Steps to Adoption Through Department of Social Services

Steps to become an adoptive parent

  • Contact one of the Department of Social Services' regional offices to inquiry and receive application.
  • Application completed and returned to the regional office which serves your resident county.
  • Complete SLED/ Fingerprints and Child Abuse Central register releases on all members of household 18 years and older.
  • Attend 14 hours of preparatory training to help with self evaluation of the types of children which would fit into your family.
  • Fire and sanitation inspections completed on home by the Fire Marshal and DHEC.
  • Home Visits: adoption specialist visits the home and completes interviews for pre- placement investigation.
  • Three/ Four References received and interviewed by adoption specialist.
  • Medicals are required on all family members.
  • Provide copies of birth certificates, Marriage license and divorce petitions and decrees if applicable.
  • During assessment family and agency assess qualifications and readiness to adopt.
  • Approval received and family considered for children along with other approved and waiting families.
  • Placement committee selects family and notifies family and family is presented full background on child/ children for whom family is selected.
  • Family meets child and begins visitation with child.
  • Placement occurs when child and family are ready for move.
  • Post placement period begins and can continue up to 12 months..
  • Finalization of the adoption in Family Court.
  • Adoption Preservation services are available upon request after the finalization of the adoption. Adoption is a lifelong process, counseling and other referral services may be available to the family as needed and requested by the family.

Judge McFaddin Breaks Adoption Finalization Record

This article was copy without editing from  Department of Social Services Websites at this link.

On Wednesday June 2nd, 2010, a record was broken for the number of children adopted in South Carolina in a single day. Sumter County Family Court Judge, The Honorable George M. McFaddin, Jr. will hosted another Adoption Day in Sumter Family Court where he gave the SC Department of Social Services an entire court day to finalize adoptions.

A total of 39 adoptions were finalized. From 9:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. Judge McFaddin will finalize adoptions all day with no lunch break. This is at least the fourth such Adoption Day Judge McFaddin has hosted for South Carolina’s waiting children. In November, Judge McFaddin finalized 26 adoptions. Each time he has held Adoption Day in his courtroom, the number of adoptions granted has grown.

Of note, Judge McFaddin does have some assistance with the hearings beyond what one might expect. His assistant is a long haired dachshund named Moose who gently puts the children at ease in what would normally be a daunting courtroom setting. Most of the children are as delighted to pet Moose, before or after their adoption, as Moose is to be coddled by them.

Judge McFaddin works to help children find permanency by calling attention to the many children who await families. While DSS has had 2 record breaking years of adoption finalizations (523 adoptions finalized last fiscal year and 513 adoptions the prior year), many more children continue to await families. Currently, there are approximately 5100 children in foster care in South Carolina and approximately 1713 have the plan of adoption.


What is ICPC?

The Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children(ICPC) is a compact between all 50 state, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands. South Carolina's ICPC statutes are in the Sections 63-9-2200 through 63-9-2290 of the South Carolina Code of Laws, as amended. The compact was instituted among the states to help ensure that a child being moved from one jurisdiction to another for purposes of adoption is protected and his best interests are being looked after.

In South Carolina, adoptive parents who are not residents of South Carolina may adopt only under certain circumstances; the circumstances are listed in Section 63-9-60 of the South Carolina Code of Laws, as amended. In that same section the Code reads:

Before a child is placed within or outside the boundaries of this State for adoption with nonresidents of this State, compliance with [the] Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children is required.

Because compliance with ICPC is required, a basic understanding of it will help ease some of your anxiety in working through the adoption process.

The Association of Administrators of the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children (AAICPC) has a wonderful website that helps you understand the ICPC better. This link will take you to their Frequently Ask Question Page and you can navigate the website from there to find more help.

Below I have listed one of the questions from the AAICPC website for your review.

How does the ICPC work?

The Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children is an agreement between all fifty states, Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Compact Agreement provides for the movement and safe placement of children between states when the children are in the custody of a state, being placed for private/independent adoption, or under certain circumstances, being placed by a parent or guardian in a residential treatment facility (RTF). The process involves several steps.

In order for an ICPC placement request to get started, a caseworker (or adoption entity) in the state the child is located creates a packet that includes such items as the child’s social, medical, and educational history and the current status of any court case involving the child. The packet will also include information about the person who is being considered for placement of the child in the receiving state so that the receiving state will know who they should be evaluating for possible placement.

Once the placement request packet is created by the local person in the sending state, it gets sent to the central ICPC office in the sending state (usually the state capital, e.g., Austin, Texas). The ICPC central office in the state makes sure everything is in the packet, approves it for sending out, and then transmits it to the ICPC central office in the state where the child would be sent. Once it arrives in the central office of the receiving state of the proposed placement, that office also looks at the packet and if all is in order, the central office will send it down to the social services agency office in the local community where the prospective placement lives. The social services agency will then go out to the home, meet with everyone in the home, do background screening, and make a determination as to whether the home should be approved for the child to come and live there.

A completed home study report is then sent from the local agency to the central ICPC office in that state and the placement request is either approved or denied based on the recommendation of the home study report. The packet is then sent from the receiving state to the central office in the first state for review. Finally, the local office that started the placement request is sent a copy of the completed home study along with documentation of the receiving state’s decision to either approve or deny the placement request. If the request has been approved by the receiving state, the child can be placed in the chosen home.

While there is much more detail to the process in terms of the forms, financial arrangements for the child, and licensing that may need to be put in place, this is a simple overview of each of the steps that the placement request process will take to go from the local level in one state, through the central office of each state, to the local level in the other state and back again. The process ensures that when children are placed out of state, they are placed in a safe and nurturing environment that can meet their particular needs.