A Professional child monitor in California can make $50.00-$100.00 per hour to supervise visits. Fees can also be charged for the following: traveltime, holidays, reports , day in court, cancellation and late fees and more....
they can run from $50-$100 a session.
Custody refers to the legal right to make decisions for a child's upbringing, while visitation refers to the time a non-custodial parent spends with the child. Custody involves more authority and responsibility, while visitation is about spending time with the child.
It is his choice as to whether or not he exercises his visitation. He does not have to but the mother does have to make the child available should he decide to exercise his visitation.
If there is a court order to that affect the child and the custodial parent must adhere to the terms of the visitation order. If that does not take voluntarily take place the non custodial parent can petition the court to make visitation mandatory. The exception would be if by allowing a minor child to engage in visitation with the non custodial parent it would place the child in an environment of neglect and/or endangerment.
No. Child support, visitation and custody are three separate issues in court. And that also means you can not deny him to see his child if there is a court order for visitation. The child is not allowed to choose until he is 18yo. It's the parents job to make sure the court orders are followed.
Every car company makes limited cars to observe and monitor their sales annually.
If the father has visitation rights and the mother refuses to allow the father those rights, then the father can sue the mother in a civil contempt proceeding. If she doesn't have a good reason for disallowing the visitation then she can be held in contempt of court. There are various remedies including giving the father more visitation to make up for the visitation that was disallowed by the mother or even giving the father custody, but usually, the judge will just order the mother to allow the visits. His paying or not paying child support has nothing to do with whether or not he gets visitation (i.e. he gets visitation regardless of whether or not he is current with child support).
A child has to follow a visitation schedule until they are 18. They may stop visiting if the courts orders it.
You can't. The child has the right to be supported by her father and they both have the right to a relationship with each other. The father should pay child support and also have a regular visitation schedule.
Visitation and child support are two different issues. Legally you can't keep your child from visiting the father on that charge. Some fathers have gotten modified change of custody orders because the mother wouldn't allow visitation.
Make sure 911 has been called and continue to monitor the child.
Custodial issues are determined by the terms of the original or amended custodial/visitation court order. If the order does not specify the terms of such issues as holidays, it is up to the primary custodial parent (the one whom the child resides) to decide when or if visitation should occur.