Kentucky sees first infant anonymously surrendered at "baby box"

FILE - Monica Kelsey, firefighter and medic who is president of Safe Haven Baby Boxes Inc., poses with a prototype of a baby box, where parents could surrender their newborns anonymously, outside her fire station on Feb. 26, 2015, in Woodburn, Ind.  Michael Conroy / AP

A healthy baby is the first infant to be anonymously dropped off at one of Kentucky's "baby box" safe surrender locations.

Safe Haven Baby Boxes founder and CEO Monica Kelsey said at a news conference Friday that the child was dropped off within the last seven days at a Bowling Green Fire Department location. She declined to be more specific to protect the anonymity of the surrender. According to Kelsy, the fire department staff was able to tend to the child in less than 90 seconds.

The baby is the 24th in the country to be surrendered at one of more than 130 baby boxes and drawers the organization has established across nine states.

"This baby is healthy. This baby is beautiful. This baby is perfect," said Kelsey, who added that officials are now looking to place the child in "a forever home."

Gov. Andy Beshear signed a law in 2021 that allows the use of baby boxes for children less than 30 days old. The law requires the boxes to be located at police stations, fire stations or hospitals that are staffed 24 hours a day. It also requires equipping them with a notification system to alert the first responders on site that a child has been placed inside the box.

Kentucky now has 16 baby box locations. The Bowling Green box had been operational for less than two months. Safe Haven Baby Boxes are installed in the exterior wall of a fire station or hospital. An exterior door automatically locks when a newborn is placed inside, and an interior door lets a medical staff member secure the baby from inside the building.

"This child was legally, safely, anonymously and lovingly placed inside of this Safe Haven Baby Box, and that speaks volumes about the parent," Kelsey said.

Republican state Sen. Nancy Tate, who sponsored the legislation, told WNKY-TV that it's her goal to have at least one box in every Kentucky county.

"It makes me heart full to know how supportive this project is," Tate said.

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