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March 06, 2008

New York Times article about the role of religion in custody disputes

Published: February 13, 2008

A 27-year-old single mother at the time, Mrs. Snider felt she had ruined her life through a disastrous marriage and divorce. But in her kitchen that night, after reading pamphlets and Bible passages that her boss had pointed her to, she realized she was a sinner, she said, she prayed for forgiveness, and put her trust in Christ.

Four years later, the conservative brand of Christianity Mrs. Snider embraced became the source of a bitter, continuing custody battle over her only child, Libby Mashburn.

Across the country, child-custody disputes in which religion is the flash point are increasing, part of a broader rise in custody conflicts over the last 30 years, lawyers, judges and mediators say.

“There has definitely been an increase in conflict over religious issues,” said Ronald William Nelson, a Kansas family lawyer who is chairman of the custody committee of the American Bar Association’s family law section. “Part of that is there has been an increase of conflicts between parents across the board, and with parents looking for reasons to justify their own actions.” Another factor, he said, is the rise of intermarriage and greater willingness by Americans to convert.

Nobody keeps track of who wins in these religious disputes, but lawyers say that judges are just as likely to rule in favor of the more religiously engaged parent as the other way around. That is because, for constitutional reasons, judges are reluctant to base their rulings primarily on the religious preferences of parents.

Judges do not want to take on custody disputes rooted in religion, said lawyers like Gaetano Ferro, who until recently served as president of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. Mr. Ferro said, “How will a judge say in any rational fashion that Islam is better than Buddhism, Catholicism better than Judaism, or Methodism better than Pentecostalism?”

As a result, more and more states have tried to keep custody disputes out of court by mandating mediation. But the effect has been piecemeal, and religious disputes have proven to be among the most difficult to resolve, lawyers said.

From the age of 1 month, Mrs. Snider’s daughter had lived with her, and later Mrs. Snider’s new husband, Brian Snider, with occasional visits to her biological father.

But in 2003, when Libby was 6, an Alabama court gave primary custody to her father, William Mashburn, after he and Mrs. Snider’s own family argued that the strict religious upbringing Libby received at her mother’s home, which involved modest dress, teachings about sin and salvation, and limited exposure to popular culture, was damaging her.

“We were easy targets because we were made to look like cultists,” Mrs. Snider, 36, said. “I think whether anyone admits it or not, almost all of the ruling had to do with religion. Nothing I had done was called into question except that.”

Generally, custody disputes are resolved outside the courtroom, lawyers said.

Such cases have increased, however, because a generation ago, mothers almost always got custody and were responsible for nearly all aspects of children’s upbringing. But now, both parents are usually involved in raising children after divorce, and that can lead to dispute. Data regarding custody cases are not uniform, according to the National Center for State Courts, but for 10 states for which it has data from 2002, all show an increase in custody cases coming to trial.

Conflicts sometimes arise when an interfaith marriage dissolves or when one parent converts to a different religion after divorce.

In Oregon, a dispute between James Boldt and his former wife, Lia, was recently decided by the State Supreme Court. Mr. Boldt, the custodial parent, converted to Judaism after the divorce and sought to have their son, now 12, convert, and be circumcised.

The court ruled that custodial parents could generally decide if a child should be circumcised. But given the son’s age, it ordered the lower court to ascertain his wishes. If they conflict with his father’s, the court may have to reconsider the custody arrangement, the court ruled.

Tensions can emerge when one parent takes a turn toward fundamentalism. In 2006, the United States Supreme Court let stand a decision by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania that permitted Stanley Shepp to tell his 14-year-old daughter about polygamy.

Mr. Shepp and his former wife, Tracey Roberts, were Mormons living in York, Pa., when they married. But Mr. Shepp espoused polygamy as a tenet of their faith.

Ms. Roberts contends that Mr. Shepp spoke to one of her daughters from a previous marriage about marrying him, which he denies. She left Mr. Shepp and has primary custody of their daughter. He was excommunicated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for his polygamist views and is now part of a Mormon fundamentalist movement in Utah.

