Not exact matches
Family law, with
children and finances and often high emotions involved, is just one example where an algorithm is not going to be
of much use beyond working out the
support payments (and we have the provincial guidelines for that already.
Among the services it provides are finding the other parent if and when they have not given
child support; sort out disagreements about parentage; work out how
much child maintenance should be paid; and arrange for the «paying» parent to pay
child maintenance - the parent who doesn't have main day - to - day care
of the
child; as well as pass
payments on to the «receiving» parent - the parent who has main day - to - day care
of the
child.
Making sure your parenting plan is fair and balanced and that the
children see both
of you as
much as possible is the best way to ensure there will be no issues with
child support payments or random expenses.
Statistics show that mediation can also lower the risk
of non-payment
of child support because the reasons behind the
child support payments are
much more clear and better understood than in litigated divorces.
While the most misogynistic branches
of the father's rights movement state outright that they favor male control and father - only custody in the hopes that this will turn the clock back on women's independence (e.g. by helping to entrap women in marriages that are otherwise broken),
much of the movement prefers to publicly posture in favor
of the more palatable and misleading rhetoric
of «shared parenting,» i.e. joint custody, as a ruse to accomplish this end more indirectly, as well as to reduce or eliminate the foundations for
child support payments.
The decision by state
child support enforcement units
of whether or not to pursue
child support payments from adoptive families has caused
much distress on the part
of parents who adopt our country's most vulnerable
children.
Child support payments may only cover so much of a child's everyday finances, so the parenting plan should address how those outlying expenses should be cov
Child support payments may only cover so
much of a
child's everyday finances, so the parenting plan should address how those outlying expenses should be cov
child's everyday finances, so the parenting plan should address how those outlying expenses should be covered.