Not exact matches
Under current law, an unmarried father is not named on the birth
certificate unless he signs a voluntary
acknowledgment of paternity.
The plea
of guilty in any court, the decision
of guilty by any court, the forfeiture by the teaching certificateholder
of a bond in any court
of law, or the written
acknowledgment, duly witnessed,
of offenses listed in subsection (1) to the district school superintendent or a duly appointed representative
of such superintendent or to the district school board shall be prima facie proof
of grounds for revocation
of the
certificate as listed in subsection (1) in the absence
of proof by the certificateholder that the plea
of guilty, forfeiture
of bond, or admission
of guilt was caused by threats, coercion, or fraudulent means.
PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS • 8 + years» successful experience in human resources coordination • Supports HR department across all operational and administrative functions • Hands on experience in managing payroll processes • Well versed in assisting in documentation
of workflow processes and procedures • Documented success in managing statistical data and collection
of various training
certificates and policy
acknowledgments • Proficient in Oracle HRMS Software, MS Office Suite, and MS Project
An unmarried father may have parental rights if he agreed to include his name on the child's birth
certificate after the child's birth or he signed a voluntary
acknowledgment of paternity.
Both parents can sign the child's birth
certificate after she is born; the father and mother can sign a voluntary
acknowledgment of paternity or the father can take a paternity test and petition the court to acknowledge him as the child's legal father.
Fathers who were not married to the child's mother at the time
of the child's birth must file a petition for
acknowledgment of paternity — even if they signed the birth
certificate — prior to commencing custody proceedings.