Mr. Shepp petitioned for better-defined custody rights for his daughter, but Ms. Roberts objected because he had exposed the child to polygamist Mormon communities. The court upheld Mr. Shepp’s right to teach his daughter about polygamy, saying it could not find evidence that such teaching harmed her physical or mental health.

Judges risk violating the separation of church and state if they try to choose the faith a child should be raised in, legal experts said. But in situations like Libby Mashburn’s, judgments about parenting can become entwined with religion.

In upholding the rulings of lower courts to grant primary custody to Mr. Mashburn, the Supreme Court of Alabama said the Sniders’s involvement in missionary work took Libby away from her extended family in Alabama. The Sniders are quietly, unapologetically fundamentalist. They believe that American culture, even conservative denominations like the Southern Baptist Convention, has drifted perilously far from biblical teachings. They attend a large Independent Baptist church in Madison, where the music, the sanctuary and the congregants are unadorned and old-fashioned.

Women wear skirts as a sign of modesty. They do not swim in mixed company. They eschew rock music and nearly all popular culture. They do not drink, smoke or swear.

The Sniders have raised Libby, now 11, in that tradition. But it has put them at odds with Mr. Mashburn and Mrs. Snider’s family. Mr. Mashburn and his lawyer declined to comment .

Mrs. Snider said she understood that Libby might wear pants at her father’s home or go to the movies. But she insisted that Mr. Mashburn not swear or drink in front of Libby or expose her to inappropriate movies and music, which, she said, he has repeatedly done.

The Sniders have repeatedly appealed to win back primary custody. They are awaiting yet another decision from a hearing in November.

At the last hearing, Libby, who spends about 40 percent of her time with the Sniders, testified against Mr. Mashburn.

“I’m more of my mom’s religion, and my dad sometimes talks bad about my mom,” she said. “He called it a cult, and it’s definitely not a cult. It kind of makes me mad sometimes. Maybe he thinks her religion may be bad for me, but I think mainly he doesn’t like my mom and is using that as an excuse.”

Some states like California and Connecticut have taken innovative steps to get parents to resolve custody issues outside court. In Connecticut, for example, those seeking a court order have to meet with a family-relations specialist in an effort to negotiate. If that fails, they attend a daylong session to settle their differences before a panel that includes a lawyer and a mental health professional.

Even after a case goes to court, little may be resolved.

Aaron Petty of Minneapolis and Gineen Gove of Black River Falls, Wis., had their daughter, Basyl, 17 years ago. The couple split up when Basyl was 4. Soon afterward, Ms. Gove married, and she and her husband converted to Old Order Amish.

As Mr. Petty saw his daughter over the years, he became concerned, he said, when Basyl was about 11 and he learned that the Goves would not let her go to school past eighth grade, a common decision among the Amish.

Mr. Petty petitioned for primary custody so that Basyl might continue her education. “This case wasn’t about religion for me,” he said. “It was about her education.”

He won the case when Basyl was 14, but she disappeared. Mr. Petty said he suspected Basyl was living within the Amish community. The Goves declined to talk about the case.

“I wanted to offer my daughter options for her future, in case she grew up and didn’t remain Amish,” Mr. Petty said in a phone interview. “At 12, 13, 14, making lasting drastic decisions based on faith isn’t an appropriate time.”

Mr. Petty’s voice caught as he continued. “Was that case worth fighting? In hindsight, no. I haven’t seen my daughter in two-and-a-half years.”

Warren Shiell is a Los Angeles Family Law Attorney

         

March 06, 2007

Parental alienation: The latest weapon in nasty divorces

Source Lawyers USA

"Welcome to the swamp."

That's what a judge once told a client of Anchorage divorce attorney Steve Pradell when accusations of parental alienation were leveled against the client in a custody hearing.

Parental alienation syndrome - a controversial diagnosis to describe a child who compulsively denigrates one parent in response to consistent brainwashing by the other parent - has become a common weapon in custody cases.

