QuickTake:
The state of Oregon has essentially ignored warnings from the Trump administration regarding a policy mandating that foster and adoptive parents affirm a child's potential LGBTQ+ identity.
A high-ranking U.S. Department of Health and Human Services official issued a subtle warning last year when he challenged a longstanding Oregon policy mandating foster and adoptive parents affirm a child’s potential LGBTQ+ identity.
“These developments are deeply troubling, clearly contrary to the purpose of child welfare programs, and in direct violation of First Amendment protections,” wrote Andrew Gradison, then-acting assistant secretary for the Administration for Children and Families, in a September letter to Oregon child welfare officials. “As you know, I have the responsibility of monitoring how federal funds are used and ensuring that federal law is upheld.”
But more than six months later, the federal agency has yet to announce that it is withholding any funding because of Oregon’s policy. Oregon child welfare officials, meanwhile, have not directly responded to the federal government, but are tweaking the policy following a high-profile legal challenge brought by a conservative religious advocacy group.
Supporters say the affirmation model is designed to protect vulnerable youth within a foster care system, especially if they haven’t come out by the time of their initial adoption or placement in a foster home. Advocates for the LGBTQ+ community point to research showing the harm of conversion therapy and living in a nonsupportive family.
But the requirement has long drawn the ire of conservatives who see the nation’s history of faith-based orphanages as a solution to providing homes for the hundreds of thousands of children in American foster care. The matter gained urgency in the wake of President Donald Trump’s November executive order targeting state and local policies that “inappropriately prohibit participation in federally-funded child-welfare programs by qualified individuals or organizations based upon their sincerely-held religious beliefs or moral convictions.”
Gradison’s letter followed a July decision from a panel on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals striking down the policy’s application on First Amendment grounds for a Christian mother from Malheur County.
Jessica Bates, a widowed mother of five from Vale, said she wanted her current children to have more siblings but would not take a child to a Pride parade or to receive hormone injections from a doctor. Her case was sent back to district court for further review, and the appeals court in February declined to revisit the case in front of a broader panel of judges.
State child welfare officials never responded to Gradison’s request to “provide information that can shed light on your current policies,” which did not come with a formal deadline for producing evidence or documentation. His agency told Capital Chronicle in late January that Oregon had not responded to the agency’s inquiry.
A spokesperson for the federal Administration for Children and Families didn’t elaborate on any investigatory measures or funding changes the agency would take in light of Oregon’s lack of a response, nor did they immediately respond to a follow-up inquiry Wednesday, April 1. In March, the agency wrote to all 50 states to pressure them against removing children from homes where parents decline to support their gender identity.
Studies have shown that LGBTQ+ youth are overrepresented in the foster care system, making up about one-third of cases. The federal appeals court, however, did not strike down anti-discrimination protections for LGBTQ+ youth or a Biden administration rule establishing LGBTQ-friendly care providers without mandating participation. The court and free speech advocates have suggested Oregon could take a less prescriptive approach to protecting vulnerable foster youth.
Jake Sunderland, a spokesperson for the state human services department, said that Oregon’s affirmation policy will be changing but wasn’t able to provide details by Wednesday afternoon. He said the agency still considers Bates’ case as ongoing litigation and confirmed that Oregon never responded to the letter from Gradison.
“ODHS also is reviewing its rules and policies for resource parents and prospective adoptive parents, continuing its commitment to ensuring that all children and young people in foster care, including those who are LGBTQIA2S+, have access to a safe and supportive environment provided by loving caregivers that are responsive to their individual needs,” Sunderland told the Capital Chronicle in September.

