lwheelr
Lovin' The Homestead
This REALLY depends on the state! My sister adopted through Washington state, and they refused all follow up assistance except Medicaid. This, when their CPS charts both stated that the kids had Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (the case worker told her emphatically before the adoption that they had no evidence to suggest that they did - even though the mother was a known alcoholic), and the state knew the needs of the boy were such that respite care would be essential (she has flown him to us in Wyoming because the state refused respite care for him). My sister said she'd do it again, because it was the right thing to do, but she did not appreciate being lied to and then abandoned.best thing about adopting through the state is that you have resources available forever-like classes on adopting, classes on parenting, resources for psychiatric care if needed, medical expenses covered if necessary and expenses paid if you have some special need that you can't afford like braces or glasses or physical therapy or summer camps or .......
Many states in a budget crunch will cut services for kids that have been adopted - the agreements at the time of adoption can vary widely (and WILDLY), depending on the kid, particular needs, the caseworker handling the state side of things, the budget health of the state at the time of the adoption, the overall number of adoptable kids in the system at the time, and other factors.
Some states have adoption subsidies for kids with special needs, but this is declining - their categorization of "qualifying special needs" is getting tighter and tighter.