* * * Login issues? Please login directly under the forum * * *
* * * Login issues? Please login directly under the forum * * *
micheles wrote:No, what is a delayed birth certificate?
What is required to file a delayed birth certificate?
In order to request a delayed report of birth, you must first file an application requesting the birth certificate to ensure the record is not on file. If no record is found, you will receive a No Record statement, which must be returned with a letter of request to place a delayed report of birth on file. You will receive a questionnaire to complete so that a more detailed search can be completed. You will also need to provide documentary proof that the birth took place. Documentary proof will be reviewed and a determination made. Please contact the Record Modification unit toll-free at 1-866-649-8726 extension 581 for further information.
If your grandmother is not in your direct-line of ancestors, you can probably safely forget about this document entirely.mkaysm wrote:I have been unable to find my GM birth certificate in NYS and would really appreciate a copy of that document as well. I am sort of at a dead end if I can't get that info. I do have her SS#.
Has this been confirmed? My GF had a social security number. He does not appear to have had a birth certificate. We do have his baptismal certificate from the church. Is it possible he used this for a SS#? I ask because I'm preparing for a court order compelling the county to create a birth cert for him in PA. If having an SS# means having had a birth cert, I will pivot and instead try harder to find it. The town he was born in is actually in two counties. Both counties responded to my written request that there was no record.CeruleanOcean wrote:He had a social security number and according to the social security administration, he had to have had a birth certificate in order to get that social security number.
Has this been confirmed? My GF had a social security number. He does not appear to have had a birth certificate. We do have his baptismal certificate from the church. Is it possible he used this for a SS#? I ask because I'm preparing for a court order compelling the county to create a birth cert for him in PA. If having an SS# means having had a birth cert, I will pivot and instead try harder to find it. The town he was born in is actually in two counties. Both counties responded to my written request that there was no record.CeruleanOcean wrote:He had a social security number and according to the social security administration, he had to have had a birth certificate in order to get that social security number.