Well you are not the one deciding if you are allowed to come home or not. It's the judge. Talk with your foster parents and tell them how you feel. They can ask the social worker to come to your house so you can talk about it. It's important you know why you are not living with your parents. As long as you are a minor the decision is not yours.
They aren't the same. Adoption is becoming the legal parent and foster care means the state is the childs guardian. The state makes all important decisions regarding the child and the foster parents have no rights, the state can just come in and move the child to another foster home for no reason. Adopted children are yours forever.
you call foster care and then they come to you. If you need someone adopted if they are in the foster care, they will find them and give them to you or if you dont want your daughter/son anymore you can ask the foster care to give them to another family if they can find them.
Biological children have all legal rights regarding their biological parents that come into operation by law. A foster child would not have any rights at all regarding the foster parents except the right to be properly cared for pursuant to the foster parent status.
Because the birth parents say no.
He is allowed to come home if he wants.. but he has to be 18 if he has a guardian
A minor mother can and have the right to make decisions about her baby. If they think she can handle the baby and allow her to get married the baby will come with her. She will then be emancipated since she is married.
if you don't then the foster home will come and get the baby.
Until they reach the age of majority. In other words, unfortunately, a child may never be adopted and will remain in state's custody until he or she reaches adulthood. This answer of course relates to a child whose parents have had their parental rights permanently terminated by the court either voluntarily or otherwise. This is an incorrect answer. If a minor child's parental rights have been terminated, they can be adopted. The adoptive family can be the Foster Parents, other family members or an unrealated family. My husband and I are currently in the process of adopting an 8 year old girl who is currently living in Foster Care System.
Foster children can be from any ethnic background.
Your question is unclear to me. However, I will let you know about me. I was a foster child, along with my 4 siblings, as our mother died when i was 3. I/we were raised in foster homes until we each graduated from high school. This was in the 1940s and in New York state. I am now an adult of many years and in the process of writing my story of living in foster care. Carol J. Pettengill
The surname Foster is of French and English origin. See the Related Link.
You can't just "hand" a child into foster care. It takes a court order to place the child and the social worker will try to find other family members willing to take the child because it's better if they stay with their own family that with strangers, and if a parent is fit and want custody the parent will come first. Foster care is not used to keep fit parents and children away from each other.