2002 Revisions
The new revisions in 2002 include adding new definitions to Article 1, General Provisions, to help clarify determinations of parentage and fitting the act to scientific developments at the time. Article 2, Parent-Child Relationship was kept similar to the 1973 version, only the term "natural" to describe a genetic parent was changed. Article 3, Voluntary Acknowledgment of Paternity, was a new addition in 2002, which was driven by federal mandates that states provide means to establish paternity. Article 4, Registry of Paternity, was another new addition, focusing on incorporating registry law to deal with men's rights who are not acknowledged, presumed or adjudicated fathers. Article 5, Genetic Testing, was expanded from one section to ten separate sections. Article 7, Child of Assisted Reproduction, recodified USCACA (1988), but applies to non-marital children as well as marital children. Article 8, Gestational Agreements is based on USCACA (1988) as well, but permits enforcement of a gestational agreement. The UPA (2002) also omitted some substantive provisions from the original 1973 version involving child support and custody, since other state law provided for those provisions.Enactment by States
1973 Original
The original version of the Uniform Parentage Act was enacted by 16 states: Alabama, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas and Washington.2002 Revision
The 2002 Revision has been enacted by 11 states: Alabama, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming.2017 Revision
The 2017 Revisions has been enacted by 7 states: California, Colorado (substantially similar), Connecticut, Maine, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.2017 Revision Introduced Bills
The 2017 revision has been introduced as a bill for 5 states. Hawaii, Kansas, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Pennsylvania. Hawaii bills including the act are HB384 (Judiciary Package; Uniform Parentage Act) and SB484 (Judiciary Package; Uniform Parentage Act). Kansas has one bill regarding the Uniform Parentage act, which is HB2409 (Enacting the Kansas uniform parentage act (2017)). Massachusetts bills including the act are SD1088 (An Act to ensure legal parentage equality) and HD2348 (An Act to ensure legal parentage equality). Nevada has one bill, AB371 (makes various changes relating to parentage). (BDR 11–140). Pennsylvania has one bill, HB350 (An act amending Title 23 (Domestic Relations) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, adding provisions relating to establishment of parent-child relationship for certain individuals; providing for voluntary acknowledgment of parentage, for registry of paternity, forArticles
Article 1: General Provisions Article 2: Parent-Child Relationship Article 3: Voluntary Acknowledgment of Parentage Article 4: Registry of Paternity * Part 1: General Provisions * Part 2: Operation of Registry * Part 3: Search of Registry Article 5: Genetic Testing Article 6: Proceeding to Adjudicate Parentage * Part 1: Nature of Proceeding * Part 2: Special Rules for Proceeding to Adjudicate Parentage * Part 3: Hearing and Adjudication Article 7: Assisted Reproduction Article 8: Surrogacy Agreement * Part 1: General Requirements * Part 2: Special Rules for Gestational Surrogacy Agreement * Part 3: Special Rules for Genetic Surrogacy Agreement Article 9: Information About Donor Article 10: Miscellaneous ProvisionsReferences
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