write your name
No, a baby cannot travel to Canada with only a birth certificate. They would need a valid passport to enter the country.
No, your not related to her.
Yes, a baby can legally have two last names on their birth certificate if their parents choose to hyphenate or combine their last names.
Yes and he still have to pay whether he signs the birth certificate or not.
A child born outside the US will not be issued a US birth certificate. The birth certificate will be issued by the country in which the child was born.
No, you can and should put the baby's fathers name on the birth certificate.
In Los Angeles County, you can request a birth certificate for your baby as soon as the birth is registered, which typically occurs within 10 days after the birth. Once the birth is registered, you can obtain a certified copy of the birth certificate. It's advisable to wait a few weeks after the birth to ensure the registration process is completed. You can request the certificate online, by mail, or in person at the County Registrar-Recorder's office.
No, the hospital won't create a certificate of live birth until there is one, it's illegal. If you are having a homebirth, you can obtain the form and fill in any non-birth related details in advance (parents' names, baby's name, address, etc.) and complete it upon baby's birth, but you cannot turn it in until baby is born.
In this state the Mother can put any name she wishes on the birth certificate. It would be quite difficult to have your name removed from the birth certificate. It would be almost impossible to have the baby's name removed from the birth certificate. You could be Joe Smith and she could be Jane Miller. She could put the name Albert Einstein on the birth certificate and that would be the baby's name.
no
The law varies from state to state and from country to country. In the United States, if you do not supply a name for the baby in enough time before the birth certificate is issued, the certificate will bear the first name "Baby Girl" or "Baby Boy" followed by the last name of the mother. The certificate can be amended later, when the parents decide which name to give the child. Until, then, the child's legal name is "Baby Girl" or "Baby Boy".
The authorized birth certificate may refer to the Original birth certificate rather than the Copy of the Birth Certificate.