9205
. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, the department, county
adoption agency, or licensed adoption agency that joined in the
adoption petition shall release the names and addresses of siblings
to one another if both of the siblings have attained 18 years of age
and have filed the following with the department or agency:
(1) A current address.
(2) A written request for contact with any sibling whose existence
is known to the person making the request.
(3) A written waiver of the person's rights with respect to the
disclosure of the person's name and address to the sibling, if the
person is an adoptee.
(b) Upon inquiry and proof that a person is the sibling of an
adoptee who has filed a waiver pursuant to this section, the
department, county adoption agency, or licensed adoption agency may
advise the sibling that a waiver has been filed by the adoptee. The
department, county adoption agency, or licensed adoption agency may
charge a reasonable fee, not to exceed fifty dollars ($50), for
providing the service required by this section.
(c) An adoptee may revoke a waiver filed pursuant to this section
by giving written notice of revocation to the department or agency.
(d) The department shall adopt a form for the request authorized
by this section. The form shall provide for an affidavit to be
executed by a person seeking to employ the procedure provided by this
section that, to the best of the person's knowledge, the person is
an adoptee or sibling of an adoptee. The form also shall contain a
notice of an adoptee's rights pursuant to subdivision (c) and a
statement that information will be disclosed only if there is a
currently valid waiver on file with the department or agency. The
department may adopt regulations requiring any additional means of
identification from a person making a request pursuant to this
section as it deems necessary.
(e) The department, county adoption agency, or licensed adoption
agency may not solicit the execution of a waiver authorized by this
section. However, the department shall announce the availability of
the procedure authorized by this section, utilizing a means of
communication appropriate to inform the public effectively.
(f) Notwithstanding the age requirement described in subdivision
(a), an adoptee or sibling who is under 18 years of age may file a
written waiver of confidentiality for the release of his or her name,
address, and telephone number pursuant to this section provided
that, if an adoptee, the adoptive parent consents, and, if a sibling,
the sibling's legal parent or guardian consents. If the sibling is
under the jurisdiction of the dependency court and has no legal
parent or guardian able or available to provide consent, the
dependency court may provide that consent.
(g) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (e), an adoptee or
sibling who seeks contact with the other for whom no waiver is on
file may petition the court to appoint a confidential intermediary.
If the sibling being sought is the adoptee, the intermediary shall be
the department, county adoption agency, or licensed adoption agency
that provided adoption services as described in Section 8521 or 8533.
If the sibling being sought was formerly under the jurisdiction of
the juvenile court, but is not an adoptee, the intermediary shall be
the department, the county child welfare agency that provided
services to the dependent child, or the licensed adoption agency that
provided adoption services to the sibling seeking contact, as
appropriate. If the court finds that the agency that conducted the
adoptee's adoption is unable, due to economic hardship, to serve as
the intermediary, then the agency shall provide all records related
to the adoptee or the sibling to the court and the court shall
appoint an alternate confidential intermediary. The court shall grant
the petition unless it finds that it would be detrimental to the
adoptee or sibling with whom contact is sought. The intermediary
shall have access to all records of the adoptee or the sibling and
shall make all reasonable efforts to locate and attempt to obtain the
consent of the adoptee, sibling, or adoptive or birth parent, as
required to make the disclosure authorized by this section. The
confidential intermediary shall notify any located adoptee, sibling,
or adoptive or birth parent that consent is optional, not required by
law, and does not affect the status of the adoption. If that
individual denies the request for consent, the confidential
intermediary shall not make any further attempts to obtain consent.
The confidential intermediary shall use information found in the
records of the adoptee or the sibling for authorized purposes only,
and may not disclose that information without authorization. If
contact is sought with an adoptee or sibling who is under 18 years of
age, the confidential intermediary shall contact and obtain the
consent of that child's legal parent before contacting the child. If
the sibling is under 18 years of age, under the jurisdiction of the
dependency court, and has no legal parent or guardian able or
available to provide consent, the intermediary shall obtain that
consent from the dependency court. If the adoptee is seeking
information regarding a sibling who is known to be a dependent child
of the juvenile court, the procedures set forth in subdivision (b) of
Section 388 of the Welfare and Institutions Code shall be utilized.
If the adoptee is foreign born and was the subject of an intercountry
adoption as defined in Section 8527, the adoption agency may fulfill
the reasonable efforts requirement by utilizing all information in
the agency's case file, and any information received upon request
from the foreign adoption agency that conducted the adoption, if any,
to locate and attempt to obtain the consent of the adoptee, sibling,
or adoptive or birth parent. If that information is neither in the
agency's case file, nor received from the foreign adoption agency, or
if the attempts to locate are unsuccessful, then the agency shall be
relieved of any further obligation to search for the adoptee or the
sibling.
(h) For purposes of this section, "sibling" means a biological
sibling, half-sibling, or step-sibling of the adoptee.
(i) It is the intent of the Legislature that implementation of
some or all of the changes made to Section 9205 of the Family Code by
Chapter 386 of the Statutes of 2006 shall continue, to the extent
possible.
(j) Beginning in the 2011-12 fiscal year, and each fiscal year
thereafter, funding and expenditures for programs and activities
under this section shall be in accordance with the requirements
provided in Sections 30025 and 30026.5 of the Government Code.