Current:Home > reviewsA newborn was surrendered to Florida's only safe haven baby box. Here's how they work -Global Finance Compass
A newborn was surrendered to Florida's only safe haven baby box. Here's how they work
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-07 16:58:17
A newborn was surrendered recently to Florida's only baby box, a device that lets people give up an unwanted infant anonymously. It was the first time anyone has used the baby box since organizers placed it at an Ocala fire station over two years ago.
"When we launched this box in Florida, I knew it wasn't going to be an if — it was going to be a matter of when," Monica Kelsey, the founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, told NPR. "This does not come as a surprise."
Kelsey, who says she was also abandoned as an infant, founded Safe Haven Baby Boxes in 2015. The program offers a way to anonymously surrender an infant to the authorities.
The organization launched the first baby box in the U.S. in Indiana in 2016, and the organization received its first surrendered newborn in 2017. There are now at least 134 baby boxes scattered across numerous fire stations and hospitals in the country, according to the organization.
There are plans to establish more baby boxes in Indiana, which already has 92 of them — the most of any state.
"It's really simple from a policy matter," Santa Clara University law professor Michelle Oberman told NPR's All Things Considered in August. "It doesn't require you to face hard questions about what we owe people most impacted by abortion bans."
The Ocala Fire Rescue received the surrendered newborn, the first to ever be surrendered in a baby box in Florida, within the last 10 days, Kelsey said. She declined to give an exact date to protect the infant's anonymity.
The baby boxes are touted as being safe, with temperature controls, safety incubators and alarms designed to contact authorities as soon as the outside door to the baby box is opened. Once the authorities arrive, the newborn is removed from the baby box's bassinet and immediately taken to receive medical attention, before then being placed for adoption, according to Kelsey.
Each location pays the organization $200 t0 $300 a year to cover maintenance and a yearly recertification.
Kelsey said her organization is in discussions with several other locations in Florida interested in launching similar baby box programs.
Baby boxes remain controversial
Baby boxes aren't a new invention. Kelsey became inspired to start her organization after she spotted one in South Africa, according to her organization's website. And in Europe, the practice has gone on for centuries: A convent or place of worship would set up rotating cribs, known as foundling wheels, where a child could be left.
And while advocates argue that baby boxes help save lives, critics say the practice creates a method for people to surrender children without the parent's consent.
While every U.S. state has some sort of legislation allowing infants to be surrendered to authorities, a United Nations committee called in 2012 for the practice to end. And while some countries are outlawing the practice altogether, others, like Italy, began introducing even more high-tech devices for surrendering children in 2007. There are still dozens of "cradles for life," or culle per la vita, in almost every region in Italy.
Another criticism lies in how infrequently infants are surrendered. In Texas, the number of abortions and live births far eclipses the 172 infants successfully surrendered under the state's safe haven law since 2009, according to The Texas Tribune. From 1999 to 2021, at least 4,505 infants were surrendered through safe haven laws nationwide, according to the most recent report from the National Safe Haven Alliance.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- How to check if your eye drops are safe amid flurry of product recalls
- Mother found dead in Florida apartment fire had been stabbed in 'horrific incident'
- Maui wildfire survivors camp on the beach to push mayor to convert vacation rentals into housing
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Mississippi drops charges in killing of former state lawmaker but says new charges are possible
- Czech president approves plan introducing budget cuts, taxes. Labor unions call for protests
- Missouri driver killed in crash involving car fleeing police
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Niall Horan says he 'might pass out' on 'The Voice' from Playoffs pressure: 'I'm not OK'
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- 2 killed, 5 injured in Philadelphia shooting, I-95 reopened after being closed
- 2 killed, 5 injured in Philadelphia shooting, I-95 reopened after being closed
- Poland’s new parliament debates reversing a ban on government funding for in vitro fertilization
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Judge denies corrupt Baltimore ex-detective’s request for compassionate release
- Pilot dies after small plane crashes in Plano, Texas shopping center parking lot: Police
- Yes, France is part of the European Union’s heart and soul. Just don’t touch its Camembert cheese
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Atlanta officer used Taser on church deacon after he said he could not breathe, police video shows
Messi leaves match at Maracanã early, Argentina beats Brazil in game delayed by fight
'She definitely turned him on': How Napoleon's love letters to Josephine inform a new film
Sam Taylor
Susan Sarandon dropped by talent agency following pro-Palestinian rally appearance, reports say
What is the longest-running sitcom? This show keeps the laughs coming... and coming
Billion Dollar Babies: The True Story of the Cabbage Patch Kids Teaser Shows Dangerous Obsession