Without knowing all the details and specifics, most likely yes.
If they have siblings, they can share rooms, but after about the age of 10, boys and girls should not be sharing rooms.
If you want more information, call your local Health and Human Services or Child Protective Services and ask them for what is generally the minimum required so you can ensure your child is in the best environment possible.
yes. the courts frown upon pulled out coaches and sleeping bags on the floor. If you do not have room for your child and your ex has more living room (depending on the circumstances) the courts could make the child (depending on age) live with the other parent until you find a place with suitable space.
Oh of course the child needs a bedroom. They need a place to feel safe, and have their own private area away from what ever else goes on around them. Visitation is hard enough on a child, they NEED a place to be alone if they need to be. Its usually in the court documents also stating the other parent will furnish the child their own bed, which would include a bedroom.
No, there are no laws in the US that addresses this requirement.
No. A child does not have the right to ignore court ordered visitation. A parent who assists the child would be in contempt of court.
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
18. Until then, if the parent has court-ordered visitation, it has to be followed. If there is a legitimate reason the child does not want to visit the parent, the custodial parent can petition the court to revise the visitation order. Be aware the court will not deny a parent the right to visitation without a very goodreason.
It's not the parent who decide whether there will be visitation rights or not, that is the court and a parent is not obligated to petition for one. A parent can not be forced to have a relationship with their child. Apart from paying child support.
Possiblysee link
the custodial parent is the parent the child lives with the non custodial parent is the parent the child does NOT live with the non custodial parent assuming he / she knows he is a parent... is usually the patitioning parent. if he /she chooses not to seek visitation rights the court cannot force him/ her to see the child.... but they can enforce child support. research the laws for your state.
The non-custodial parent should file for visitation rights for the child in the county where custody was given. If the parent who has custody of the child is preventing the non-custodial parent the right of visitation they can be found in contempt of court if visitation has already been established. If the custodial parent has too many repeated contempts filed against them, custody can be switched to the other parent.
When the child is 18.
In most cases the parent who has the child doesn't have to pay child support. The parent who does not have the child pays child support if they want visitation rights. In most jurisdictions, the non custodial parent must pay child support even without visitation rights.
You have to file a motion for contempt in the court that issued the visitation order to have a judge review the situation and modify the visitation order if appropriate. The court cannot force a parent to visit with their child. However, if the non-custodial parent is trying to pick the child up during non-visitation hours or bringing the child back late, the court will impose further orders and likely modify the visitation order if the problem persists. If the child is prepared for visits and the parent fails to show up that is also extremely stressful for both child and custodial parent. If the parent continues to violate the order they can eventually lose their visitation rights.
Change visitation
yes