"It happens all the time," said Michael R. Walsh, a divorce attorney in Orlando, Fla. "If Mom can't hurt Dad another way, what has she got left after she's tried to rake him over the coals on everything else?"

According to Richard Gardner, the psychologist who is considered the father of the syndrome, it typically manifests itself as a campaign of denigration by one parent against the other, which is accompanied by weak, frivolous and absurd rationalizations for the deprecation. As a result of this steady campaign of insult, the child reflexively supports the alienating parent and experiences no guilt over their own cruelty towards the targeted parent.

But the mental health profession is far from agreement about the existence of the syndrome. Noting the lack of supporting data, the American Psychological Association has "no official position on the purported syndrome," according to a statement in its website.

The legal community is divided as well.

While many family lawyers believe the syndrome is a legitimate psychological diagnosis, others view it as nonsense. They say it's used primarily by parents who want someone to blame for their poor relationship with their children.

"I think it's more of a code word that gets used in trial because one parent is not maintaining the relationship with the children and believes the other parent is interfering with the relationship," said Minneapolis divorce attorney Susan Gallagher.

Like it or not, parental alienation has become a common weapon in courts across the country. Even in jurisdictions that don't recognize it as a diagnosable syndrome in children, lawyers can still argue straight parental alienation - that one parent's attempts to turn the child against the other parent indicates that the first parent is not fit to have custody.

Sometimes the behavior that prompts charges of parental alienation is subtle - frequent disparaging remarks within earshot of the child or setting up appointments and activities for the child during times when the other parent is scheduled to have visitation. Other times it is openly aggressive, such as unfounded accusations of child abuse or neglect.

In some cases, a parent is deluded enough to believe their unfounded accusations - and other times when the accusations are true - so sorting out what is real and what is not can be a tall order for the courts.

"I can't tell you if the syndrome exists psychologically, but I can say it's very troubling and one of the hardest things for a judge to figure out if it's really happening," said Pradell.

It's also possible for the child to be alienated from one parent without any campaign of denigration by the other.

"Just for the sake of illustration, a 13-year-old girl finds out before Mom that Dad is cheating on Mom. That 13-year-old girl may become alienated from Dad, not because of Mom, but the alienation is there," said Patrick O'Reilly of Buffalo, head of the Family Law Section of the New York Bar Association.

As the Anchorage judge said: "Welcome to the swamp."

Making it stick

 

Although parental alienation has become a common weapon in custody cases around the country, proving it can be a tall order.

"It's like everything else in a custody case - it all comes down to what you can prove at trial. A lot of bad things happen, but they're very difficult to prove," said Ben Stevens of Stevens MacPhail in Spartanburg, S.C.

The best place to begin is with witnesses - anyone who was present when one of the alienating interactions occurred. In some states, clients can record telephone calls or other conversations to create audio evidence.

O'Reilly suggested that lawyers encourage their clients to communicate via e-mail and voice mail to create a tangible record. This will be far more effective in court than the typical he-said/she-said battles that dominate most custody battles.

But the heart of any parental alienation case is the expert testimony, according to Stevens.

"Take the child to a mental health professional and let him do testing," he suggested. "Then you've got an expert witness to come and say, 'In my expert opinion, this is what's going on.'"

It many cases the judge will require a court-appointed psychologist to work with both parents and the children in order to obtain a non-partisan expert opinion. In a similar vein, lawyers may want to ask the court to appoint a guardian ad litem who will advocate on behalf of the child to determine whether parental alienation has occurred.

In the end, though, lawyers should be prepared for a tough battle.

"It's very hard to prove, because if you have the client from whom the children are estranged, you don't have a child willing to cooperate with the process, and that's where most of the proof would be," O'Reilly said.

 

efending against a charge

 

These same strategies, and a few others, are useful if unfounded allegations of alienation are leveled against your client.

"Obviously they have the burden to prove the client's doing something," said O'Reilly. "It's not, 'The child doesn't talk to me, res ipsa it's your fault.' You have a little bit of advantage."

