Saturday, February 9, 2013

Requesting Non-ID in Ohio

By law, all Ohio adoptees are over the age of 21 to receive their non-identifying information.

The request can be made to any of the following:

  • agency that arranged the adoption
  • attorney that arranged the adoption
  • probate court where adoption was finalized

Non-ID may include a social history of one or both parents (age, physical description, ethnic background, religious background, employment information on biological parents and/or bio family members, number of parental and/or adoptee siblings), and a medical history.

The records of agencies or lawyers that are no longer in business are required to be sent to the probate court in which the adoption was finalized or another agency in good standing..

Although the law does not required it, I suggest that anyone requesting non-ID notarize their request and send a copy of their driver's licence or other ID with his or her letter..

Please remember that any information you receive is a clue to your identity and family history  no matter how insignificant it may seem.
Below is the entire Ohio Revised Code Entry on non-ID:


3107.66 Request for nonidentifying information.

(A) As used in this section:
(1) “Adopted person” includes both an “adopted person” as defined in section 3107.39 of the Revised Code and an “adopted person” as defined in section 3107.45 of the Revised Code.
(2) “Adoptive parent” means a person who adopted an adopted person.
(3) “Birth parent” means the biological parent of an adopted person.
(4) “Birth sibling” means a biological sibling of an adopted person.

(B) An adopted person age eighteen or older, an adoptive parent of an adopted person under age eighteen, or an adoptive family member of a deceased adopted person may submit a written request to the agency or attorney who arranged the adopted person’s adoption, or the probate court that finalized the adopted person’s adoption, for the agency, attorney, or court to provide the adopted person, adoptive parent, or adoptive family member information about the adopted person’s birth parent or birth sibling contained in the agency’s, attorney’s, or court’s adoption records that is nonidentifying information. Except as provided in division (C) of this section, the agency, attorney, or court shall provide the adopted person, adoptive parent, or adoptive family member the information sought within a reasonable amount of time. The agency, attorney, or court may charge a reasonable fee for providing the information.

A birth parent of an adopted person eighteen years of age or older, a birth sibling age eighteen or older, or a birth family member of a deceased birth parent may submit a written request to the agency or attorney who arranged the adopted person’s adoption, or the probate court that finalized the adoption, for the agency, attorney, or court to provide the birth parent, birth sibling, or birth family member information about the adopted person or adoptive parent contained in the agency’s, attorney’s, or court’s adoption records that is nonidentifying information. Except as provided in division (C) of this section, the agency, attorney, or court shall provide the birth parent, birth sibling, or birth family member the information sought within a reasonable amount of time. The agency, attorney, or court may charge a reasonable fee for providing the information.

(C) An agency or attorney that has permanently ceased to arrange adoptions is not subject to division (B) of this section. If the adoption records of such an agency or attorney are held by a probate court, person, or other governmental entity pursuant to section 3107.67of the Revised Code, the adopted person, adoptive parent, adoptive family member, birth parent, birth sibling, or birth family member may submit the written request that otherwise would be submitted to the agency or attorney under division (B) of this section to the court, person, or other governmental entity that holds the records. On receipt of the request, the court, person, or other governmental entity shall provide the information that the agency or attorney would have been required to provide within a reasonable amount of time. The court, person, or other governmental entity may charge a reasonable fee for providing the information.

(D) Prior to providing nonidentifying information pursuant to division (B) or (C) of this section, the person or governmental entity providing the information shall review the record to ensure that all identifying information about any person contained in the record is deleted.

(E) An agency, attorney, person, or other governmental entity may classify any information described in division (B)(2) of section 3107.60 of the Revised Code as identifying information and deny the request made under division (B) or (C) of this section if the agency, attorney, court, person, or other governmental entity determines that the information could lead to the identification of the adoptive parent. This determination shall be done on a case-by-case basis.
Effective Date: 09-18-1996; 09-21-2006; 2008 HB7 04-07-2009


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