Presumably, the custodial parent is the parent who has arranged for the child care and is the person who normally delivers the child and picks the child up after work. The child care worker can refuse to allow a parent to take a child if the custodial parent has provided a copy of a court order showing that the custodial parent has legal and physical custody. No unauthorized person should be allowed to take a child from day care.
On what?
what care
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.
Not if your the parent taking care of the child.
no
If the child care center is being used for it's intended purpose, i.e. providing child care for a certain amount of time either for a fee or as part of a membership service, there is no difference between the foster parent and a biological parent. There is no law prohibiting foster parents from utilizing child care services. If you are instead questioning the propriety of the location of the child care because it is in a gym, as long as the care center meets the requirements set down for child care providers in their state there is no problem. If the foster parent does not have an agreement with the care center to provide care and instead is just dropping the child off, this is not okay, and would not be okay for a biological parent eiither. It then becomes the responsibiity of the care center employees to contact the proper authorities to report the problem.
Yes! It is very important for a day care to enforce child safety. Every parent should throughly examine the day care they are considering for their child, before they trust them with their child. I would assume any parent would consider their child's safety important.
In American legalese, a noncustodial parent is the non-resident parent who has not been granted care of the child(ren).
Yes. They are not "awarding" the care of the child. They are "arranging" for the care of the child while they are away.Yes. They are not "awarding" the care of the child. They are "arranging" for the care of the child while they are away.Yes. They are not "awarding" the care of the child. They are "arranging" for the care of the child while they are away.Yes. They are not "awarding" the care of the child. They are "arranging" for the care of the child while they are away.
because the parent is the child's guardian and the guardian has the power to decide who will care for the child.
Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.