First, make sure your client always takes the high road. Although the natural instinct of clients is to become indignant and defend themselves vehemently, protesting too loudly could undermine their credibility in the eyes of the court, said Gallagher.

Instead, develop an action plan for how your client can build a stronger relationship with the children. Change any behavior that is suspect. Have clients tell the judge that while they don't feel there is evidence to support the allegation, they are seeking the help of a professional as a precaution, and are prepared to change any behavior that is deemed inappropriate.

"Who is not confident in a parent who is going to do and say that?" Gallagher asked.

But just as in the case of the accuser, the most powerful weapon for a client who is accused of alienation is the psychological expert.

"A good forensic expert has credibility because that person doesn't represent your guy and doesn't represent the other party - he's appointed by the court," said Tom Carnes of Carnes Ely in Houston.

Third-party witnesses can also be a powerful weapon in court.

"Try to line up witnesses that would have had the opportunity to see [the parent] interact with the child. Teachers, scout leaders, dance teachers, karate teachers - people who see them during times when parents let their guard down and can say, 'I've never seen Dad say anything bad about Mom or Mom say anything bad about Dad,'" Stevens suggested.

Finally, Carnes suggests that lawyers request more visits between the targeted parent and child in an effort to strengthen the relationship between them.

Of course, the best defense against an alienation charge is to make sure it's never made in the first place. Advise your client not to get in the middle of disputes between the child and the other parent, O'Reilly advised. If a child refuses to go with the non-custodial parent, the custodial parent should insist. He or she should tell the child that the judge has required the visit.

"I encourage my clients to act reasonably, assume anything they do or say could be shown to the judge - or better yet, that the judge is standing there watching," said Stevens. "I don't know if that's great advice or I've just had good clients, but I haven't had many alienation claims alleged against my clients."

 

Keep your sanity

 

Custody cases are among the most frustrating cases a lawyer takes on, O'Reilly said.

Although he said he doesn't duck under his desk when a potential client walks into his office with an alienation claim, "there's certainly a gastro-intestinal response that says, 'Oh jeez.'"

And there's more than your professional satisfaction at stake. Choosing the wrong clients could damage your firm's reputation.

"We represent the alleged perpetrator more often, but we make sure we think they're not a pervert or hitting their kids before we ever take them on," said Carnes. "If we take people who are in the gray area, the court is going to develop a different view of us over time."

Stevens is also careful to take cases he believes in strongly.

"It's not worth it to me to deal with clients who are acting deliberately," he said. "If they're going to do that to their child's parent, I'm going to have a problem with them at some point."

But that approach concerns Pradell, who worries it will make it difficult for the parent who really is guilty of alienation to find adequate counsel. He believes lawyers should take the assertions of prospective clients at face value, while maintaining a willingness to fire any client who wants them to do something unethical.

To maintain his sanity, Carnes periodically takes time off from custody cases and concentrates on his business litigation practice.

As gut-wrenching as custody cases can be, Pradell said there is something that keeps him coming back for more. He recalled a case he took on when he was starting to burn out after 15 years of family law.

His client was a father who was awarded custody of his child and an unborn sibling because the mother and her boyfriend physically abused the child. The woman disappeared before the birth. But many months later, Pradell received a call from the police in Washington, who had just raided the home of the mother and boyfriend. The officer found a copy of the signed order giving custody of the unborn child to Pradell's client. The baby girl had a broken arm, but doctors expected her to be okay. The state confiscated the child and delivered her to her father.

Six months ago, Pradell, who is also a magician, performed a show at the little girl's birthday party. "At the end of the show I sat with her and I said, 'I knew you before you were born,' and she goes, 'You must be magic.'"

"That case changed me - now I know I make a difference."

