ILOILO CITY – Seventy-three children are up for adoption in Western Visayas, the Regional Alternative Child Care Office (RACCO)-6 said.
THE Regional Alternative Child Care Office (RACCO)-6 conducts a forum on a new law that makes legal adoption easier in Iloilo City. (Tara Yap) The RACCO-6 has urged those who can provide homes and new families to adopt them. “For those who have the heart and are financially capable, we are looking for adoptive parents,” said Janice Brasileño, chief of the RACCO-6, during this year's Adoption and Alternative Child Care Week Celebration. Brasileño said they have undergone the process and have been issued Certifications Declaring a Child Legally Available for Adoption (CDCLAA). “We want these children to find a home and to be part of a family,” added Brasileño. As the quasi-judicial agency of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), the RACCO-6 is pushing for the grassroots implementation of Republic Act No. 11642 or the Domestic Administrative Adoption and Alternative Child Care Act. Brasileño said the law is meant to legalize adoption and address the issues and concerns arising from faking birth certificates and other documents that will later have a negative impact on the adopted child, especially when they become adults. The law is also meant to address the previous system of adoption, which is judicial and was very expensive. Brasileño noted that the government has streamlined adoption by making the process administrative. There is no filing fee and the only expense is processing of documents. Those who want to become adoptive parents can file their application at the DSWD-6 regional office here.
THE Regional Alternative Child Care Office (RACCO)-6 conducts a forum on a new law that makes legal adoption easier in Iloilo City. (Tara Yap) The RACCO-6 has urged those who can provide homes and new families to adopt them. “For those who have the heart and are financially capable, we are looking for adoptive parents,” said Janice Brasileño, chief of the RACCO-6, during this year's Adoption and Alternative Child Care Week Celebration. Brasileño said they have undergone the process and have been issued Certifications Declaring a Child Legally Available for Adoption (CDCLAA). “We want these children to find a home and to be part of a family,” added Brasileño. As the quasi-judicial agency of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), the RACCO-6 is pushing for the grassroots implementation of Republic Act No. 11642 or the Domestic Administrative Adoption and Alternative Child Care Act. Brasileño said the law is meant to legalize adoption and address the issues and concerns arising from faking birth certificates and other documents that will later have a negative impact on the adopted child, especially when they become adults. The law is also meant to address the previous system of adoption, which is judicial and was very expensive. Brasileño noted that the government has streamlined adoption by making the process administrative. There is no filing fee and the only expense is processing of documents. Those who want to become adoptive parents can file their application at the DSWD-6 regional office here.