Sentences with phrase «duty military parents»

In 2013, the following rules were established in New Jersey to protect our state's active duty military parents.
The Education Savings Accounts for Military Families Act [H.R. 5199] allows active duty military parents to set up Education...
The Education Savings Accounts for Military Families Act [H.R. 5199] allows active duty military parents to set up Education Savings Accounts (ESAs), that can be used for a wide variety of education services for their children, including private school tuition.

Not exact matches

Something that helped a coworker of mine was the local Parents of Multiples group (they lived in San Diego but there are groups all over) They had preemie triplets and were active duty military.
If a single parent is ordered to active duty in Ohio, the parent must notify the other parent within three days of receiving a military service order.
Due to the time commitment and the uncertainty of locations associated with military assignments, it is difficult to imagine how a parent could be committed to the military and full - time duties as a single parent, simultaneously.
Her writing can be found all over the web, mostly detailing her own parenting struggles and triumphs, as well as her life as the military spouse of an active - duty airman.
There are more than 2 million children in US classrooms whose parents are active - duty military service members, National Guard or reservists, or military veterans.
Military children face unique challenges: having active - duty parents means frequent moves, lengthy deployments, and sometimes having to cope with a parent's injury.
The law gives preference to students living in the district, students moving because their parents are active - duty military personnel or students moving because of foster care placement or court - ordered custody arrangements.
AFC also believes that Congress and the Administration should pursue additional and bold policies to fulfill the President's promise to expand school choice, including: a K - 12 tax credit to leverage private money in support of scholarships for lower income families; vouchers for children of active duty military members so they can attend schools of their parents» choice; Education Savings Accounts for children in Bureau of Indian Education schools; and more funding for the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program.
Arizona's ESA program is available to children with special needs or foster care, families of active duty military personnel or children who lost a parent in active duty, and children zoned to attend a failing school.
Soon I was weeping — for the reservists who put their entire lives on hold when called to duty, for the military mothers who had to keep their families together all alone, for the parents, spouses, sons, and daughters who were beset with worry, for Mike, and for the soldiers who would never come home.
As used in this paragraph, a «Covered Borrower» means any person who, at the time such person becomes obligated on a loan transaction or establishes an account for consumer credit, satisfies the requirements under any one or more of the following classifications, or is otherwise under applicable laws deemed to be a «Covered Borrower» under the Military Lending Act, 10 U.S. Code Section 987: (a) An active duty member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force or Coast Guard, or a person serving on active Guard and Reserve duty (a person described in this clause (a) of the definition of «Covered Borrower» is hereinafter referred to as a «Service Member»); or (b) Any of the following persons, relative to a Service Member: (1) The spouse; (2) A child under the age of 21; or (3) If dependent on the Service Member for more than one half of such person's support, any one or more of the following persons: (i) A child under the age of 23 enrolled in a full time course of study at an institution of higher learning; (ii) A child of any age incapable of self support due to a mental or physical incapacity that occurred before attaining age 23 while such person was dependent on the Service Member; (iii) Any unmarried person placed in legal custody of the Service Member who resides with such Service Member unless separated by military service or to receive institutional care or under other circumstances covered by Regulation; or (iv) A parent or parent - in - law residing in the Service Member's hoMilitary Lending Act, 10 U.S. Code Section 987: (a) An active duty member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force or Coast Guard, or a person serving on active Guard and Reserve duty (a person described in this clause (a) of the definition of «Covered Borrower» is hereinafter referred to as a «Service Member»); or (b) Any of the following persons, relative to a Service Member: (1) The spouse; (2) A child under the age of 21; or (3) If dependent on the Service Member for more than one half of such person's support, any one or more of the following persons: (i) A child under the age of 23 enrolled in a full time course of study at an institution of higher learning; (ii) A child of any age incapable of self support due to a mental or physical incapacity that occurred before attaining age 23 while such person was dependent on the Service Member; (iii) Any unmarried person placed in legal custody of the Service Member who resides with such Service Member unless separated by military service or to receive institutional care or under other circumstances covered by Regulation; or (iv) A parent or parent - in - law residing in the Service Member's homilitary service or to receive institutional care or under other circumstances covered by Regulation; or (iv) A parent or parent - in - law residing in the Service Member's household.
If you have an exigency arising out of the fact that your spouse, child, or parent is a covered military member on active duty (or has been notified of an impending call or order to active duty) in support of a contingency operation, you may qualify to suspend your service obligation.
Your plan needs to state where you child will live and how the parents will make decisions for the child during the military parent's deployment, mobilization, temporary duty, unaccompanied tour, etc..
A military member parent, at some point, may be deployed as part of his or her duties.
The Texas Office of the Attorney General - Child Support Division developed the Help Establishing Responsive Orders and Ensuring Support (HEROES) for Children in Military Families program to provide specialized support for active duty service members and veterans» child support and parenting time needs.
The curriculum Heroes at Home: Supporting Military Families is a collection of resources and parent handouts designed specifically for family support professionals serving active duty, Guard, Reserve, and former service members.
In addition, eligibility also includes children under the age of three who are referred from child protective services or with at least one parent in active military duty.
With difficulty affording necessities like nutritious food, and a husband whose military duties often kept him from home, Miriam describes the help she received from her home visitor as critical: «My home visitor helped me with every aspect of parenting, connecting me to a dietitian who could treat my daughter's disorder, helping me access (Women Infant and Children) so that my baby and I could afford to eat, and helping me learn about my baby's development.»
Informal kinship care is available if the child is living with a relative (through marriage or blood) because the biological parents are unavailable due to death, serious illness, drug addition, incarceration, abandonment, or active military duty.
As Marriage and Family Therapists, we are uniquely qualified to help military children adjust to the family stressors of their parent's active duty deployment and reintegration to civilian life.
Almost half of today's active duty forces are parents, and continuing hostilities in Iraq and Afghanistan ensure that growing numbers of military families will experience repeated cycles of separation in a context of danger that may span across years of each family's development.
Their effects on both parents and adolescents in active duty military families are examined (N = 236 families).
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