By Amy Johnson Conner Contributing writer

December 23, 2006

How to tell the children

A helpful article from divorce magazine about how to raise the subject of divorce with the children. Read more

December 16, 2006

PREPARING A CUSTODY DECLARATION

OVERVIEW

A request for a temporary custody order is usually made by filing an Order To Show Cause (“OSC”). This consists of a Judicial Council OSC Form (Form FL 300), an Application For Order (Form FL310) and supporting sworn written declarations of the parents and other witnesses. Because of the heavy caseload of family law matters in most Courts in California, judges have come to rely on sworn written declarations instead of taking oral testimony of witnesses in Court. You should, however, check the local rules of your Court to see how they handle OSC applications.  In many counties, the “preferred practice” is for judges to make decisions based upon written declarations, supplemented by offers of proof of counsel at the hearing, and only occasionally by oral testimony. The entire hearing may take less than twenty minutes. That is why your written declarations are so important to winning your case. Judicial Council Forms can be found at http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/forms/.

FORMAT OF YOUR CUSTODY DECLARATION

You declaration should be in the correct format on numbered pleading paper, with separate paragraphs and must end with a perjury declaration e.g.

 

DECLARATION OF JOHN DOE

1     I am Petitioner/Respondent in this matter. The facts stated herein are within my personal    

2      knowledge and I further affirmatively state that, if sworn as a witness, I could and would

3      competently testify thereto.

4                     2. [insert facts]

5                      3.

6     I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that

7      the foregoing is true and correct to the best of my knowledge.

8     Executed this____ day of ____, 2006, at Los Angeles, California.

9     ___________________________________

10             [Sign your name]

 
A copy of a blank declaration for in WORD is attached here.Download declaration_client.doc


Your first paragraph should consist of a short summary outlining what relief you are requesting. For example: “I respectfully request that the Court award me joint legal custody and primary physical custody of John Doe (date of birth ____ age___) “the minor child,” with Respondent having visitation on alternate weekends from ____to ____with Respondent picking him up at [place] at [time] and returning him to [place] at [time].

Lead with your strong points and remember that the Judge who will be reading this may know nothing about your case. You can view a declaration filed with the Los Superior Court in the case of Denise Richards v. Charlie Sheen here.Download richards_declaration_april21_2.pdf

GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS

When you discuss what you want for your children, you should focus primarily on your parenting skills and your positive contributions to raising them. It’s a mistake to focus only on bad or negative things about your spouse. If the Court has to make a decision about the best interests of the children, it wants to hear about both side’s parenting abilities and what plans they’ve made. Once you’ve discussed your role in raising the children, then you can explain why you think you are the better parent and describe any traits or incidents that show your spouse’s poor parenting choices/judgment. The chances are that your spouse will also level accusations against you, so you should be prepared to discuss this.

One objective of your declaration is to show the Court that your proposed parenting plan is, as a practical matter, better suited to both parents schedule and your children’s schedule. Before you even start writing your declaration it is a good idea to start by charting out the schedules of your children, your schedule and your spouses. Take a calendar and chart out in a colored pen the activities of each of your children (e.g. when they leave and return from school/day care each day, when they go to different activities such as music lessons, when they have vacations etc.) Next, take a different colored pen and chart your activities and commitments. Include when you go to and return from work, go to meetings, go out with friends etc. With another colored pen do the same for your spouse. You should then compare your desired parenting plan and your spouse’s desired parenting plan to see if there is any common ground and why your plan is more appropriate.

WHAT TO PUT IN MY DECLARATION

The following is a list of issues you should consider when preparing your declaration. This list is by no means exhaustive but will provide a basis for helping you discuss why your proposed plan is in the best interests of the children. Some questions might be less appropriate depending on how many children you have and how old they are. It’s important to try and be as specific as possible. If you are describing an event, it’s a good rule of thumb to try and answer in terms of “what,” “when” and “where”. If there’s a specific incident, try to remember a specific date or a month when it happened e.g. “last month”, “about six months ago”. If you are describing a particular behavior describe how long it has been going on and it’s frequency. For example, “he/she has been drinking since 2002,” “he/she drinks frequently several times a week,” “he/she usually drank at home in the evenings ” etc.

