If there is no will completed, children of deceased parents may be placed in foster care temporarily while authorities determine suitable guardians. Typically, the court will prioritize placing the children with next of kin, such as grandparents, aunts, or uncles, if they are deemed fit to care for them. The specific process can vary by jurisdiction, but the welfare of the children is the primary concern.
Yes, we did.
it is very great to foster parents because not everyone in the world has parents so foster parents look after those children.
Yes, that is precisely what they are known as.
No this is up to the foster parents to decide.
their parents hate them
If the child's parents are no longer in the legal picture, then there are steps to follow in order to adopt the child. Many foster children are in foster care while their parents get education, jobs and/or get off of drugs, so the child or children are not available for adoption.
A foster family is when a child who is in a foster home is fostered. Children in foster homes are children who have parents that are too busy to look after them, ill with a serious illness or have died. People can foster a child and look after a child ( a bit like adopting) but most of the time their parents are still alive so the child can't be adopted but can be fostered. The children can still see their parents and people they met at their foster home.
because their parents dont have enough common sense to get up off their butts and get their children out of the foster care system
Yes, Bruce Dale and Dianne Dale Pattie are the foster parents of the children in question. They have provided care and support for the kids in their home, fulfilling the role of foster parents.
Because many children have parents who can not or will not take care of them properly or at all. There are not enough adoptive parents to adopt all children without parents.
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.
In South Carolina, the practice of foster parents adopting foster children began to gain traction in the late 20th century, particularly during the 1980s and 1990s. This shift was influenced by changing attitudes towards adoption and the recognition of the importance of maintaining familial bonds for children in foster care. The Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980 also played a significant role in promoting adoption from foster care. Over time, this led to an increase in foster parents choosing to adopt the children in their care.