In most states, a parent cannot kick you out until you are 18. If your parents kicked you out already, contacted your local Department of Human Services (DHS) or (if you can't find that number), just call the police. They will advise you of the next steps you should take. Good luck!
Call 911 and report those who kicked you out for child abuse and neglect. As it is likely you did something to provoke such a response, you also might want to consider modifying your behavior.
That child can become emancipated, or end up in a foster home if they don't have friends to stay with.
Legally, if the child is still a minor than no. If the child is underage and leaves the home the parent could be charged with abandonment. It is the parents reponsibility to look after the child until they reach adulthood. What the child wants does not really matter.
If the "child" is still living in their parent's home - yes, they DO have access to his room - HOWEVER - depending upon the state, this right may not extend to the "child's" personal private property.
Yes of course. You are not just responsible between the 4 walls of your home. If you brought them there it is your responsibility to make sure they are safe.
Not in and of itself, however is the parent has a disability that prevents them from being able to care for the child, than it becomes an issue of safety.
In general, child protection does not get involved in custody in any way. If a child is removed from an unfit home the noncustodial parent can often have the child placed with them, but are considered a foster parent in the legal sense. There is a federal law that states that the offending parent has 15 out of the next 22 consecutive months to rehabilitate and get custody back of their child. If this does not happen then the state is obligated to file a termination of parental rights against that individual. If the parent completes rehabilitation then the child is returned to their custody and the parents must determine custody through a separate court action. The short answer is that child protection is generally required to attempt to reunify the child with the parent that they were removed from.
The child benefit check will go to whoever has the legal custody of the child.
Not on taxes no. The parent the child lives with has the main right to claim the child. But if that parent can't or doesn't want to then the other parent can
no is not you dumboos
If a Parent so chooses to home-school their child, there is no law against it so long as there is a basic curriculum the child can follow, and the the parent registers their home-schooled child with their respective state. It is ultimately the Parent's decision whether or not to place their child in public, private or home school. It merely depends on what the parent feels would be a more productive learning environment for their child.
i think the parent has to let a child live at home until they are 18 unless they both agree the child can move out
There is not set amount of money a parent can give towards a child's home purchase. This is totally individual.
Yes, until a judge rules otherwise see link
when the parent isn't home, and the child is alone in the house. In some cases it's child neglect, if the child records or has some kind of documentation of he/she doing the act, the parent can go to jail, or the child.
Yes, if it's the home of the other parent.
Yes. Child support is for the "custodial parent". If you are not living at home with your custodial parent, then they are no longer eligible to receive child support. However, the non-custodial parent can request a modification if the child is no longer living with the custodial parent and that includes a change of custody. A 17 yr old is not emancipated in Texas, unless proper procedures through the courts have taken place. If that is the case, then the custodial parent and child are no longer eligible for child support.
yes you could
it is okay for one parent to work a job and for the other to stay at home and take care of a child as long as it makes the child and the parent happy! and if the child is getting the care that is needed and there is being enough money made to support the family.