Whether you are a father
seeking parenting time with your children, a mother seeking visitation when the father has custody, a grandparent who has been denied visitation, or a custodial parent who has legitimate reasons to fear for the child's well - being when with the other parent or a grandparent, I will work creatively and diligently to help you achieve your goal.»
Not exact matches
By the way, if you find that you are having a hard
time controlling your own temper,
seek out support in the form of friends, other
parents with same - age
children, or by taking a
parenting class at your local rec center or church.
Both
parents have the right to
seek custody and visiting
time with their
child.
Interference
with parenting time can become a severe obstacle to
parents seeking to maintain a relationship
with their
child.
Whether you're dealing
with a willful two - year - old or a power -
seeking twelve - year - old, If I Have to Tell You One More
Time... provides the tools that
parents need in order to raise respectful, well - behaved, and well - adjusted
children.
Drawing on 1,200 interviews
with California
parents, A
Time to Learn, A
Time to Grow, looks at the disconnect between the summer activities that
parents seek for their
children and what they are able to find.
(c) If the
parents are actually spending substantially equal intervals of
time with the
child and the relocating
parent seeks to move
with the
child, the other
parent may, within thirty (30) days of receipt of notice, file a petition in opposition to removal of the
child.
Negotiating an acceptable arrangement regarding
parenting time,
time with a
child and authority over key decisions in a
child's life is of utmost concern to many
parents when they
seek a lawyer.
Whether one
parent is attempting to move to another state or a
parent needs more or less
time with a
child to accommodate his or her new situation, we can assist you in
seeking a legal change to the custody order that was previously created.
Florida law
seeks to promote happy and healthy
children by giving
children meaningful contact and
time with both
parents.
Where, on the other hand, a
parent acquiesces (leaves their
child in the custody of the other
parents and does nothing to actively
seek custody) for some period of
time, but then
seeks to recover custody later on, a court will generally favour the interim order and keep the
child with the current custodial
parent.
Parents who are
seeking a divorce when their
child is in college or entering college may be able to have the same court deal
with the issue of who pays college tuition at the
time of their divorce.
FAMILY LAW —
CHILDREN — Parenting — Parental responsibility — With whom the children shall live and spend time — Separation of siblings — Where the two eldest children have been living with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
CHILDREN —
Parenting — Parental responsibility — With whom the children shall live and spend time — Separation of siblings — Where the two eldest children have been living with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age
Parenting — Parental responsibility —
With whom the children shall live and spend time — Separation of siblings — Where the two eldest children have been living with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
With whom the
children shall live and spend time — Separation of siblings — Where the two eldest children have been living with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children shall live and spend
time — Separation of siblings — Where the two eldest
children have been living with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children have been living
with the father and the youngest child has been living with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the father and the youngest
child has been living
with the mother — Where both parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the mother — Where both
parents seek sole parental responsibility for all three
children and for the children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children and for the
children to live with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children to live
with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with them ---- Where there are concerns about the mother's
parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age
parenting capacity in relation to the two eldest
children — Where the mother's relationship with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children — Where the mother's relationship
with the youngest child is a protective factor for the child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the youngest
child is a protective factor for the
child — Orders made for the father to have sole parental responsibility for the two eldest
children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest child — Orders made for the two eldest children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children and the mother to have sole parental responsibility for the youngest
child — Orders made for the two eldest
children to live with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children to live
with the father and the youngest child to live with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the father and the youngest
child to live
with the mother — Orders made permitting the children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the mother — Orders made permitting the
children to determine when to spend time with the non-resident parent on reaching age t
children to determine when to spend
time with the non-resident parent on reaching age thirt
with the non-resident
parent on reaching age thirteen.