Example:

                      WRONG: Respondent has a drinking problem.
BETTER:
When Respondent and I lived together, he drank 6 to 7 beers a day and up to 12 a day on Saturday. When he picks up the kids on Friday, I can smell alcohol on his breath, his speech is slurred and he has difficulty maintaining his balance. Three weeks ago, Respondent showed up at my house with alcohol on his breath and swore “*****” at me in front of the children….etc.

 ISSUES TO ADDRESS WHEN PREPARING YOUR DECLARATION

  • What is your proposed parenting plan? Describe what days you wish to have your children. Who will pick them up and return them and to what location e.g. school or one  parent’s house? Describe how you propose to make such a plan work. Will you need additional child care? Can your job and work schedule realistically accommodate such a plan?
  • Prior History. Describe the procedural history of your case if you have already been to Family Court on these issues. Discuss dates of court appearances, Court orders, agreements.
  • Describe your children’s relationship with you and your spouse?
  • Describe your contributions to raising your children. Were you the primary caregiver who stayed at home while your spouse worked during the marriage?     
  • Describe you and your spouse’s responsibility for taking the children to doctor’s appointments, babysitters, school, church etc.
  • Describe who does homework with the children.
  • Describe how you and your spouse take care of the children’s personal needs such as     bathing, changing diapers, arranging for sitters, haircuts, feeding?
  • Describe how you and your spouse discipline the children and set structure for them?
  • Describe what kind of personal attention each of you gives to the children, such as      teaching problem solving, reading, playing together, sharing activities?
  • Describe you and your spouse’s involvement in the children’s social, educational and religious activities. For example, who attended most teacher-parent conferences, took the kids to the gym etc.
  • Who do the children turn to when they have problems or need someone to talk to? Describe any incidents you think are significant.
  • What do the children do on the weekends?
  • Do the children spend time with relatives and who takes them?
  • Describe why you think you are the better parent?
  • Describe what you’ve done to encourage your spouse to remain involved in the children’s lives.
  • Do the children have any special educational, medical, dietary needs?
  • Describe any incidents in which your spouse has shown poor parenting judgment or made bad choices? Describe any incidents when your spouse has not been as emotionally or financially supportive of the children as they should have been.
  • Describe any other problems you have with the way your spouse parents?
  • Describe any habits or any behaviors of your spouse which negatively affect the children?
  • Describe any preferences your children have expressed about who they want to live with?
  • Describe any major disagreements you’ve had with your spouse about how you raise      the children? For example, over issues such as religion, lifestyle, schools, friends etc.
  • What kind of custody/visitation do you think is appropriate for your spouse?
  • Describe any childcare arrangements you’ve made.
  • How will these plans affect their education? Will they stay in the same school? Who will pick up/drop off?
  • Describe any incidents of domestic violence.

 

 

 

November 25, 2006

How to prepare for an evaluation

A great blog from Peace-Talks regarding how to prepare for an evaluation and/or mediation.Read more

November 24, 2006

Why Wallerstein was wrong on relocations

An interesting academic article arguing that empiral evidence shows that children whose parents relocate are disadvantaged.  Article summary:
    "Relocation cases, in which a divorced parent seeks to move away with the child, are among
the knottiest problems facing family courts. The recent trend is to permit such moves, largely
because of Wallerstein’s (1995) controversial amica curiae brief, which a recent court
(Baures v. Lewis, 2001) interpreted as supporting the conclusion that “in general, what is
good for the custodial parent is good for the child” (p. 222). The current study provides the
first direct evidence on relocation by dividing college students into groups on the basis of their
divorced parents’ move-away status. On most child outcomes, the ones whose parents moved
are significantly disadvantaged. This suggests courts should give greater weight to the child’s
separate interests in deciding such cases."
Download jounal_of_fampsyrelcoation2003.pdf

November 23, 2006

Developing a parenting plan

Developing a Parenting Plan

How can parents decide on a custody and visitation plan?

