The answer depends on the circumstances and you haven't provided any details so the following is general information that may be helpful.
Not without a court order.
If extreme circumstances are present, a court may grant a grandparent full custody and not allow the parent any visitation rights. However, generally courts encourage parents and children to have a relationship so even if the parent doesn't have custody they will be provided with visitations unless the court deems otherwise.
No, he has visitation rights. If she wont let him in the house he has the right to see his child somewhere else. If the court agrees he can also get shared custody.
I'm assuming that you have a teen who has a child and you wish to deny the father access. This is no a choice the grandparent legally has.
If the step-dad has or shares custodial authority, he can prevent the child seeing grandparents for any reason.
A POA is only related to custodial matters if such stipulations are stated in the order. Unless a parent has had his or her parental rights terminated by the court a grandparent cannot prevent the parent from visiting their child. Or even possible removing the child from the grandparents care.
Yes but they can't "legally"keep the parent from seeing the child.There is no custody arrangement so it wouldn't really matter!
No, it is not the child's fault, they still need the bonding effects of both parents. The other parent although not paying support is still subject to pay other bills until you can get them to court, which would also clear up the issue of keeping the child from the other.
A parent has a legal right to see there child,you can file for emergencey visitation or custody.
In the US, yes. The child's property is owned by the parent.
It very much depends on the situation and if there are any outstanding court orders the parent is trying to avoid. There are cases of abuse where it is the only choice for the safety of parent and child. As a parent, you have to act as wisely as you can in favor of the child, especially if you are "just" mad at the other--always is better to keep the other parent in the child's life. Sometimes being reasonable and acting as if things are amicable is the shortest way to solving the aggravation.
The child support goes to the one who have custody. If the grandparent still do and the child has just moved out temporarily, they will still get it. If the child is under 18 and has moved they also still get it unless the child is emancipated. If the child is 18 the child support generally end but it depends on the state laws and/or what you have written in the child support agreement.
On a permanent basis, no. However, the guardian can allow short term "overnights" just as any parent can as long as they are certain the child will be well cared for. It would not be appropriate if there are any provisions in the court order prohibiting visits with the other grandparent or if there were problems with visits in the past.On a permanent basis, no. However, the guardian can allow short term "overnights" just as any parent can as long as they are certain the child will be well cared for. It would not be appropriate if there are any provisions in the court order prohibiting visits with the other grandparent or if there were problems with visits in the past.On a permanent basis, no. However, the guardian can allow short term "overnights" just as any parent can as long as they are certain the child will be well cared for. It would not be appropriate if there are any provisions in the court order prohibiting visits with the other grandparent or if there were problems with visits in the past.On a permanent basis, no. However, the guardian can allow short term "overnights" just as any parent can as long as they are certain the child will be well cared for. It would not be appropriate if there are any provisions in the court order prohibiting visits with the other grandparent or if there were problems with visits in the past.
unless he has been abusive towards the child you cant stop him from seeing his child. but if mentally unstable maybe with supervision
Generally, only under circumstances in which there is clear evidence that the child is in an unsafe environment, and has been reported as such. And in that case the parent must file for an emergency order with the court of jurisdiction. It will be followed up by a full hearing within a couple of weeks.