminates
the jurisdiction of the juvenile court over the child, the
enforcement of the postadoption agreement and subsequent order shall
be under the continuing jurisdiction of the court granting the
petition for adoption.
2.  The court may not order compliance with the agreement absent
a finding that the party seeking the enforcement participated in
good faith in mediation or other appropriate dispute resolution
proceedings regarding the conflict prior to the filing of the
enforcement action, and that the enforcement is in the best
interests of the child.  Documentary evidence or offers of proof may
serve as the basis for the court’s decision regarding enforcement.
No testimony or evidentiary hearing shall be required.
3.  The prevailing party may be awarded reasonable attorney fees
and costs.  All costs and fees of mediation or other appropriate
dispute resolution proceedings shall be borne by each party,
excluding the child.
E.  A postadoption agreement may be modified or terminated only
if the court finds that the modification or termination is necessary
to serve the best interests of the child, and is agreed to by all
parties, including the child if the child is twelve (12) years of
age or older at the time of the requested modification or
termination.
Added by Laws 1998, c. 421, § 23, emerg. eff. June 11, 1998.
Amended by Laws 2000, c. 374, § 21, eff. July 1, 2000; Laws 2009, c.
233, § 45, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.  Renumbered from § 7003-5.6f of
Title 10 by Laws 2009, c. 233, § 259, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.

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