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What can I do with my son to help insure I am the Custodial Parent

Started by bjrohan, Jun 22, 2004, 12:48:38 PM

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bjrohan

  I live in WA state, and have a 9 mo old son with my now ex-girlfriend.  I do as much as I can for him.  I was awarded custodial parent because my ex did not show up in court.  Sheis now trying to overturn everything, and it looks like it may happen because the judges like to see a fair trial.  After her maternity leave, I did most of the raising of our son.  I took him to daycare, would visit him during the day, took him home, and took care of him in the evenings, and at night if he woke up.  Since I kicked her out of my house it has been 50/50 visitation,  I go and see him at daycare at least 1 time a week while he is not with me.  When anything happens at daycare, I take care of it, be it taking in more food, clothes, etc.  Anytime I go out while he si with me, I make sure it is something that he can join me in.  Is there any more I can do to prove to the courts that I am the more nurturing parent?  His mothe has quite a temper, and has made it very clear that now all she will ever do is fight with me any chance she gets, and she has. I gave up my visitation with my son on father's day, because she began yelling at me the night before arguing that she had him on father's day.  Instead of yelling and arguing ni front of our son, i just gave him to her.  I figured it was more important for him to no go throught the yelling, than me missing visitation.  Are there any resources online that will help me make sure I am the best father I can be for my son, and any sites that have available research on the fact that a father is better for a boy than a mother.

Thank you

Brian

Kitty C.

As much as you are torn by her yelling in front of him, she now knows that if she yells enough, you will give in to her.  You say that you got CP in court, but do you have a custody order with specified parenting time laid out, including holidays?  If it states in the CO that you have him on Father's Day, then SHE is in contempt if she kept him that day.

If you don't already have an atty., get one.  But remember that just because she says something doesn't make it so.  BM's like this do what they do by intimidation, to push your buttons.  If they know you hate confrontation, they will confront you just to get you to back down.  What you should have done was to just walk away from her with your son.  Yes, it's likely that she could escalate the situation, but that's HER problem, not yours.  If she calls the cops, that's HER problem, not yours.  And it's not like they'd do anything about it anyway.  Don't pay the price for HER actions.  Just remember that all the BS the BM can try to throw your way is HER actions and you don't have to get swept up in it.  It takes two to tango and as long as you don't engage, she'll have no one to fight with.

Understand that she's pissed at herself right now for not showing up in court and throwing it all away.  She was obviously of the assumption that moms get custody without question, so she didn't have to be.  She's paying the price for that right now, and instead of accepting the responsibility of her actions, she's taking it out on whomever she can dump it on, namely you, as you are the easiest target.  Protect yourself and CYA.
Handle every stressful situation like a dog........if you can't play with it or eat it, pee on it and walk away.......

Peanutsdad

Begin by taping exchanges....to show her labile emotions.


 
Tips For Getting Started
http://www.deltabravo.net/news/10-19-2000.htm

How To Hire An Attorney
http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/hiring.htm

Hiring An Effective Attorney
http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/effective.htm

Success Factors In Obtaining Custody
http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/tips.htm

http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/missed-visit.htm

Suggestions When Falsely Accused
http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/falseacc1.htm

Dealing With Threats Of False Allegations
http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/blackmail.htm


