WHAT IS A PARENTING AGREEMENT?
Custodial and parenting issues involving the children can be resolved under
the parties' overall settlement agreement or in a separate
Parenting Agreement.
Such a document generally includes resolution of the following important
parenting issues:
- Custody -- Temporary or permanent; sole, joint or shared?
- Residential Custodian -- Defined or not defined?
- Visitation -- Supervised or liberal?
- Parenting Schedule -- Specific or general?
- Division of Holidays -- Per the weekly/monthly schedule or as
specified by agreement?
- Grandparent Visitation -- Will either set of grandparents have
defined visitation rights with the children before or after the parents'
deaths?
- Transportation -- Who is responsible for transport the children for
changes in parenting time?
- Exchange of the Children:
- Where?
- When?
- Under what circumstances?
- Who may participate in exchange? (i.e., can Grandma or
Grandpa pick up or deliver the child if Mom or Dad is busy?)
- Vacations -- Will contact be permitted with the non-vacationing
parent? How often? At whose expense?
- Decision-making Authority (custody):
- Shared or joint?
- To include:
- Education?
- Religion?
- Health issues (medical, dental, psychiatric, etc.)?
- Extracurricular activities?
- Designation of a Primary Residential Custodian?
- Education:
- Are your children going to attend public or private school?
- Who is responsible for tuition, books, school supplies,
uniforms, etc.?
- Who is responsible for transportation to and from school when
the children aren't with their primary parent?
- Daycare:
- Will younger children attend in daycare?
- Where?
- Who will pay for it?
- Who will have the right to drop them off and pick them up?
- After-School Care:
- Where will the school-aged children go for before-school and
after-school care?
- Who will pay for it?
- Who can pick them up?
- Access to Records -- School, medical, etc.?
- Input with Educators -- Freedom to attend parent-teacher
conferences?
- Other Access to Child -- To include e-mail, web-cam, telephone, cell
phone, etc.?
- Tax Deduction -- Which parent will claim the children as dependents
and when?
- Control of Children's Finances
- Conduct of the Parents -- No disparaging the other parent, no using
the children to convey "adult" messages between the parents, etc.
The bottom line is that a cookie-cutter settlement agreement is not going to
properly address all of the issues in
your divorce.Be sure that the agreement you sign adequately and
satisfactorily covers all of these important issues.
Remember, if you do not understand the terms of the agreement, you should not
sign it until you understand every provision!
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