No. Until she is 18, she needs to live where her parents want her to live.
In Florida, a minor cannot move out of their parents' home without their consent until they reach the age of majority, which is 18. Emancipation would be required for the 15-year-old to legally live on their own before turning 18. Crossing state lines to live with an 18-year-old friend in New Mexico could present legal complications and may not be allowed without parental consent or the appropriate legal process.
Telling them you know how to take care of them
planing
What are the dynamics of marketing planing
what is planing for "Payroll Management System"
police planing is planing
no ash and dawn do not planing to get married ash and may planing to get married not ash and dawn or ash and misty
A planing hull has which of the following characteristics
planing to buy a new machinery planing to start operations in new locality Monthly budget planing
Planing means "the direction of production activity by a central authority".
No, brainstorming is for coming up with ideas. Planing is implementing those ideas.
Urban planing is an approach to managing and influencing the growth and development communities. Engg waseem
Unless emancipated, anyone under the age of 18 is a minor and therefore has minimal rights. Their parents' or legal guardians' consent would be necessary before any change of residence, except in certain cases (such as abuse), in which case the courts could intervene. Whether or not you plan to finish high school is irrelevant. If the person discussed in the question went ahead and moved out anyway, the parents could report her as a missing person and involve the police in searching for her. Whosever custody she is found in could be charged with kidnapping (this is highly dependent on the circumstances, especially the child's age). In the case of a 16-year-old, this would most likely not be the case. The teenager would be considered a runaway. In some states--Oregon, for example--running away is not illegal. In others, such as Texas, it is illegal and the police may be obligated to return the runaway to her parents or guardians when found. However, once a person has been established as a runaway (and not a missing person), the police technically aren't required to hunt her down. Again, specific laws differ between states. Once you cross state lines, it becomes a federal issue. For a state-by-state rundown of specific laws, see the following link: http://www.nlchp.org/content/pubs/Al...0A%20Home1.pdf Skip ahead to page 39 of the pdf for a paragraph describing Texas laws for children "in need of supervision." Page 100 describes the criminality of anyone found "harboring a runaway," in this case your friend's parents. Your friend's parents could notify your parents within 24 hours of discovering that you had run away, thus escaping criminal charges if found out.