Helping the child, well i should say adult, make the right choices and find the right path. The parent should help them less then they did when they were younger.
Until a child turns the legal age of eighteen, the parent retains full custody and rights unless otherwise mandated by the courts.
The child support money is part of a court order between your two parents, for your benefit. It is up to them. If you are still in school at eighteen and not employed full time, your custodial parent may still receive support.
No. The child is now eighteen and he or she can make their own decision although that may cause trouble if the child still lives with the "custodial" parent.
Not from the parent that is losing parental rights.
If you are still finically responsible then a parent should have some rights. Even if it is supervised visits. other wise go after the parent who still has rights, not the one who has given up or lost their rights.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
A parent is the biological or legally adoptive mother or father. If you have lost custody of your child you are still the child's parent in that sense. If you have allowed your child to be legally adopted you may not be in their life but you are still their parent in that sense. In a legal sense you can no longer make any decisions for the child and have no parental rights.
A parent cannot simply sign away their rights to a child. There are many factors that come into play in the state of Mississippi. If the child is abandoned by the parent then their rights can be stripped but they will still have to pay child support.
You still pay child support until the child is 18. Parental rights means you signed away having any legal say in the child not the fact that you are still the parent.
No. It depends on when the TPR became final. If the child resided with the parent or a parent for the entire tax year then they may still claim said child as a dependent.
The same as every. The child is still a child with little choices.
Giving up parental rights does not allow you to be free from the responsibility of your child. You may not want to be this child's parent, but you will still be responsible for the child.