Child Arrangements Are Often A Worry for Divorcing or Separating Couples
We understand that your children and child arrangements are often your biggest worry when you separate or divorce, so you need a local family law team who are experienced in dealing with issues surrounding your children in a professional, supportive and sensitive manner. This is where we come in.
Many couples, with the benefit of our advice, are able to make child arrangements without incurring the cost of legal proceedings. We can advise you about the types of arrangements that may work for your family and offer you guidance about what may be ordered by a court, if either of you were to apply.
If there are no disagreements about your children the court may not make any orders about them at all.
Compulsory Mediation and Child Arrangements
From April 2014, anyone seeking to issue an application relating to issues surrounding children i.e where children will live and with whom they shall spend time, must, save in certain defined circumstances, attend a MIAM (Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting) prior to issue. If one party is unwilling to mediate and/or the Mediator assesses the matter as unsuitable, then a Court application can be made.
If, as a last resort, one of you has to apply to the court, the main Orders which can be made are set out in the Children Act 1989:
Parental Responsibility: a bundle of rights relating to the parenting of a child which enables you to have a say in important decisions about your child’s upbringing.
Child Arrangements Orders: these orders govern who a child shall live with and what period of time a child will spend with each parent. These orders used to be known as a residence or contact order. Historically, the term “custody” was used to describe this type of order.
Prohibited Steps: preventing something from happening to a child e.g. removal from England to a foreign country.
Specific Issue: when a court is asked to decide about an important aspect of a child’s upbringing which the parents are in dispute over, for example, which school a child should attend.
Children Act proceedings can prove costly in terms of legal fees so it is important that you get cost effective expert legal advice. Our team are on-hand and ready to help.
We Can Advise You On the Children Act and Child Arrangements
For advice and guidance please contact the family law team on 0113 320 5000 or email us at family@winstonsolicitors.co.uk.
Research tells us that arrangements agreed between the parties are much more likely to succeed if they are made by agreement between the parents. However, where one parent does not agree to those arrangements we can suggest alternative ways of reaching a resolution for your children for example, you may need to try mediation, arbitration or ultimately court proceedings to help you sort these arrangements.
These are historical terms the court used to describe where a child lives and spends time with a parent. These are now called Child Arrangement Orders.