http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pplan3.htm

http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-vassiliou.htm

http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-gardner06.htm

http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-navarre.htm

http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-gardner01.htm

THE SPECTRUM OF PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PART I)
Parental Alienation Syndrome is a distinctive family response to divorce in which the child becomes aligned with one parent and preoccupied with unjustified and/or exaggerated denigration of the other target parent.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rand01.htm - size 40kb - 20 Oct 2003
12. Mediation And Parental Alienation Syndrome by Anita Vestal
This article looks at parental alienation syndrome (PAS), which is a complex manifestation of mental and emotional abuse resulting from conflicted parents fighting for custody.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-vestal.htm - size 52kb - 20 Oct 2003
13. Recommendations for Dealing with Parents Who Induce a Parental Alienation Syndrome in Their Children
PAS is commonly seen in highly contested child-custody disputes. The author has described three types: mild, moderate, and severe, each of which requires special approaches by both legal and mental health professionals.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-gardner02.htm - size 54kb - 20 Oct 2003
14. THE SPECTRUM OF PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PART II)
Studies of target parents who are falsely accused of abuse report they tend to be less disturbed than their accusing counterparts.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rand12.htm - size 53kb - 20 Oct 2003
15. THE SPECTRUM OF PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PART II)
Parental Alienation Syndrome is a distinctive family response to divorce in which the child becomes aligned with one parent and preoccupied with unjustified and/or exaggerated denigration of the other target parent.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rand11.htm - size 44kb - 20 Oct 2003
16. Parental Alienation Information Archive
All the information on the SPARC site regarding Parental Alienation has been consolidated on this central reference page.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pasarchive.htm - size 17kb - 20 Oct 2003
17. THE SPECTRUM OF PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PART II) (cont.)
In the following case, the accused father was an officer in the military. Testimony on PAS by the defense expert provided the judge and jury with some alternative explanations as to the reasons the children accused their stepfather of abuse.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rand13.htm - size 31kb - 20 Oct 2003
18. THE SPECTRUM OF PARENTAL ALIENATION SYNDROME (PART I)
Parental Alienation Syndrome is a distinctive family response to divorce in which the child becomes aligned with one parent and preoccupied with unjustified and/or exaggerated denigration of the other target parent.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rand02.htm - size 44kb - 20 Oct 2003
19. Expanding the Parameters of PAS
The newness of the parental alienation syndrome (PAS) compels its redefinition and refinement as new cases are observed and the phenomenon becomes better understood.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-cartwright.htm - size 32kb - 20 Oct 2003
20. PAS: How to Detect It and What to Do About It
Although parental alienation syndrome (PAS) is a familiar term, there is still a great deal of confusion and unclarity about its nature, dimensions, and, therefore, its detection.
URL: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/pas-walsh2.htm - size 24kb - 20 Oct 2003




One of the first things you'll hear around here is "Document, document, document!". Having good records is *crucial*. Get yourself either the Parenting Time Tracker (PTT) at: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/tracker.htm or the OPTIMAL Custody Tracking service at: http://www.parentingtime.net. The PTT is good, but the OPTIMAL service is definitely better.

 

bjrohan

Thank you very much for your responses.  They have helped me considerably.

tulip

I don't understand. You were awarded custody, when you lived together? Since you kicked her out of the house it's been 50/50? Is that by court order, or your idea? I don't get this at all.

If you are in for a custody dispute in court, my first advice would be, don't give up any time with son. I wouldn't rip him away from mom when he is used to being with her alot, that would look bad on your part. Generally, when it comes down to one parent or the other, they look a lot at who has been the primary caregiver. Not very likely to get joint custody when you have so much trouble communicating and getting along.

My personal opinion is that a 9-month old should not be changing homes so much. He needs stability. I think the best thing for such a young baby would be to sleep overnight MOSTLY in the same place, with frequent visits during waking hours with NCP. I just think it's too confusing for such a little guy.

bjrohan

My girlfriend and I had lived together while she was pregnant, and for the first 6 months of our sons life.  For the first 3.5 months, she was on maternity and was at home all the time with him.  After 6 months, I served her with papers to leave my house, and child custody papers, in which I stated I was to be the custodial parent. A court date had been set for 3 weeks later.  At that court date, she did not show up to contest anything, so I bacame the custodial parent.  My visitation schedule that I put together was accepted as well, which was 50/50.  She gets him Sunday Monday and Tuesday, I have him Thursday, Friday and Saturday, then we alternate every wednesday.  I then made it so that for holidays, I got him overnight more, so thatI had more time with him.  About 3 weeks after she missed the court date, my lawyer had the temp plan filed as the final parenting plan.  4 weeks after that, my ex girlfriend pulled her head out of her butt, and decided to contest everything.  Last Tuesday we went to court, and the judge overturned the final parenting plan (which is identical to the temp plan), and had the default set aside (from her not showing up).  The judge left the original temp plan in place, which leaves me as the custodial parent, and ordered her to pay my lawyer bills for all the paperwork regarding the things that he had overturned. The judge also appointed a Guardian Ad Litem, to interview she and I, and reccomend to the court what is in our son's best interest.

