Unless you have some very serious reason to avoid the parental visitation, you probably have to accept it. If you believe that the parent in question is dangerous to you in some way, you can bring your concerns to the police or any other available authorities. If your only problem is that you find this parent to be boring, you will probably just have to suffer the boredom, until you are older. Eventually we are all free of our parents.
A child must be eighteen years of age to be free from visitation orders.
Visitation is important in a child's life, when the parents are split. There is no standard visitation schedule, the schedule is made based of the parental needs.
You can not get visitation rights if you gave up your parental rights.
If your parental rights are taken away from you, you lose all contact and say over what that child does. You will not have visitation with the child at all and you cannot make decisions about their school, medical, or religion.
It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.
Yes signing over custody is not the same as giving up your parental rights. You still have the right to visitation for example.
No. Child support, visitation, custody etc are all separate issues. The court will see to what is best for the child and one parent can not deny the parental rights of the other.
Legal Custody is different than Parental rights. The courts decides child visitation, etc. and parents could pay child support to grandparent. It is all up to the courts..
No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.
The judge needs to review visitation and parental income to decide if a change in CS should be made.
That is a state to state issue. Grandparents are being allowed to go into court these days and get rights though. I added a couple links for you to visit for more information. Hope this helps.
The legal age of majority which in Pennsylvania is 18, or with permission from the court to end the visitation.