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©
2001 |
State
society supports local adoption
Black Butte resident Paula Reents
has found a way to pursue her interest in helping children through The Boys
and Girls Aid Society of Oregon.
The organization has been
in existence since the days of the Oregon Trail. Established in 1885,
the organization looked for suitable homes for orphaned children.
While the agency has widened
its scope of services, offering programs such as crisis intervention and
pregnancy prevention, it still functions mainly as a child welfare agency.
Reents has been working with
The Boys and Girls Aid Society since 1996. Her primary responsibility
is to locate adoptive families for children needing placement.
Reents, who has a background
in drug prevention and counseling, has always been interested in children's
issues.
"I chose to work for the Aid
Society because of the respect I saw given to their clients," said Reents.
"Helping children is the centerpiece of the agency. What I do isn't just
about adoption, it's about finding what is best for the child."
The Boys and Girls Aid Society
emphasizes open adoption, meaning that the birth mother chooses and meets
the adoptive family. Some form of contact usually takes place after the
adoption occurs.
"The spectrum and culture
of adoption has changed since this Society was founded," explained Reents.
"The process was once cloaked in secrecy, but openness is deemed a more
healthy route today. We work with both the birth mother and the adoptive
family to find the degree of openness that works for them."
According to Reents, openness
seems to allow a sense of completion for adoptees.
"I've asked adopted people
who don't know their birth parents how they feel about that," she said.
"They will usually reply that they've had great experiences with their
adoptive families, but always felt that something was missing from their
lives. Why was I given up for adoption? Who are my parents? In open adoption,
those questions are answered early on."
Susan Straub is Reents' partner
in the process. While Reents works primarily to locate adoptive families,
Straub focuses on helping the birth mothers to make wise choices.
"I've been working with the
agency since '95," said Straub. "I have a background in teaching and childbirth
education, so it was natural for me to work with the young mothers."
Services Straub offers the
birth mothers include all-options pregnancy counseling, information and
unconditional support for women facing a crisis pregnancy.
"Single parenting is more
acceptable now and there is a lot of peer pressure today for girls to
keep their babies," said Straub.
"Having a baby is a novelty,
plus the girls are dealing with the myth that giving up their baby for
adoption is taking the easy way out. In reality, in many cases it is the
loving and courageous thing to do."
"We used to do around 100
adoptions a year," agreed Reents. "That number has dropped sharply."
The cost of a typical adoption
through The Society is 20 percent of the adoptive family's gross income.
While Reents works mostly
with infants, The Society also find homes for older and special needs
children.
"One of the things I am most
proud of is placing Down syndrome and other disabled children," said Reents.
"Hard placements are one of
our strengths -- we've actually inherited babies from other agencies who
couldn't find homes for them."
For more information about
open adoption, call Paula Reents at 595-2245 or Susan Straub at 480-2490
(cell).
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