Toddlers under the age of three do the best with shorter half day visits. Children who are over three years old are able to handle longer parental visits.
There is no such law.
Legally the custodial parent can deny visitation outside the court ordered terms. But if custodial issues come before the court again the incident might not look favorable for the custodial parent. To refuse an activity such as noted in the question would appear to be mean spirited unless the request for visitation interferred with the child's/children's school, medical care, extracurricular activity or something similar.
Permission from the court would not be required. The court does not become involved in things such as childcare providers, schools, religion, etc. such issues are hopefully decided amicably between the parents. The exception, of course, is if the non custodial parent restricted vistation or contact with the children by order of the court.
Every parent mustprovide children with a place to sleep for 8 continuous hours that is clean and suitable for sleeping. They don't have to have a bed per say, but a sofa for older children or a play pen for tots can be deemed suitable. What loving parent wouldn't provide a place for their child to sleep?
That is interpreted by the court and assumes that the grandparents should have no greater right, nor that the child spends long hours in daycare.
12 to 14 hours
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.
what is an acceptable blood sugar range witin two hours after a meal ??
yes if you find that your current job doesn't fit around your responsibilities as a parent e.g. the hours you work are unsociable, the location is not convenient for childcare, you need more money, you want to reduce your working hours etc......
4 hours, real time
A person can sue for almost any reason. Whether or not it is a justifiable case is usually the question. Was there emotional and/or physical injury to the plaintiff? Was there any monetary loss? What purpose if any would litigation serve. Lawsuits are not, as a rule timely, inexpensive or even the solution to the problem(s). A counselor/mediator however, might be more helpful.
How often does he have custody of the children and for how long a period. Several hours? Several days? It can all depend upon the circumstances. That circumstance would probably apply, but the more proper charge would probably be CHILD NEGLECT.