Mediation: Request for Mediation
In the previous post, I suggested making a record to contrast your (the parents) attempts to negotiate adoption assistance in accordance with federal and state policy with the actions of the county agency. If the agency recognizes the validity of your approach and engages in a genuine negotiation, great! Most likely, the agency will not respond to your questions and statements in any reasonable fashion, or neglect to respond at all.
You might give the agency a couple of weeks to respond. Depending on the nature of the response, or lack thereof, you might give negotiation one more try or request mediation. You request mediation by completing the JFS 01470 form and submitting it by email to the ODJFS Bureau of State Hearings at BSH@jfs.ohio.gov.
In the space devoted to reasons, you can put something like: “the agency failed to negotiate my child’s Title IV-E Adoption Assistance Agreement in accordance with Federal and state law. Specifically, . . . .” Then, you can list areas of non-compliance such as:
· Failure to negotiate at all. (Example).
· Failure to consider family circumstances (Examples).
· Failure to consider “anticipated” needs. (Example).
· Insistence on an adoption assistance payment that is (half, less than half) of the foster care maintenance payment she receives as child determined by the agency to require a high level of care. (Specific Example).
· The agency has threatened to look for another family if we don’t reach an agreement.
If you need more space, put “See Attached” in the space on the form.
When you get a response from the Bureau of State Hearings. The mediator will contact you and the agency to set up separate phone meetings without the other party present. I suggest telling the mediator that you are going to submit a written statement, so you can have a more productive conversation with him or her.
In your e-mail message to mediator, I think it is important to communicate that
1. You know that mediator will not determine the amount of adoption assistance.
2. But, as a neutral third party, a kind of referee, the mediator apply federal and state criteria for negotiation in discussions with both the parents and county agency.
3. You believe that the agency’s failure to comply with negotiation requirements is a major cause of the current impasse.
4. By applying the federal and state requirements for negotiation, the mediator can establish a common framework for the parents and agency try and reach an adoption assistance agreement.
Example of an E-Mail Message to the Mediator Prior to the Initial Phone Conference