50/50 schedules are
joint parenting time schedules that divide the child's time equally between both parents and allow the child to be consistently cared for by both parents.
Not exact matches
These six
joint custody
schedules provide for almost equal
time for the kids with both
parents.
When
parents carve
time out of a busy
schedule to grab a bite at a local burger
joint or window shop at the mall with the typically developing child, it conveys a message that
parents «are there» for them as well.
Joint Physical Custody •
Joint Legal Custody (Decision Making) •
Parenting Time • Visitation
Schedules --
Such interim orders contained provisions stating that the plaintiff and the defendant shall have interim
joint custody and guardianship, that the primary address of the children shall be the defendant's address, that for the purpose of access arrangements the plaintiff shall promptly inform the defendant of her monthly work
schedule, and the defendant shall make efforts to ensure the children spend equal
time with both the plaintiff and the defendant and, upon receipt of such work
schedule, draw a calendar setting out
parenting time for each
parent for the coming month, and that the plaintiff shall be allowed to travel to Japan with the children from November 2, 2002 through November 18, 2002.
Joint physical custody is when the parties have an equal or approximately equal
parenting time schedule and share roughly the same amount of
time with the kids.
Parents with
Joint physical custody share responsibility for the child's
time within a more equitable
schedule.
Title 25, Chapter 4, Article 1, A.R.S. Section 25 - 403.02 defines the essentials of the
parenting plan, which includes each
parent's rights and responsibilities in terms of personal care and decision making in the areas of education, healthcare and religion; a detailed
schedule of the physical residence of the child throughout the year; prescribed courses of action when changes need to be made to the agreement or if the agreement is broken by one party; and a statement from both parties acknowledging that
joint custody is not defined by equal
parenting time.
As equal
parenting time and
joint legal decision making are almost a given (aside from certain specific activities that rebut the presumption),
parents can work from that place in order to personalize and custom tailor their specific agreements to fit their
schedules, and their children's needs.
If you have
joint custody, you need to make a
parenting time schedule that shows when your child spends
time with each
parent.
Food is also usually not shared, although sometimes when the
schedule of exchanges is quite unequal, the more
time parent can take an agreed upon amount from the
joint account to compensate for the difference.
Is it that difficult to ascertain who was a child's historical primary caregiver, who is the more competent
parent, where the child would be happier spending the bulk of
time, whether Dad should have the additional overnight a week he wants, whether Mom really needs to relocate for her job, or — if the recommendation probably is going to be some version of «
joint custody» anyway — whether the
parents»
schedules and the child's life work better on the 5 -5-3-3 plan or with a rotating every other week
schedule?
Under
joint custody,
parents typically work out a co-parenting plan based upon work
schedules, housing arrangements and the needs of their children to try and reach a near equal amount of
time with each
parent.