LD 1526
pg. 75
Page 74 of 118 An Act To Enact the Uniform Parentage Act and Conforming Amendments and Additio... Page 76 of 118
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LR 134
Item 1

 
Source: UPA (1973) § 5(b); USCACA (1988) § 4(a).

 
If a child is conceived as the result of assisted
reproduction, this section clarifies that a donor (whether of
sperm or egg) is not a parent of the resulting child. The donor
can neither sue to establish parental rights, nor be sued and
required to support the resulting child. In sum, donors are
eliminated from the parental equation.

 
The new UPA does not deal with many of the complex and serious
legal problems raised by the practice of assisted reproduction.
Issues such as ownership and disposition of embryos, regulation
of the medical procedures, insurance coverage, etc., are left to
other statutes or to the common law. Only the issue of parentage
falls within the purview of this Act. This was also the case in
UPA (1973), which wholly deferred speaking on the subject except
to ensure the husband's paternal responsibility when he gave his
consent to what was then called "artificial insemination" of his
wife (now known in the scientific community as "intrauterine
insemination"). The commentary to UPA (1973) stated: "It was
thought useful, however, to single out and cover . . . at least
one fact situation that occurs frequently."

 
The new UPA goes well beyond that narrow view; it governs the
parentage issues in all cases in which the birth mother is also
the woman who intends to parent the child. It also ensures that
if the mother is a married woman, her husband will be the father
of the child if he gives his consent to assisted reproduction by
his wife, regardless of which aspect of ART is utilized. UPA
(1973) § 5(b) specified that a male donor would not be considered
the father of a child born of artificial insemination if the
sperm was provided to a licensed physician for use in artificial
insemination of a married woman other than the donor's wife. The
new Act does not continue the requirement that the donor provide
the sperm to a licensed physician. Further, this section of the
new UPA does not limit a donor's statutory exemption from
becoming a legal parent of a child resulting from ART to a
situation in which the donor provides sperm for assisted
reproduction by a married woman. This requirement is not
realistic in light of present ART practices and the
constitutional protections of the procreative rights of unmarried
as well as married women. Consequently, this section shields all
donors, whether of sperm or eggs, (§ 102 (8), supra), from
parenthood in all situations in which either a married woman or a
single woman conceives a child through ART with the intent to be
the child's parent, either by herself or with a man, as provided
in sections 703 and 704.


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