     Since my ex had gone back to work from maternity leave, but before I kicked her out, I was the one who took our son to daycare, and picked him up.  When he needed anything at daycare, I took it to them.  I went to visit him on some of my lunch breaks, not my ex girlfriend.  I would feed him at night, and put him to bed.  I would wake him in the mroning and get him ready for the day.  I went to all of his doctor's appointments.

    Since having kicked my girlfriend out, I have still gone and seen our son on my luinch breaks while she has him for visitation. I am still the one that daycare calls when my ex forgets to take something in that he needs, so that I take off work and take it in for them.

Peanutsdad

Tulip,

I gained custody of my daughter when she was 1.5 yrs old. Had ON's from the time she was about 9 months old.


Shes a happy child.

tulip

Peanuts, I didn't mean that a NCP shouldn't have ON's at all. And I guess it's not my place to judge how many there should be is it? It depends on each family's situation. I guess the biggest problem with my daughter and my skids going back and forth is the inconsistency. My poor skids over the last couple years have never known whether they were coming or going (until a few months ago, of course.)

TJ, from what you've said, you seem to have your son's best interests in mind. The most important thing for you to do from here on is to be very consistent. Being the one the daycare always calls when they need something says a lot about who they think the more reliable parent is.

Peanutsdad

And Im not crackin on ya,,, just pointin out all situations are different.

;)

Lawmoe

Since I don't want to retype the whole thing, I will reprint this from above

Unfortunately, custody battles can become ugly business. being prepared for the long battle that is divorce is important.

First, there are two types of custody, legal and physical.

Legal Custody

Legal Custody is the right to make decisions related to your minor children. Major decisions include

1 Education: Where do you children attend school? Should they attend special classes or tutoring?
2 Health care: What types of medical treatments should your child have? Who should be the doctor?
3 Religion: What church, mosque or temple should your child attend? What religious education should your child attend? Should your child be baptized? If so, in what religion?

There is a strong presumption under most state laws that legal custody should be shared by the parents. The only time that legal custody is not shared is when the parents are unable to communicate and do not have any reasonable methods for resolving disputes. Often when parents have conflicting beliefs regarding legal custody issues, the Court may decide the one conflicting issue while still awarding parents joint legal custody on other issues. For example, the Court may determine a conflict regarding religion but still award joint legal custody regarding non-conflicting issues.

It is important to remember that an award of joint legal custody is not a basis for a downward departure in child support.

Physical Custody

Physical Custody or placement or primary residence is what most people think of when the term custody is mentioned. It may be referred to in different terms in different states.

Physical custody refers to the primary physical residence of the child. The presumption under Minnesota Law is that when parents disagree on who should have primary physical custody, it should be awarded to one parent. There are some counties that take this presumption to an extreme. For example, Anoka county will not award joint physical custody even if the parties agree ti such an arrangement unless a custody evaluation is performed that recommends joint physical custody. This is an aberration and not followed by most counties.

In any custody dispute, the Court must decide what is in the "best interests of the children."

