Brief

Children and Families Impacted and the Fiscal Implications of Florida HB 7111

April 2015

Legislation introduced in Florida would allow licensed child welfare agencies to make foster and adoption placement decisions in accordance with their own sincerely held religious beliefs. This study examines the impact of the bill on LGB adults, children in foster care, and the state.

AUTHORS
  • Gary J. Gates
    Research Director, Former
  • Taylor N.T Brown
    Project Manager, Former
Highlights
Many LGB individuals and same-sex couples provide adoptive and foster homes for children in Florida.
If passed, the bill may make it more difficult for LGB individuals and same-sex couples to serve as adopted or foster parents.
Reducing access to adoption services for LGB individuals and same-sex couples would result in higher state spending as children remain in care.
Data Points
2,460
adopted children under age 18 are being raised by LGB individuals and same-sex couples in Florida
160
foster children are living with LGB individuals or same-sex couples in Florida
Brief

Introduction

HB 7111, Conscience Protection for Private Child-Placing Agencies, would allow all private agencies licensed to make foster care or adoption placement decisions in the state of Florida to do so in accordance with their own religious or moral convictions. The state would be prohibited from denying or revoking a license based on the failure to comply with rules if the agency cites a religious or moral objection to the rules.

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals and same-sex couples could be among the potential foster or adoptive parents for whom placements would be refused under this proposed legislation. This memo provides estimates for the number of children being raised by lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals1 and same-sex couples in Florida, along with estimates of the potential fiscal implications if this bill causes children to stay longer in the foster care system rather than being placed for adoption.

Many LGB individuals and same-sex couples provide adoptive homes and foster care for children in the state, and LGB individuals are more willing than their non-LGB counterparts to consider adoption. If this legislation were to pass, LGB individuals and same-sex couples may find it more difficult to serve as adoptive or foster parents, resulting in more children remaining in foster care for longer periods of time.

The majority of child welfare and foster care resources in Florida go toward private community-based agencies.2 If these agencies refuse to place children for foster care or adoption with qualified individuals or couples based on religious or moral beliefs associated with objections to same-sex sexual orientations or coupling, fewer children in foster care may be adopted in the state. Foster care is generally more expensive to the state than adoption, and the state receives incentives from the federal government that increase with the number of adoptions from the foster care system. Reducing access to adoption services for LGB individuals and same-sex couples would result in higher state spending as more children who could otherwise be adopted remain in foster care.

Adoption and Fostering by LGB Adults and Same-sex Couples in Florida

An estimated 2,460 adopted children under age 18 in Florida are being raised by LGB individuals and same-sex couples (see Table 1). Had HB 7111 been enacted before these children were being placed for adoption, these families could have been turned away by some agencies, and some of these children would have remained in foster care for a longer period of time awaiting adoption.

An estimated 160 foster children are living with LGB individuals or same-sex couples in Florida. These children have been placed in these homes because agencies have determined that they are the best placements for each child’s needs. It is possible that some of these foster parents may wish to adopt the children for whom they are providing foster care. Under HB 7111, private agencies with religious or moral objections associated with same-sex sexual orientations could deny children in such situations a permanent home through adoption by their foster families.

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LGB individuals are much more open to the possibility of adopting than their non-LGB counterparts. Among women in the US aged 18-45 who say that they intend to have children or have more children, approximately 52% of LGB women say that they would consider adoption (unfortunately, a similar measure for men is not available). Among comparable non-LGB women, the figure is only 37%. Similar portions of LGB men and women in that age group (just over half) say that they intend to have children or more children if they already have them.4 If like their female counterparts, 52% of LGB men would consider adoption, then an estimated 53,000 LGB adults in Florida may be potential adoptive parents. These individuals may not be considered as adoptive or foster parents or may not pursue adoption or fostering as a result of agencies’ religious or moral objections to their sexual orientation or fear that such objections could be raised.

Fiscal Implications of HB 7111

The ability of adoption agencies to restrict services to LGB individuals or same-sex couples based on religious or moral objections potentially reduces the pool of adoptive homes in Florida and increases the chances that foster children will remain in foster care longer than necessary. For every child that remains in foster care rather than finding an adoptive home as a result of HB 7111, there will be negative fiscal implications for the state. States spend significant resources keeping children in foster care healthy and safe. These expenses include payments to foster parents for room and board, as much as $527.36 per month per child in Florida.5 They also include full Medicaid coverage for minors, as well as for young adults who have aged out of the foster care system but are younger than 26.6 Tuition and fee waivers at institutions in the Florida College System, state universities, and workforce education programs are also provided.7

Studies find that children who are adopted have better physical, mental, and educational outcomes compared to children who remain in foster care. Permanency is an important goal for children. Adoption is also more cost-efficient for the state. A national analysis compared the costs to states of supporting foster children into adulthood. Comparisons are made between children who enter foster care and do not get adopted with those who are adopted from the foster care system. The average cost to the state of supporting children who enter foster care and are not adopted from the time they enter foster care until they turn age 18 was more than $135,000. If a child can be placed for adoption, the comparable cost was $67,000.8 On average, the study finds that a state saves approximately $68,000 over the course of a child’s life from birth to age 18 if the child can be placed with an adoptive family rather than keeping the child in foster care until adulthood.