Parents who separate should have a custody and visitation or parenting plan for deciding how they will share parenting responsibilities. A custody and visitation plan must be in writing and signed by both parties and a judge to be enforceable.

What if parents cannot agree on a custody and visitation plan?

If parents cannot agree on custody and visitation on their own they may go to court and ask a judge for a temporary order. The Court will first send them to Conciliation   Court where a trained mediator tries to help the parties agree. In Los Angeles conciliation  services are free. An appointment can be made by calling conciliation services at (213) 974-5524.

If the parties still cannot agree, the Court will make a temporary custody and visitation order that is in the best interests of the children. The temporary order will continue until the parties can reach an agreement or until custody and visitation is resolved after a trial.

If parents cannot agree on custody and visitation, they can also ask the court to appoint a mental health expert such as a psychologist to carry out a custody evaluation. A list of custody evaluators can be found at the Los Angeles Court 's web site at www.lasuperiorcourt.org.

Developing a Plan

While it is difficult to make generalizations about the suitability of various parenting plans many experts agree that during the first years of life, it is important for young children to develop an attachment to a primary caretaker and recommend frequent but non-overnight visitation with the non-custodial parent for short periods of time. As the children grow older and are better able to develop multiple attachments longer periods of continuous overnight visitation is encouraged.

Consider the practical aspects of any plan

A first step in developing a plan is charting out the schedules of the children and both parents. This will help you make realistic choices based upon practical considerations. Take a calendar and chart out in a colored pen the activities of each of your children (e.g. when they leave and return from school/day care each day, when they go to different activities such as music lessons, when they have vacations etc.) Next, take a different colored pen and chart your activities and commitments. Include when you go to and return from work, go to meetings, go out with friends etc. With another colored pen do the same for the other parent. You should then compare both parents’ plans to see if there is any common ground.

The children’s best interests

When parents decide custody and visitation they should develop a plan around the needs and best interests of their children and not their needs. In other words, they should adjust the plan to the children, not the children to the plan. Parents should be looking at their children's need for love, emotional support and security. Parents should take into account their children's age, personality and experiences. Children will generally be better off when both parents are involved and participating in their upbringing.

Next you should consider who has historically been responsible for different commitments with the children and which parent is practically able to fulfill them in the future. Questions you should consider are:

Who do the children turn to when they have a problem or need to share their feelings?

Who does homework with the children?

What do the children do on the weekends?

Do the children spend time with relatives and who takes them?

Who takes the children to medical appointments or picks them up in when they are sick?

Who provides the children’s physical care, such as bathing, changing diapers, arranging for sitters, haircuts, feeding?

How do you and your spouse discipline the children and set structure for them?

What kind of personal attention do each of you give to the children, such as teaching problem solving, reading, playing together, sharing activities?

Who is responsible for the children’s social activities, such as arranging birthdays, play dates, trick or treating, taking class trips, games, lessons, school plays etc?

Joint Custody

For older children one of the key issues is whether a joint custody is more appropriate than an arrangement where the non-custodial parent has alternate weekends and one or two overnights during the week. The answer will be different for each family. The parent’s relationship and their level of cooperation and also the children’s preferences can be as important as how much time the children physically spend with each parent. The Family Code provides that any parental plan must encourage frequent and continuing contact although it does not specify a particular plan.

The Legal Aspects of a Plan

Any parenting plan will have to make provision for who gets "legal" custody and who gets "physical" custody of the children. These are the terms that are used in agreements.

"Legal" custody means which parent gets to make important decisions about the children's education, religious upbringing, medical treatment and other legal decisions. If one parent gets to make these decisions they have "sole legal custody." If both parents get to make those decisions together, they have "joint legal custody." It is rare for one parent to be granted sole legal custody unless there are issues of domestic violence and substance abuse or there is a history of the parents being unable to communicate. In deciding on issues relating to legal custody, form "Joint Legal Custody Attachment" FL-341 (E) which has been approved by the Judicial Council of California is helpful. It can be found at www.courtinfo.ca.gov/forms/.

