Emancipation is usually quite easily acquired if you can show that you can support yourself or show that your grandparents will support you. You do have to go to court. It's not as scarry as it sounds.
If he is legally emancipated, or both parents are deemed unfit, or if the grandparents gain legal custody, then yes.
Yes. You have to apply for emancipation, then after you've been granted - you can live with anyone you want.
1. Get Grandparents'/Parents' Permission or 2. Get married (which will require Grandparent's/Parents' permission) or 3. She gets emancipated (which is hard to do without grandparents'/parents' permission)
No. Being emancipated means taking care of yourself and pay your own bills, have your own place, work etc. You can not seek early emancipation until you are 16 in the states that have that option. As long as you are a minor your parents or the court decides where you live.
First you'll need to get emancipated, and a judge won't do it unless you have a good reason.
Yes. But depending on where you live it can take a while.
Nope! You're totally free.
If you are a minor you need your parents permission to move.
In Virginia, a 17-year-old is considered a minor and must have parental consent to live with another adult, such as grandparents. If the parents approve, the teenager can live with their grandparents without legal issues.
The Gosselins rarely talk about the grandparents and they do not say to protect the parents' privacy.
Not unless your grandparents are granted custody/guardianship by the court.
She is since she is emancipated. If the parents have a health insurance she might be on that one and being pregnant does not change that. The birth and the baby is something the parents, not the grandparents, have to pay for.