To determine what is in a child's best interests, a Court is required to look at factors set out in your state's divorce laws. Know those factors and outline your arguments accordingly. They often include:

1 The wishes of the child's parent or parents as to custody;

2 the reasonable preference of the child, if the court deems the child to be of sufficient age to express preference most Courts do not consider the child to be of suitable age until the age of twelve or more;

3 the child's primary caretaker (who cooked the meals, took the child to the doctor, bathed the child, attended school functions and extra-curricular activities, helped with homework, provided discipline);

4 the intimacy of the relationship between each parent and the child;

5 the interaction and interrelationship of the child with a parent or parents, siblings, and any other person who may significantly affect the child's best interests;

6 the child's adjustment to home, school, and community;

7 the length of time the child has lived in a stable, satisfactory environment and the desirability of maintaining continuity;

8 the permanence, as a family unit, of the existing or proposed custodial home;

9 the mental and physical health of all individuals involved;

10 the capacity and disposition of the parties to give the child love, affection, and guidance, and to continue educating and raising the child in the child's culture and religion or creed, if any;

11 the child's cultural background;

12 the effect on the child of the actions of an abuser that has occurred between the parents or between a parent and another individual, whether or not the individual alleged to have committed domestic abuse is or ever was a family or household member of the parent; and

13 The disposition of each parent to encourage and permit frequent and continuing contact by the other parent with the child.
The court may not use one factor to the exclusion of all others. Many people, attorneys included, tend to place a significant emphasis on which parent was the primary caretaker. However, this factor is only one of thirteen and may not be used as a presumption in determining the best interests of the child. Any custody order by the Court must make detailed findings on each of the factors with an explanation how the factors led to its determination regarding custody and how it serves the best interests of the child.

Joint Physical Custody.

In order for a court to award joint custody, it must find that the parents have the ability to cooperate in rearing the children and have methods and a willingness to use methods for dispute resolution. In making such a determination, the Court must consider the following factors:

(a) the ability of parents to cooperate in the rearing of their children;
(b) methods for resolving disputes regarding any major decision concerning the life of the child, and the parents' willingness to use those methods;
(c) whether it would be detrimental to the child if one parent were to have sole authority over the child's upbringing; and
(d) whether domestic abuse has occurred.


Allegations of Abuse.

Allegations of sexual or physical abuse are taken very seriously. Seeking a restraining order as part of a divorce proceeding has become a common occurrence and is sometimes an abused process designed to gain advantage in a custody proceeding or to acquire an early court date to have one party removed from the home. A finding of domestic abuse, whether it involves the minor children or not, may have a dramatic impact on the divorce proceedings. There is a very strong presumption under Minnesota law that physical custody should not be awarded to a domestic abuser. That means, a person who has been the subject of an Order for Protection (restraining order) or convicted of domestic assault may be unable to acquire physical custody. For this reason, allegations of domestic abuse must be vigorously defended in order to preserve your rights in a custody battle. This can be a vexsome issue since Courts regularly elect to err on the side of caution granting restraining orders in cases where the allegations and evidence are very weak. Do not fall into this trap.

1 Avoid all conflict if possible!
2 Assume any thing you say or do is being recorded!
3 Maintain your best behavior!

This can be very difficult in the emotional context of divorce. However, when you consider that most divorce cases are driven forward by emotional issues rather than legal ones, this becomes an absolute necessity to preserve your rights, facilitate settlement and reduce legal fees.

What is Domestic Abuse?

Domestic abuse is defined generally as abuse committed against a family or household member by a family or household member and include:

(1) physical harm, bodily injury, or assault;
(2) the infliction of fear of imminent physical harm, bodily injury, or assault; or
(3) terroristic threats, or interference with an emergency call

Family or household members" include spouses and former spouses, parents and children, persons related by blood, persons who are presently residing together or who have resided together in the past, persons who have a child in common regardless of whether they have been married or have lived together at any time; a man and woman if the woman is pregnant and the man is alleged to be the father, regardless of whether they have been married or have lived together at any time; and persons involved in a significant romantic or sexual relationship.


False Allegations of Abuse.

False allegations of sexual or physical abuse are also taken very seriously. Courts consider false allegations of abuse in making custody determinations. Moreover, false allegations of sexual or physical abuse to gain advantage in a custody proceeding may also result in criminal charges in many states.

Preference of Children.

