Myths versus Facts Regarding Bill C - 560 — from Lawyers for Shared Parenting, Leading Women for Shared Parenting and Canadian
Equal Parenting Council
Such organizations as the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council, Lawyers for Shared Parenting, and Leading Women for Shared Parenting amongst others, were in the forefront of the Canadian 2013 - 2014 campaign in support of a private member's Bill (C - 560) that would have legislated a rebuttable presumption in favour equal shared parenting.
Visit the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council web site for some astonishing information about the struggle to have this Bill passed.
Kris is a co-founder and former executive director of the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council.
Most of all, I want to thank the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council, a very broad umbrella group comprised of 35 to 40 groups across the country that all have their own individual chapters.
I remember Kris Titus, who was the president of
the Equal Parenting Council across Canada, an umbrella organization for 40 - some groups, telling me about when she and her ex, who were living in close communities, went to the judge the first time around to try to work out this kind of arrangement of approximately equal shared parenting.
Glenn Cheriton is the dedicated President of the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council.
The Canadian
Equal Parenting Council is an umbrella organization for the various equal shared parenting groups across Canada.
My public advocacy work (Canadian
Equal Parenting Council, Lawyers for Shared Parenting, etc.) is directed at making separation and divorce less traumatic for kids.
Starting in approximately 2001, I was very involved in laying the groundwork with others for the cross Canada umbrella group that eventually became the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council or CEPC.
The bill was sponsored by the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council and was defeated in 2014 with a vote of 80 in favour and 174 against.
Kris Titus is former co-president of the Canadian
Equal Parenting Council (CEPC).
Not exact matches
School site
councils include
equal numbers of teachers and
parents to help decide how to spend discretionary money coming to the school.
Association of Education Service Agencies Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty Center for Inquiry Clearinghouse on Women's Issues
Council for Exceptional Children
Council of the Great City Schools Disciples Justice Action Network
Equal Partners in Faith Feminist Majority Hindu American Foundation Institute for Science and Human Values Interfaith Alliance International Reading Association Lawyers» Committee for Civil Rights Under Law NAACP National Alliance of Black School Educators National Association of Elementary School Principals National Association of Federally Impacted Schools National Association of Secondary School Principals National Association of State Directors of Special Education National Black Justice Coalition National Center for Lesbian Rights National
Council of Jewish Women National Education Association National Organization for Women National
Parent Teacher Association National Rural Education Advocacy Coalition National Rural Education Association National School Boards Association People For the American Way Public Education Network School Social Work Association of America Secular Coalition for America Southern Poverty Law Center Union for Reform Judaism Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations United Church of Christ Justice and Witness Ministries Women of Reform Judaism
«The Bar
Council has been lobbying for rule changes since the introduction of Shared Parental Leave in 2015 because we want
parents to have a more
equal role and because we want to see more
equal numbers of men and women at the Bar.
Council of Europe member states should remove from their laws any difference based on marital status between
parents who have acknowledged their child and ensure that
parents have
equal rights vis - à - vis their children under their laws and administrative practice, the PACE Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination has said.
There are significant opportunities for Canadian advocates for
parents to use the academic research revealed by the conference to promote
equal parenting, to advocate the for a Canadian resolution similar to that of the
Council of Europe, and to show how
equal shared
parenting is being successfully implemented in various countries to the benefit of children,
parents and society in general.