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Understanding Parental Rights During a Divorce

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Understanding Parental Rights During a Divorce

If you are a parent and find yourself going through a divorce, we understand that the most challenging thing you’re facing is learning to co-parent your children under your new circumstances.  The complicated and sensitive process of dividing assets and agreeing upon spousal support when settling a divorce can be time-consuming and tumultuous but making decisions surrounding parenting are often the most emotional and thus the most taxing.

While parenting with a former spouse is never easy, when the two of you can agree on parenting arrangements things tend to be a lot less complicated.  The most stressful, highly-charged situations arise when you and your former spouse don’t agree on parenting time and decision-making responsibilities.  If you find yourself in such a situation, it is important to consult with experienced and compassionate legal counsel to guide you through the process with both competence and understanding.  The lawyers at Gelman & Associates are available to make sure you understand your legal rights and the options offered to reach the best possible outcome for yourself and your family.  

It is always preferable to reach decisions about your family’s future with your former spouse rather than have a judge do so on your behalf since nobody knows your history, your situation, and your children better than the two of you.  Fortunately, there are tools such as negotiation, collaborative family law, mediation, or arbitration available to assist you in reaching a plan that you both agree on.  If, however, you are unable to reach a solution together, you can turn to the court to have a judge issue an enforceable parenting court order.  This is an order that lays out who has decision-making responsibility for the children as well as how parenting time is allocated.  

What is Your Right to Parenting Time?

Parenting time refers to the time your child spends in your care.  You have a right to parenting time with your child unless a court finds that it is not in the best interest of your child.  You also have the right to know information about your child’s health, education, and general situation.  It is possible to have a flexible arrangement with your co-parent that lets you work out arrangements with them in a fluid way – but it should be noted that this type of arrangement is difficult to enforce.  It is also possible to have a detailed parenting schedule written in a parenting plan, separation agreement, or court order.  

Your Rights To Decision-Making Responsibility

In addition to parenting time, an agreement must be reached about who has the authority of making decisions for and about your child.  This is known as decision-making responsibility.  This responsibility may be assigned to one or both parents and allows them to make decisions that relate to the child’s health, education, religion as well as other important matters in relation to your child.  

If you have sole decision-making responsibility you will not need to consult your co-parent when making these types of decisions for your child (unless the parenting agreement or court order says otherwise).  If you have joint decision-making responsibility with your former spouse, you will equally share in the right to make these important decisions for your child.  This requires that you can co-operate and communicate with your former spouse.  There is a third type of decision-making authority that occurs when the children primarily reside with one parent until a separation agreement has been signed or court order has been issued.  This happens when the children reside with one parent full-time and your spouse has accepted this arrangement.  In this event, you will have de facto decision-making authority until you have either agreed or received an order deciding otherwise.  

What is A Parenting Plan?

If you can reach a decision with your former spouse about parenting time and decision-making authority you can memorialize those decisions in a parenting plan.  The parenting plan can be as detailed and specific as you would like and include when each parent will spend time with the children, with whom the children will spend major holidays and school vacations, and who will make major decisions about the child.  You can make this plan a part of your separation agreement or court order or you can have a less formal arrangement.  However, if you do not memorialize your parenting plan in a court-sanctioned document, it will be difficult to enforce what you agreed to in the event your co-parent changes their mind or fails to adhere to the plan.  

If you are unable to reach an agreement about parenting and you find yourself in court, the judge assigned to your matter will make a decision about parenting that is in the best interests of your children.  The judge may ask for a report from an Office of the Children’s Lawyer clinical investigator as well as a possible assessment from a social worker or psychologist who will speak to each parent and child and sometimes other family members or witnesses.  The judge will consider the current living arrangements of the child as well as any history of violence between family members and issue a court order about where the child will live, who will receive decision-making authority, and when and how often the children will be in each parent’s care.  

Our lawyers are here to answer your questions and to guide you each step of the way through what is likely one of the most overwhelming and difficult times of your life.  Contact us today to begin the process of reaching a parenting plan that is right for you and your children.

Written by Lisa Gelman

Senior Lawyer

Senior Lawyer Lisa Gelman has over 25 years of family law experience and founded Gelman & Associates to provide strategic legal counsel in family law matters concerning divorce, parenting, separation, and more.

Frequently Asked Questions - child custody & access

It is not uncommon for someone to want to relocate after a divorce. If you still live in the marital residence, the familiar surroundings and memories may be too much for your heart to handle. Or in the process of reinventing yourself post-divorce you may want to take a new job, move closer to your friends and family, or simply wish to start fresh somewhere new. There are many reasons a person may want to move after going through a divorce, however if you have children you will need to think twice before making a big move.

Emotionally, it can be challenging for a child to move to an unfamiliar place. Often, they are most at ease in a familiar environment with access to family and friends. Changing schools, living in a new city or even a new house can be difficult on a child, especially after dealing with the emotional turmoil associated with divorce.

