|

REPORT
US: Changes in fathers' custody rights
urged
Armed with voters' approval of nonbinding initiatives
in more than 30 legislative districts, a group that wants to increase
the parental custody rights of divorced fathers is urging lawmakers to
change state laws to “'uphold the fundamental rights of both parents to
the shared physical and legal custody of their children.”
“'As things stand now with sole custody given to one
parent, the noncustodial parent finds himself the fifth wheel,” said Dr.
Ned Holstein, president of Fathers & Families, the advocacy group that
pushed for the initiative. “'The short amount of time spent together are
painful times, not happy times, because it reminds the child and the
parent of what they don't have anymore, an intimate relationship.” Under
current state law, the judge in a divorce case determines custody in the
best interest of the child with the presumption of shared legal custody.
Generally, that means the child lives with one parent, and both parents
share in decision making. Advocates want to change the law to encourage
joint custody, shared by both parents, as the standard in divorce law.
Holstein said the change is needed “because the parent is removed from
the child's life and doesn't know what is going on between the child and
their friends, teachers, baseball team, and things that really matter.”
Legislators in districts where the proposal passed said they would press
for change. If enacted, Massachusetts would become the 12th state to
have legal support for joint custody. Twelve other states give
preference to shared custody when both parties agree. “I'll take this,
but I want to be practical and come up with a law that can work and most
importantly work in the best interest of the child,” said Representative
Robert A. DeLeo of Winthrop. DeLeo, who once worked in probate court and
has handled family law cases over the years, said that splitting time
between two homes can be disruptive, because a child's life is focused
on school, friends, and activities in their community. “It's best for
each child to have as much time with both parents as possible, but I
don't see how you can cut a child in two,” he said. “You have to have
some continuity.”
The Massachusetts Bar Association opposed the change
to shared physical custody when it came before the Legislature because
it took discretion away from the courts and placed the best interest of
the child second, according to Denise Squillante, former chairwoman of
the family law division of the Massachusetts Bar Association. “To create
an automatic presumption takes away too much discretion from the court,”
said Squillante, who has been practicing family law for 21 years. “No
two cases are the same. They all call on different facts.” Squillante
said that in cases where judges determine that both parents are fit, the
courts should be allowed to maintain the current pattern in the
household to avoid disruption in children's lives. “This [proposed] law
is not the answer in my experience, because there are very few
situations where parents are able to work out a shared physical
arrangement,” she said. “Kids don't like to be bounced back and forth
and living out of a suitcase.” Holstein said, however, that shared
physical custody will help quell many problems faced by youth. He cited
poor grades, substance abuse, gang violence, and pregnancy, and said
they are rampant among children in single parent homes.
“This is a cost-free method to address the problems of
youth by finding ways to give them back their fathers instead of giving
them programs,” he said.
Elise Castelli
5 November 2004
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/11/05/changes_in_fathers_custody_rights_urged/
home /
Previous feature
|