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Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman and Todd Landry, the state's social-services director, announce the special legislative session.
Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman and Todd Landry, the state’s social-services director, announce the special legislative session.
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LINCOLN, Neb. — Deciding he could wait no longer, Gov. Dave Heineman said Wednesday that he will call a special legislative session to fix a safe-haven law that in just a few months has allowed parents to abandon nearly two dozen children as old as 17.

Heineman had planned to wait until the next regular legislative session convened in January but changed his mind as the number of children dropped off at hospitals grew. Two teenagers were abandoned Tuesday night alone, and three children dropped off previously did not even live in Nebraska.

“We’ve had five in the last eight days,” Heineman said in explaining why he called a special session. “We all hoped this wouldn’t happen.”

The special session will begin Nov. 14. That’s less than two months before the regular legislative session, but the governor and others see a need to act quickly.

“This law needs to be changed to reflect its original intent” to protect infants, Heine man said during a news conference Wednesday.

The law, which was signed by Heineman in February and took effect in July, prohibits parents from being prosecuted for leaving a child at a hospital.

The use of the word “child” was a compromise after legislators disagreed about what age limit to set, but that decision made Nebraska’s safe-haven law the broadest in the nation by far. Most states have age limits ranging from 3 days to about a month. Colorado’s law has a 3-day age cap.

Most Nebraska lawmakers have agreed upon revisions that would limit the law to newborns no older than 3 days.

As of Wednesday 23 children had been left at Nebraska hospitals, including nine from one family and children from Iowa, Michigan and Georgia. Many are teenagers, only one is younger than 6 and none are babies.

None of the children dropped off had been in immediate danger, said Todd Landry, director of the state’s Children and Family Services Division. The children brought in from Iowa and Nebraska were returned to their home states, and Georgia child-welfare authorities were returning the child from that state Wednesday.

Tim Jaccard, president of the National Safe Haven Alliance, said age limits in safe-haven laws vary greatly. Aside from Nebraska’s law, North Dakota’s is the broadest, allowing children up to 1 year old to be abandoned.

“It’s kind of a strange thing,” said Jaccard, a police officer in New York’s Nassau County. “If you were born in New York, you have five days. If you walk across the street (to Connecticut), you’ve got 30 days.”

Jaccard hopes to bring all 50 states to an agreement. Most of the type of abandonments that safe-haven laws are meant to prevent happen in the first 24 hours after birth, he said.

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