"Physical" custody means who the children live with on a daily basis. A parent has "sole" physical custody if the primary residence of the child is with that parent. The non-custodial parent then has visitation rights. The parents have "joint" physical custody if the children live with each parent for significant periods of time during the week.

A custody and visitation plan should be consistent and detailed. It should spell out who gets the children when and where in enough detail so that it is easy to understand and enforce. Important questions are who has the children in the week and on the weekends? Who transports the children for exchanges and to activities? Who gets the children on holidays and vacations? In California, the Judicial Counsel has developed forms to be used when requesting custody and visitation. The forms "Child Custody and Visitation Attachment FL-311 and "Children's Holiday Schedule Attachment” can be found at www. Courtinfo.ca.gov/forms and are helpful in developing plans.

Sample physical custody plans

Some states have developed model parenting plans that take into account what is appropriate for children of different ages and stages of development. The Oregon Judicial Department and the Supreme Court for the State of Arizona have both developed model parenting plans for Parents that suggest different parenting plan options. (see Oregon ’s plan at http://www.ojd.state.or.us/osca/cpsd/courtimprovement/familylaw/parentingplan.htm.
Arizona ’s plan at www.supreme.state.az.us/dr/Text/ModelPTPlans.htm)

The following samples are based on those parenting plans.

Parent A’s time with the child is indicated by solids.

Birth to 12 months

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1pm

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

2pm

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

3pm

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

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Sample Language:

Commencing on _________, Parent A shall have physical custody of the minor child(ren) each week on Tuesday and Thursday from 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 pm. and Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Parent A shall be responsible for picking up and dropping of the minor child(ren) at the residence of Parent B. Parent B shall have physical custody of the minor child(ren) at all other times not designated as Parent A’s time.

Comments:

At this young age, infants form a primary attachment to one parent and long periods of absence from the primary attachment figure may be traumatic. Parents should minimize the infant’s basic sleep, feeding and waking cycles.

Pre-schooler 3 – 5 years

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Week 1

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Week 2

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Week 3

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Week 4

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 

The parties alternate weekends and the non-custodial parent has one or more overnights during the week.

Sample Language:

A.  Commencing on ___________, Parent A shall have physical custody of the minor child(ren) alternate weekends from Friday, after the end of school/child care/camp (or at 5:30 p.m. if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp), when Parent A shall pick up the child(ren) from school/child care/camps, or at Parent B’s residence if the child(ren) are not in school/child care, until Monday, at the start of school/child care (or at 8:00 a.m. if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp), when Parent A shall drop the minor child(ren) off at school/child care/camp or at Parent B’s residence if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp.

B. Commencing on ____________, Parent A shall have physical custody of the minor child(ren) each week from Wednesday, after the end of school/child care camp (or at 5:30 p.m. if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp), when Parent A shall pick up the child(ren) from school/child care/camp, or at Parent B’s residence if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp, until Thursday, at the start of school/child care/camp(or at 8:00 a.m. if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp), when Parent A shall drop the minor child(ren) off at school/child care/camp or at Parent B’s residence if the child(ren) are not in school/child care/camp.

C. Parent B shall have physical custody of the minor child(ren) at all other times not designated as Parent A’s time.

*  Instead of referring to alternate weekends, a plan can refer to 1st, 3rd and 5th weekends of the month. This generally avoids any confusion about which parents has custody on any given weekend.

Comments:

This plan is sometimes referred to a “Freeman” order. It may be suitable where Parent B has not been very involved in the day to day care of the child and has a busy work schedule. Three to five year olds may show increased anxiety moving between parent’s homes. This does not necessarily reflect on whether the other parent is not a good parent or does not want to be with the other parent. Depending on the maturity of the child and the practicality of the exchanges these times can be negotiated so that Parent A only has the child one or two evenings in the week and has shorter or longer weekends.

“2:2:3” Joint Physical Custody for older children

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