Many people incorrectly believe that the children have an absolute right to choose where they will live. That is not the case. Under most state stautes, a child may express a preference when that child has reached a suitable age and maturity level. Even if the child is able to express a preference, most courts do not place much weight on a child's preference before the age of twelve. Even at that age and older, the child's preference is only one factor out of many for determining custody.

Children as Witnesses.

Many parents wish to know if their children can be called as witnesses. Although opinions on this topic may vary, most psychologists agree that placing a child in the role of a witness can be very traumatic and is usually not in their best interests. Children present testimony in only rare cases. Where cases do require the testimony of children, Courts will often require that a Guardian Ad Litem speak with them and represent their interests and statements to the Court. The Court may also speak to the children directly in a less intimidating setting such as the Judge's chambers.

Parties in a divorce proceeding may also craft their own parenting plans.

A parenting plan is simply a schedule which sets out the care giving responsibilities of each parent. Parenting plans should include:

1 a schedule of the time each parent spends with the child;
2 a designation of decision-making responsibilities regarding the child; and
3 a method of dispute resolution.


A parenting plan may also include other issues and matters the parents agree to regarding the child.

Parents that voluntarily agree to parenting plans may substitute other terms for physical and legal custody, including designations of joint or sole custody, provided that the terms used in the substitution are defined in the parenting plan. Moreover, a Order from the Court that includes a parenting plan which uses alternate terms to designate decision-making responsibilities or allocation of residential time between the parents must designate whether the parents have joint legal custody or joint physical custody or which parent has sole legal custody or sole physical custody, or both.


EVALUATORS

Where parents are unable to agree on parenting plans or custody issues, the Court will require a custody evaluation performed. This may be carried out by county social workers, psychologists or a Guardian Ad Litem. A Guardian Ad Litem is a person that is appointed by the Court to represent the interests of a person who is unable to do so for themselves. In the context of a custody case, the Guardian Ad Litem acts as a spokesperson regarding what the Guardian believes is in the child's best interests.

REPORTS

The person performing the evaluation will investigate the facts and generate a report that is provided to the Court. The report will usually include a summary of the investigation, an analysis of the custody factors set out in your state statutes and a conclusion regarding what is in the child(ren)'s best interests.

THE USE OF CUSTODY EVALUATIONS

The Court is not required to adopt the recommendations of a custody evaluator. However, in most custody cases, the parties have very polar positions regarding the facts. This often boils down to a "He Said - She Said" Situation at trial. Where the evaluation was performed by a person appointed by the Court, the evaluator is considered a neutral party and their recommendation may hold considerable weight with a Judge who must weigh conflicting testimony. To combat an unfavorable custody report, your attorney will try to point out the deficiencies of the investigation performed and facts that may have been overlooked by the evaluator. It is may also be necessary to hire your own expert to conduct a separate custody evaluation and present a different recommendation at trial.

POWERS OF THE EVALUATOR

The custody evaluator often has broad power and may require the parties to provide releases of information for counseling, medical or psychological records. The evaluator may also require psychological testing, chemical dependency evaluations or random urinalysis tests as part of the investigation process. This is particularly true when one parent raises concerns about the other parent=s chemical dependency or emotional stability.


CUSTODY STUDY ELEMENTS

Although each custody evaluator may have a slightly different approach to performing custody evaluations there are some things you should expect :

Initial Interview with Evaluator.
At the initial interview, the evaluator will discuss at length the past history of care with the child. The evaluator will attempt to determine who was the primary caretaker. BE PREPARED! At the initial interview arrive prepared with a chronology of events clearly set out.

Home Visit(s).
The evaluator will make at least one home visit to watch you interact with your child(ren). The evaluator is watching to see:

* Whether you actively play with and interact with your child;
* Whether you set appropriate boundaries for the child and whether the child obeys those boundaries;
* Discipline used;
* Child's reaction to the parent;
* Condition of the home environment.

Collateral Contacts.
The evaluator will ask for a list of persons that you think the evaluator should contact. Family members are usually not good contact since they may be biased in your favor. Where possible use independent contacts such as counselors, daycare providers, and school teachers.

