• Equality Maine Annual Dinner: March 27, 2010
  • Read the EqualityBlog

Equality Blog

  • The Moveable Middle

    Last week a report came out by Third Way based on a study of the two 2009 state ballot initiatives regarding relationship recognition – Maine and Washing  read more »

  • Creating Change

    Last week Betsy, Matt, Dee and I went to Dallas for the annual National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Creating Change Conference. The five day conference offered something for everyone.  read more »

  • 2 Tracks to Marriage

    The plan is in place, now it’s our job to put it in motion. And we’ll need your help.  read more »

  • Announcement!

    The other week we got an email from someone who had been planning to get married this year (prior to the final Question 1 results).  read more »

Adoption

Until August 2007, only a married couple or a single, unmarried person could adopt a child in Maine. If a same-sex couple chose to adopt, only one partner could be the child's legal parent.

This changed when Maine's highest court, the Law Court, unanimously ruled that same-sex couples should be allowed to jointly adopt. The ruling stemmed from a petition brought by a lesbian couple who sought permanent adoption of their two foster children. Attorney General Steven Rowe filed a friend of the court brief in support of the plaintiffs, saying that a ruling against joint adoption would violate the intent Maine’s Adoption Act, which seeks to protect the best interests of children.

The plaintiffs' petition was also backed by several health and children's organizations, including the American Psychological Association, the Child Welfare League of America and the Maine Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Read the Portland Press Herald report of the ruling here.

Read Maine's adoption statutes here.

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