As reported by www.Philly.com, the emotional storm of divorce may soon ease a little for children caught in the middle of their parent's break-up.
As reported by www.Philly.com, the emotional storm of
divorce may soon ease a little for children caught in the middle of their parent’s break-up.
That’s because new state laws passed in January, 2011 address a few
significant child custody issues that, for decades, had been dealt with
on a case-by-case basis – and often to the confused or enraged
dissatisfaction of lawyers and parents.
Sponsored by Representative Kathy Mandarino of Philadephia, the new laws:
• require that judges explain (either in writing on in court) the
rationale for the child custody and/or child arrangement decisions,
thus giving the parent on the wrong side of an unfavorable ruling
insight on what was missing from their argument
• implement a streamlined procedure for a custodial parent who wants to
relocate, which lawmakers expect will reduce the number of cases where
parents file no notice at all
• describe to parents exactly what must be in their parenting plan, and
provides practical examples, including diet, religion, school, sports,
decision-making, which parent will attend which activities, and other
day-to-day realities
• clarify and expand the criteria that must be weighed when it comes to
child custody, including 16 specific offenses -- which apply to all
household members of a child’s potential new home, and not just the
custodial parent -- that the court must examine prior to awarding
custody
While it’s hard for anyone to argue with laws designed to minimize the trauma on children during and after their parent’s
divorce,
some Pennsylvania lawyers are concerned about the resource strain these
requirements will place on an already over-burdened system. Speaking on
the mandatory check on a child’s potential household members,
Philadelphia-area lawyer Megan Watson warned that:
“The court is a little panicked that they have this new mandate without
any funding to hire any additional people. [The new law] puts the onus
on the court to do an evaluation to figure out if a person poses a
threat to a child. Philadelphia 's thinking...how will we figure out
who the household members are, whether they've had criminal charges.
There are not the resources out there."
However, Watson isn’t entirely pessimistic about how the
(well-intentioned) new laws will be interpreted and applied. In light
of the new law that spells out what must be in a parenting plan, Watson
predicts that it will help avoid and resolve conflict between parents.
“If you don't know what the other side wants, you don't know what
you're fighting about," she noted.
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| About the author |
Josh D. Simon is the staff writer of Divorce Magazine and www.DivorceMagazine.com which offers information on Divorce Lawyer and Divorce.divorce law,divorce information |
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