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The Miranda/Smith/Cashen custody dispute has prompted lawmakers to start revising custody laws. In what ways would you change the current laws if it were within your power to do so?
39 responses total.
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Child support isn't about the parents' rights. It is about the child's rights.
One of the biggest problems is trying to determine what is in the best interest of the child. I have many colleagues who are forensic psychologists and they do child custody evaluations in an attempt to help judges and hearing officers decide who would be the better primary caretaker. I read their reports and listen to their horror stories and would never, with all my years of experience working with children, want to be in the position of shifting through and making that decision. One thing, I believe is that the decision (who will be primary caretaker) is too important to be left to the whim of one person.
Ack, Valerie, I disagree with you in a big way.
I would agree with #1 in theory, but it's too easy for a father to abuse that system. If a child is conceived through mutual consent, or through carelessness (which, by my reasoning, leaves only TRUE accidents, like a pinhole in the condom), the father has certain responsibilities to the resultant child even if he doesn't want the fetus carried to term (and is willing to pay for the abortion). The True accidents is where the issue grows truly fuzzy.
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Why are you welcoming me? I've been here forever. Don't you remember me? I am a FW for this conference. You added me to the list. Would you happen to have a split personality? Ha Ha <joke>
She's welcoming you because of the "." which is what newusers do by accident (indicating their newbiness). I guess she's just not used to your sense of humor (?) yet.
Are you a mind reader?
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(Gee, Ryan, I guess I am a mind reader. :-)
The funny part is, that there is no funny part. Since when did a dot get someone into a fight with another?
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O.K. So it wasn't quite a fight. I made the the "." Just because I couldn't figure out what to say.
You can tell that we really feel like family -- with brothers and sisters, this would be a fight. But on grex, it's just drift. Hmmm, maybe I ought to start asking my kids not to drift . . . <g>
Or to drift each other!
This is indeed a snoe[Dsnowed-in discourse.As a newby, i have no clue where its at re: grex or for that matter BBSs. First day online.... But as a Dad, I agree thast childs interest rules;but what child isn't at risk[A".""."" ."
Thanks for the input, and welcome to Grex!!.
Yes, welcome.
My brother-in-law has found the worst divorce lawyer in history. (This all happened before he married my sister.) Not only does he have full-time custody of two teen-agers, he pays their mother $400. monthly for child support. Hello?!?
That's not his lawyer's fault. He can go to Friend of the Court, any time, to challenge that payment.
I don't know that He could go right through Friend of the Court. A buddy of mine just got his child support payments lowered. He had to go before a Judge to have it taken care of...
No kidding. Any modification has to be approved by the judge. You go to Friend of the Court, they prepare an order, and it gets submitted to the judge.
And usually, if the judge has a brain, the custodial parent is relieved of all support payments.
Not all the judges have brains. My partner was allowed to take care of the two kids half time and also pay child support to someone earning twice as much because they went to college during the marriage. This was a 1981 divorce, have things changed? I thought I read something about automatic shared legal custody this past year, did it go through or not?
It is impossible to tell what the arrangement was from the facts you describe. There is de facto "joint legal custody" by default, but it is not mandatory.
In 1981, if the two parties did not agree on joint custody, the woman nearly always got sole custody. In this case, the man took care of the kids every other day and had the same expenses plus had to pay child support. How does the de facto business work now?
You are failing to distinguish between physical and legal custody. You are describing physical custody.
The mother had legal custody, this may have been sort of joint physical custody, but when the father complained that the hours (switching houses at 7 am daily) were hard on the kids, the judge cut it to one day a week, also at 7 am. (This resulted in the younger kid having to be returned at 7 am and being dumped at before-school care for 2 hours before school when he could have stayed with his father and gotten up later than 6 am, since his mother started work early.)
Could you briefly state the point you are trying to make?
The point I am trying to make is that the physical custody of the kids was split between two parents, legal custody given to the one making twice as much money (the mother, who went to school at the father's expense for four years, having agreed that he would go to school after she finished, then sued for divorce), who arranged a schedule which forced the father to work different hours every week (he never knew what three days she would choose for the kids to spend with him, his company finally fired him for this), and the father was ordered to pay child custody to the mother, in addition to spending an equal amount of time and money actually taking care of the children. If the judge had any brains, since both parents were splitting the actual child care and expenses, and since the mother was earning twice and much and getting the tax break for dependents, she would have paid child support to the father. Instead they followed the usual rules and had the 'noncustodial parent' pay the other one, who did not need the money and did what she could to sabotage the job of the parent who did need the money. He was actually charged extra for the preschool child care, which he wanted to do himself (so did the child).
First, you continue to confuse physical and legal custody. Second, child support has nothing to do with legal custody and everything to do with physical. In Michigan, based upon the parties' income, number of children, and days they care for the children, child support is determined by formula. Either party can ask that support be reassessed at any time, which would cause any increase in income to be factored in.
In this case child support had everything to do with legal custody (it was paid to the legal parent thought the other parent was doing half the child raising) and nothing to do with physical. It would have made far more sense for the parent earning twice as much to be paying child support to the other parent, since their child-raising expenses were the same. The actual physical situation was completely ignored by the court, they simply followed a formula for legal custody. They also ignored the younger child's request to live half time with each parent, with the father havinng legal custody, since otherwise he waas not allowed to call his father on teh phone. Then they informed the father that according to statistics the men always earned more money (this after he had worked to send the mother through nursing school.)
Are you even capable of listening>?
I think you are not communicating clearly, and there is no need to insult the listener. Please rephrase whatever you were attempting to say.
I have repeated myself numerous times, and you have consistently ignored what I have said, reiterating nonsense about legal custody dictating a child support obligation. What is unclear?
Why don't you try to state in a couple of sentences what point you are trying to prove, rather than telling me I am writing nonsense. Obviously I am not getting your point, and it is not necessarily my fault. Please do not be insulting, if you want to carry on a civil communication. If you continue to be insulting I will not bother responding again.
I have repeatedly explained the law to you. You have consistently ignored me. What more can I say?
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