Another study of adoption and fostering showed that, on average, the cost differential of placing a child for adoption versus keeping the child in foster care for a year is a nearly $15,500 savings. Estimates suggest that Florida bears about 41% of the costs associated with fostering children (the federal government pays the other 59%).9 If the estimated 160 children currently in foster care with single LGB adults and same-sex couples were to be adopted by them in the next year, the total savings could amount to nearly $2.5 million. This implies cost savings to the state of more than a million dollars that is put into jeopardy if LGB individuals and same-sex couples experience barriers to adopting foster children from private adoption agencies who object to providing services to them.

Creating barriers that limit the pool of prospective adoptive parents also has the potential to reduce adoption incentive payments that the federal government offers to states to encourage adoption. Since this program was first initiated in 1998, Florida has received more than $43 million. In 2013, the state received $3.5 million in adoption incentive payments.10 These incentives are put at risk when adoption becomes more difficult among the estimated 53,000 perspective LGB adoptive parents in the state.

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Children and Families Impacted and the Fiscal Implications of Florida HB 7111

It is certainly possible that transgender individuals who wish to foster or adopt could also be affected by this law, but data to assess adoption and fostering patterns among transgender individuals in Florida are, unfortunately, not available.

Ingram, J. 2013. Florida’s Right For Kids Reform. Naples, FL: Foundation for Government Accountability. http://rightforkids.org/files/6813/8184/8564/FloridaFosterCareReformPaper.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)

Comparisons between the portion of single LGB men and women aged 18-45 who have an adopted child (using the US Department of Health and Human Services’ 2011-2013 National Survey of Family Growth) and the portion of same-sex couples who have an adopted child (using the US Census Bureau’s 2008-2013 American Community Survey Public Use Microdata Samples) show that adoption is slightly more common among same-sex couples than among single LGB individuals. Single LGB individuals are about two-thirds as likely as same-sex couples to report having an adopted child. Estimates of the number of adopted and foster children among single LGB individuals assume that they are two-thirds as likely as the state’s same-sex couples to have an adopted or foster child. Estimates of the total LGBT population in the state are derived using data from Gallup’s Daily Tracking survey (Hasenbush, A. et al. 2014. The LGBT Divide: A Data Portrait of LGBT People in Midwestern, Mountain, and Southern States. Los Angeles: Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law. http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/LGBT-divide-Dec-2014.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)). The number of single LGB people in the state is calculated by multiplying the total number of LGBT adults by the proportion of LGBT adults who say they are currently not married or partnered (also using the Gallup data). Estimates of the number of same-sex couples are from the US Census Bureau’s preferred estimates of same-sex couples from Census 2010 (Gates, G.J. & Cooke, A. 2011. Florida Census Snapshot: 2010. Los Angeles: Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law. http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Census2010Snapshot_Florida_v2.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)). The numbers of same-sex couples in the state who have adopted or foster children are derived from analyses of 2008-2013 American Community Survey Public Use Microdata Samples. Estimates of the number of single LGB adults with adopted or foster children assume that the average number of adopted or foster children among LGB people with such children does not differ between single LGB individuals and same-sex couples.

Based on analyses of 2011-2013 National Survey of Family Growth.

Florida Department of Children and Families to The Community Based Care CEOs. December 31, 2014. Foster Parent Cost of Living Allowance Increase. Tallahassee, FL: Florida Department of Children and Families. http://centerforchildwelfare.fmhi.usf.edu/kb/policymemos/2015FP-COLA-Increase123114.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)

Florida Legal Services, Inc. January 22, 2014. Florida Medicaid Coverage Up to Age 26 for Young Adults Formerly in Foster Care. Tallahassee, FL. http://www.floridaschildrenfirst.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Former-Foster-Youth-Medicaid-QA.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)

Florida Department of Children and Families. April 1, 2015. Tuition and Fee Exemption. Tallahassee, FL: Florida Department of Children and Families. http://www.myflfamilies.com/service-programs/independent-living/tuition–fee-exemptions (accessed 7 April 2015)

Barth, RP, Lee, CK, Wildfire, J, Guo, S. 2006. A Comparison of the Governmental Costs of Long-Term Foster Care and Adoption. Social Service Review 80(1): 128-157. http://www.flgov.com/wp-content/uploads/childadvocacy/foster%20care%20and%20adoption%20study.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)

North American Council on Adoptable Children. May 2014. Florida State Subsidy Profile. St. Paul, MN: North American Council on Adoptable Children. http://www.nacac.org/adoptionsubsidy/stateprofiles/florida.html (accessed 7 April 2015)

Administration for Children and Families. 2014. Adoption Incentives Earning History by State: FY 1998−FY 2013. Washington, DC: Department of Health and Human Services. http://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/cb/adoption_incentive_history.pdf (accessed 7 April 2015)