Alcohol Assessments.
Where there are allegations of alcohol or drug abuse, the evaluator may refer you to a counselor for a chemical dependency evaluation. It is important that you cooperate in that process.

Psychological Evaluations.
Where there are allegations of emotional or anger problems, the evaluator may refer you to a counselor or psychologist for a psychological evaluation. It is important that you cooperate in that process. Make sure that you communicate with the evaluator or counselor regarding any and all appointments. Budget enough time to complete and testing that is required. A failure to cooperate will appear in the evaluation.

INTERACTING WITH THE EVALUATOR
How you interact with the custody evaluator may be a critical element of your custody case.

1 Custody evaluators will oftentimes make you believe that they agree with your side of the case. This is done so that you drop your guard. Never assume that the evaluator's report will favor your position.
2 Custody evaluators are also people. That means they react to personalities. You are best able to present your case to an evaluator if you appear open and honest.
3 Do not argue with the evaluator. Make eye contact and listen when they speak. This establishes a connection. It may help to nod your head as they speak even if you disagree with what they are saying. When you disagree, tell them "I see your point, but..." or agree first "I agree, but would you consider this to be important...."
4 The custody evaluator does not care about good guys and bad guys. The evaluator cares about what is in the best interests of the child(ren). To relate your case to the evaluator, you must speak his/her language. Your statements must relate in some way to what is best for the child not the parent. For example, the statement, "my wife drinks too much, is incomplete. It does not relate how the drinking affects the child(ren). Always relate how the conduct affects the child(ren). A better statement would be:

"My wife drinks too much. Because of that, he is rarely home and when he is, he is:.... abusive....spends little quality time with the children....is unable to help the kids with their homework...."

5 Provide the evaluator with the documents supporting your statements.
6 Provide the evaluator with the names of collateral contacts, people who are aware of your strong points as a parent and the other party's weak points. (It is usually better not to include relatives as part of your contacts since they may have a bias).
7 ALWAYS ASSUME when you go to court or visit a custody evaluator that you may be ordered to provide a urine sample for testing to determine if you have used drugs or alcohol.

PRESENTING YOUR CASE TO THE EVALUATOR
Remember, there are six magic words in custody evaluations.- Best Interests of the Minor Child. Custody evaluators listen for issues that relate to that phrase. You should relate how each of your proposals is beneficial to your child(ren). Wherever possible use phrases that mean best interest of the minor child without using those exact words. Using the exact words sounds too legalistic and prepared. Your statements should sound more natural.

There are certain things that evaluators look for in their custody evaluation. You should discuss these issues with the evaluator truthfully since the evaluator will, to a degree, assess your credibility. The issues you should be prepared to raise are the following:

Primary Caretaker.

Where has the child lived since birth? What was the extent of contact each parent had at each phase of the child=s life? What responsibilities did each parent have?
The best way to support the contention that you provided care for the minor child is through independent documentation. The other parent will no doubt contradict your assertions that you provided much of the care. Independent documentation may include:

1 Daycare or school records demonstrating drop off and pick ups or attendance at parent-teacher conferences. Even if you do not have documents demonstrating attendance at school functions at least verify the dates of the conferences and familiarize yourself with the daycare provider's or teacher's names. The more information you are able to provide in that regard the more credible you will appear as an active parent.

2 Medical records may document which parent brought the child in for a medical or dental appointment. If you can acquire these records prior to meeting with the evaluator, do so.

3 Homework assignments or report cards may require a parental signature before they are submitted at school. That signature may provide independent verification that the parent reviewed or was actively involved in the child's schooling. Wherever possible acquire and retain these documents. Provide them to the custody evaluator to support your claims that you were actively involved in the child(ren)'s schooling.

Be able to relate who the child(ren)'s friends are and what activities they enjoy in detail.

Stability.
The evaluator will be interested in which parent is able to provide the greater stability for the child. Stability includes a stable residence and a stable job. You may wish to document the ways in which you have provided greater stability in the past. You obviously will not emphasize those areas that do not favor you.

