You should refer to your custody agreement for specifics. Generally, shared custody allows either parent to freely travel with children without regard to provincial boundaries as long as you remain in Canada, but custody agreements can be modified. Better to check first than to be sorry later and if you have any questions about it, better yet to consult with an attorney first.
Shared legal custody means that both parents have equal rights to make decisions regarding the child. One parent may have physical custody with the non-physical-custody parent paying child support.
Yes, however if the other parent is disruptive, the parent might file a last minute injunction to stop it claiming you are moving away with the child. By the time it's cleared up, vacation is over.
The mother. The father have to petition the court for shared custody.
no
If the parents are married, yes. If one parent has sole custody that parent can consent.
Not if you have court ordered visitation rights or shared custody.
If they are the parent and they jabe custody, yes, that is one of their rights. If they have shared custody, an agreement must be made with all persons that have custody as well. If they are not the parent, then they have no right to take the child anywhere, unless that permission is explicitly granted to them by the parent or guardian.
Arkansas has no true shared custody, and therefore the judge always indicates which parent has prime custody. Even if the parents agree to shared custody, the non-prime parent is only given the right to the standard visitation unless the parties work out and submit in writing a more lenient visitation schedule. I k now this to be true, because my son and his ex got a divorce and asked for shared custody. The final decree gave his primary custody and her the every-two- weeks, etc., she would have gotten in any case. They shared because he wanted to. My granddaughter thought it would work for her, too, but her ex didn't stick to the plan once he got prime custody and she only sees her son when the papers allow her to.
Child support laws vary from country to country, state to state etc. Quite often, even in a shared custody arrangement, the parent that earns more money may pay some child support to the other parent to equal out the living standards.
Yes, with equally shared custody and if the parties have similar incomes.Yes, with equally shared custody and if the parties have similar incomes.Yes, with equally shared custody and if the parties have similar incomes.Yes, with equally shared custody and if the parties have similar incomes.
Yes of course. Unless the custodial parent is unfit the judge would not just change it though but there is also shared custody. It's up to the court to decide.
same as a father under the same conditions. What the court orders say.