Legally, there are certain implications to relocating away from the current jurisdiction where the children ordinarily reside. Before moving you and the noncustodial parent can negotiate with the absence of a lawyer, a written agreement about the moce and any changes to visitation that may be needed. If you cannot reach an agreement about the move, you then must file an Application/Motion to the court to hear your matter and for a judge to make a decision before you move. Usually the court requires at least 30 days notice to the other parent of your court Application/Motion. It may take longer to reach an agreement with the other parent or get a court order. It is a good idea to give notice of 90 days before the move, as as soon as possible and to consult with a lawyer first. Upon receiving this notice, they can challenge your proposed change of residence or apply for a variation to the existing custody or access orders.

The leading case that sets out the legal test in determining mobility is Gordon vs. Goertz (1996) 2. S.C.R. 27

Similar to any other action involving variation of an existing custody order, the person challenging the relocation has to show that the move will result in a material change in circumstances affecting the child. Once this has been established, a judge will determine the best interests of the child in light of the relevant circumstances. These relevant circumstances include the existing custody and access relationship, the relationship between the child and the custodial parent, the views of the child, and the reason for the proposed change of residence among other circumstances. As with every other custody proceeding, the judges determination will turn on the best interests of the child. The judge’s inquiry is individualized and will involve all factors relevant to the case at hand.

Because mobility has become so easy in today’s society, often separation agreements or custody orders will address relocation and place specific restrictions on changing residences. Non-removal clauses that ban the extra-provincial removal of children without consent of the noncustodial parent. In these cases, the custodial parent who wishes to relocate will have to initiate the action by placing an application with the court.

If you are contemplating a move, you must consider the emotional needs of your child, as well as your former spouse’s right to challenge your relocation. Typically, courts only allow a custodial parent to relocate if the proposed move is in good faith and not intended to frustrate the noncustodial parent’s relationship with the child. Additionally, if a custodial parent relocates, they must be willing to accommodate the noncustodial parent’s access to the child; sometimes this means that the relocating parent will have to pay the additional costs of access.

In sum, if you are a custodial parent, moving isn’t as easy as just loading up the car and hitting the road – but it is still possible.

Yes, but they will need to establish paternity, especially if the father and the mother separate. Here are the ways to establish paternity as recognized by the court:

  • Act of birth
  • Presumption of paternity
  • Uninterrupted possession of status
  • Voluntary declaration

No. Even when the parents are unmarried, divorced, or separated, one parent cannot keep the child from seeing the other unless the court deems it appropriate to the child’s best interests.

Historically, mothers have been more likely to get sole custody of their child in both consent and contested orders, as they are usually the child’s primary caregiver. However, as more mothers also work outside the home, courts could also rule in favor of the father.

The majority of judges strive to make decisions that are in your children’s best interest. Giving full custody to one parent is usually the best option, except in cases with concerns such as child or substance abuse. This typically means keeping in contact with and maintaining relationships with both parents.
You should do everything possible to prepare for the subsequent child custody negotiations, whether you’re a parent seeking full custody or shared custody:
Be honest with yourself about your ability to manage things alone, in terms of practicality, finances, and other factors. You may get the result you want by presenting the strongest case for custody by doing the following:

  • Make a Strategy: If custody is granted, a court will expect you to be ready. Compile thoughtful replies to hypothetical queries posed in court.
  • Speak with people who have gone through the child custody procedure before you. They may provide you advice and tell you what to anticipate.
  • Judges look for proof of a meaningful relationship in addition to making sure you can provide a child’s practical and basic needs. Simply put, be involved in your children’s lives.
  • Continue to pay child support regularly, whether you’re asking the court for full or shared custody. When you start the procedure, you’ll want to make sure you have a strong track record.
  • Keep a detailed log of your visitation schedule. This is a crucial aspect of obtaining child custody. Visitation records reflect how often you see your children under the present arrangements and your dependability, as well as dedication to them.
  • During all child custody hearings, the court will inquire about acceptable living accommodations. Even if you live in a tiny apartment, you should create a unique and secure environment for your child.
  • Courts may determine child custody in part by how you treat your child’s other parent. Being hostile or unpleasant to the other parent makes collaborative decision-making more complicated and can break apart parent-child ties. As a result, judges are more inclined to favor the parent who isn’t behaving badly.
  • While parents typically spend a lot of time thinking about what they believe is best for their children, children’s perspectives are sometimes overlooked. The court will be interested in learning what the children desire and will most likely question them directly at some point throughout the proceedings. You can better inform your decision-making by asking your child what they think.

No. Parenting time and child support are different from each other. While it is a child’s right to be provided with financial support, it is also their right to spend time with their parents. Thus, even if the child support was cancelled the parent formerly supporting can still enjoy parenting time with the child.

“There is no fixed age for when a child can say which parent they want to live with after a divorce. However, by law, a child must be 16 years old to decide on this matter. The exception to this is when there is a court order stating that a child/ren must live with one parent until they turn 17 or 18.

Under certain circumstances, it is possible to legally prevent your child/ren’s father from seeing or contacting them. It may be necessary if he presents a potential danger to your child/ren. If you were never married to the father of your child and there is no court order saying otherwise, you can do anything you want until paternity is confirmed.

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