(OPINION) A widowed mother of five children in Oregon, who wants to adopt a pair of siblings under the age of 10 from foster care has appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco, California, after a lower court ruled against her last year.
Oregon’s Department of Human Services categorically excluded Jessica Bates from adopting any child—no matter their age or beliefs—because she would not violate her religious beliefs and promote Oregon’s radical gender ideology.
Represented by attorneys with the non-profit Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), Bates has filed her opening brief with the 9th Circuit Court. Her attorneys asked the appeals court to allow her to obtain her certification, free of discrimination, while her lawsuit continues so that she can eventually provide a loving home to children in need.
“Jessica wants to open her home to children in need right now, but Oregon officials are placing a dangerous ideological agenda above kids’ best interests,” ADF Legal Counsel Johannes Widmalm-Delphonse said in a statement.
“Jessica is a loving mother who feels called to adopt siblings from foster care. Oregon is categorically excluding her merely because she shares a view held by millions of Americans: that boys and girls are biologically different. Jessica believes children should cherish that difference, not reject it.”
“Because Jessica will not promote Oregon’s radical gender ideology to young kids, the state considers her and many others to be ‘unfit’ parents, depriving countless children in Oregon’s system of opportunities to be raised in a loving home,” Widmalm-Delphonse added. “We are urging the 9th Circuit to allow Jessica to continue her adoption journey and provide a loving home to children in need.”
As the opening brief in Bates v. Pakseresht explains, “Oregon {cannot} justify excluding as prospective parents the hundreds of thousands of Oregonians who share Bates’ religious views about human sexuality…
Including people like Bates maximizes the number of families available to adopt children in need and increases the odds every child eventually finds a loving home.”
Bates argues that “Oregon’s categorical exclusion uses a sledgehammer when the First Amendment demands a scalpel,” pointing out that “the federal government and most other states avoid categorical exclusions and match specific children with compatible families…This policy achieves nothing but serves only to violate the First Amendment and harm kids in need of homes.”
As CBN News reported in April of 2023, Bates, a devout Christian, was widowed after her husband David died in a car crash in 2017. Even though she’s busy raising five children, ages 10 to 18 on her own, she wants to open her home to children in need.
Inspired by the story of a man who adopted a child from foster care, Bates felt a calling to follow the biblical teaching to care for orphans.
She applied to adopt a sibling pair, who are generally harder to place. But the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS ) denied her application because in order to adopt children and give them a loving home, she would first be required to endorse the state’s pro-LGBT views on sexuality. (CONTINUE)