FAMILY LAW —
CHILDREN — Best interests — Where both
parents seek sole parental responsibility and for the
child to live
with them — Where the respondent mother believes the
child would settle down and accept the arrangement if the court ordered for the
child to spend no
time with applicant father — Where the court has a statutory mandate to make
parenting orders
with the
child's best interests as the paramount concern — Where there is little doubt that the
child would benefit from having a meaningful relationship
with both
parents — Where the
child's clear views that he does not want to spend
time with the respondent mother should be given significant weight in the circumstances — Where the
child is of an age, maturity and intelligence to have principally formed his own rationally based views — Where the court is satisfied that it is in the
child's best interests for the presumption of equal shared parental responsibility to be rebutted — Where the respondent father is to have sole parental responsibility and the
child is to live
with him — Where the applicant mother is permitted to attend certain school and sporting events of the
child — Where the
child should be able to instigate contact
with the respondent mother as he considers appropriate to his needs and circumstances — Where the orders made are least likely to lead to the institution of further proceedings in relation to the
child — Where the
child is to have the outcome of these proceedings, the effect of the orders and the reasons for judgment explained to him by an expert as soon as reasonably practical.
36-6-108 (2004)(where
parents are spending substantially equal amounts of
time with child, no presumption in favor of either
parent arises when one
parent seeks to relocate).
-- Unless an agreement has been entered as described in subsection (2), a
parent or other person
seeking relocation must file a petition to relocate and serve it upon the other
parent, and every other person entitled to access to or
time - sharing
with the
child.
If your
child is struggling to cope
with a recent divorce or death in the family, if you are feeling helpless, hopeless and defeated as a
parent, or if your son or daughter is lashing out
with aggression, it may be
time to
seek the advice of a professional.
Should the
parents be unable to agree about where and when the
child is enrolled in school or extracurricular activities that infringe on the
time the
child is
with the other
parent or involve both
parents bringing the
child to practices, rehearsals, competitions, or shows, the
parents shall:
Seek professional assistance from a licensed family counselor or private mediator to resolve their differences or participate in at least six co-parenting or counseling sessions to develop a plan for such activities each year.
As the
parents unwittingly settle their score through the
children, think one
parent isn't deserving of a relationship
with the kids or think one can not
parent or will provide a negative influence and then
seek to limit one's relationship or
time with them, the fight is on.
Parents complete homework assignments between each training session, including such assignments as counting the
child behaviors which they
seek to change, applying praise and other such skills three
times a day to interaction
with the target
child, applying and charting the impact of the use of various skills, and creating and using a home special incentive system.
In September, 2001, the Colorado statutes established a new procedure and standard for review of cases in which the
parent with whom the
child resides a majority of the
time seeks to relocate or move to a residence substantially changing the geographic ties between the
child and the other
parent.
Finally, studies suggest that only
children tend to be more self - centered and success -
seeking, and can also be unusually mature because they spend so much one - on - one
time with their
parents.
The absent
parent faces potential financial hardship in maintaining a home purchased after the split
with his or her partner, but prior to the implementation of the
child support guidelines which call for increased
child support, because the recipient spouse can
seek a variation of a prior separation agreement at any
time after May 1, 1997 and thus invoke the guidelines.
Mothers who score higher in conscientiousness and those
with children having behavioural attributes that are likely to lead to risk behaviours (i.e., impulsivity, sensation
seeking), keep their
children in view more of the
time.14 Thus,
parents seem to adjust the level of supervision based on both
parent and
child attributes.
So far from these topics being off - limits, any MHP
seeking appointment in a court case needs to fully inform the parties prior to their consent [123], of information about the following kinds of potentials for bias and agenda: whether the MHP has been married or divorced, and how many
times, and under what kinds of circumstances, and how the MHP currently feels about those events; whether, if divorced, the MHP went through litigation over custody or property, and such details as whether the MHP had problems paying or receiving
child support, as well as the custody arrangements of the MHP's own
children and how these worked out and everyone's feelings about them; the MHP's own personal experience taking care of and spending
time with children, within and without the scope of «
parenting», and
with regard to
parenting, whether that was
parenting as a primary caregiver, married or single
parent,
with or without household and third party help, or as a working
parent or stay - home
parent, and for how many
children, and for how long, and the outcomes from all of that; i.e. how much
time has this person actually spent caring for
children on his or her own, and how well did this person's own family systems function, and is this person in fact an «expert» in creating a functioning family and raising happy, healthy, successful
children with good outcomes, nay «best» outcomes, thoroughly well - adjusted and having reached the very pinnacles of their innate potential.
He then has the right to ask a court to establish
parenting time and visitation
with his
child and may even
seek residential custody.