To effectively present the areas where you have provided or are able to provide more stability, you may wish to create a detailed charts. Visual aids help to present a clear picture to the evaluator. For example you may wish to create a chronological chart regarding each parent=s residence and how many times the child has changed residences or schools. You may also wish to create a summary of each parent=s employment to demonstrate stable financial circumstances. Independent verification is also very helpful. Where possible, you may wish to procure documents demonstrating residence changes such as leases, purchase agreements or real estate taxes.

Endangerment or Neglect.
If you are raising issues of endangerment you must relate specific incidents. Endangerment may be physical, emotional or developmental. A calendar may be helpful to document the dates of the incidents. Documentation can carry critical weight with this type of allegation. Documents may include:
1 Medical reports documenting injuries from abuse or lack of supervision;
2 Medical reports documenting complications because of neglect - health issues such as asthma from cigarettes smoke or lice from lack of hygiene;

3 Police reports relating to police calls to the other parent=s home;
4 Child protection reports;
5 Counseling records for the child or the parent;
6 Criminal or driving record of the other parent;
7 Criminal or driving record of individuals that have significant contact with the minor child(ren);
8 School records may document attendance problems, school performance problems, counseling issues or erratic child behavior while in the other parent=s care or after returning from the other parent=s care.


REMEMBER: Endangerment only exists if you tie the other parent's conduct into the child's care and the child's best interests. For example, if you allege the other parent has an alcohol problem. It
only will be effective if you can relate specific incidents where the alcohol use or abuse affected the minor child(ren). (eg. The parent passed out on the couch while the child played unsupervised. The parent drove the child in the car while intoxicated. The parent was out partying consistently while the child was be cared for by a stranger.)

Parenting Plans as Part of the Evaluation.
The custody evaluator will want to know what your proposal is for parenting. You should be prepared with research, facts and answers. You may wish to write out your answers to the following questions so that your response seems thought out. Do not over prepare, your response should not sound mechanical. The answers should include:

Where will the child live? Why is that in the child's best nterests?
What school will the child attend? Why is that in the child=s best interests?
What will your work schedule be?
Will that allow you sufficient time to supervise the child?
What schedule do you propose for the other parents?
How does that schedule provide stability?
Why is that schedule in the child=s best interests?
(Remember: The custody evaluator is also looking at which parent is more likely to facilitate contact with the other parent. If you appear to be an unreasonable obstructionist with regard to the other parent=s contact, it may be used against you.)

PARENTING NOTEBOOKS.
In a custody proceeding it is important to maintain a notebook including dates that events occur relating to the care of your children. What is the daily routine? Who takes them to the doctor? Who takes them to school activities? List any concerns regarding the other party's parenting including the method of discipline, drug use, alcohol use, disabilities or neglect.

COURT ORDERED SCHEDULES.
If the parties are unable to reach a visitation agreement, the Court will craft its own schedule. Oftentimes, Court ordered schedules do not make either party happy which results in later disputes. Most people understand that Courts often rubber stamp parenting schedules in a one size fits all kind of manner. We all have family or friends who have a schedule which includes:

1. Weekly Schedule: Alternating weekends from Friday - Sunday and one evening per week.
2. Holiday Schedule: The parties shall alternate legal holidays including Christmas Eve Day, Christmas Day, New Year=s Day, Easter Weekend, Memorial day Weekend (Fri-Mon), Independence Day, Labor day weekend (Fri - Mon), and Thanksgiving day. The child shall be with the mother on mother=s day and the father on father=s day.
3. Extended Schedule: Each parent shall have two (sometimes up to four) consecutive or non-consecutive weeks with the child each summer upon 30 days advance written notice to the other party.

By imposing such a schedule in so many cases, the Courts often fail to consider individual work schedules and circumstances. As a result, it is usually in the best interests of the children and the parents if agreement on a schedule is reached.

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