I'm with Prax here, what does ethnicity have to do with it. And actually the mother can tell them because that is one of the things that is revealed about the donor already. Medical history means nothing unless you are talking about genetic disorder and that is screened prior to the donation being used.I have to disagree on both counts................Every person deserves the opportunity to earn a living wage and hence buy an adequate home................unless of course he is physically or mentally handicapped. The medical and ethnic history of the donor can be disclosed without any further obligation.
You got a problem with life being unfair? No, you already stated you don't think everyone should have a living wage just the opportunity so you know life's not fair. If the kid, or you, have a problem with them not knowing their biological make-up blame the mother or couple that used anonymous sperm to bring them into the world. The individual right to privacy in an anonymous donation supercedes somebody's emotional need to know.So you think a child conceived through a donor deserves less knowledge of his ancestry than a normally produced child?
I have never considered being a donor and this ruling has ensured I never will. Try to be a help to those in society that can't conceive and 20 years later you have 6,8,12 kids or more knocking on your door. Not for me or most people.
The adoption law in BC allows someone to petition the court for access to the information regarding their biological parents once they reach the age of majority, in other words once they are an adult. Just the fact that the "child" can't petition for the information until they are a legal adult makes the point about the interests of the child a joke. At 19 they are no longer a child. The law is a paradox, its about the child but not until they are an adult????Without knowing all the details, these were Provincial laws governed by the Provincial Adoption Act, where all laws are made in the best interest of the children. The existing law granted authority to destroy records of biological parents, which the court ruled wasn't in the interest of the child. I presume it enforces an injunction of record destruction and prohibits future anonymous donation.