A father should always want to see his child, no matter what arrangements have been made. Whether it is being picked up or "delivered" a father has a right to see his child.
On the other hand, if the parents are divorced or no longer together and the father has visitation rights he should not expect the mother to do all the transporting of their child. If mom and dad are no longer together then dad needs to accept his fair share of the responsibilities and not try to force more responsibility upon the mother by expecting her to deliver the child and the pick him up from visits with dad.
Yes, but you should pursue her father in court for child support.
The two concepts are not related. Payment of child support is a financial responsibility. It does not depend on whether you see your children or not.
yes, and should see links below
well, if your asking what you could do, then you could probably take her to court for custody of the child.
A father of a child should pay for the child. The father of the child should also get to see and influence the child. A court is one place for these matters to be settled but, if possible, the matter of access is best done by mutual agreement. Access to the child must never be used as a weapon with which to hurt either parent.
well..it depends on you. its your choice and if your the mother, well its your child. if you don't think that your child be seeing the father then you have to choices. 1. don't let the father see the child or pick up anything you would not feel comfortable 2. tell the court about the incident or just simply get a restraining order
There is no law specifically compelling a father to see his child with any set frequency, and the only laws regarding how often a father who wants to "see his child" can do so are the ones enforcing compliance with whatever the court custody order and/or any applicable restraining order says.
This question requires an opinion. Not an answer.
No, Welfare will file, plus the father can file an order, as he should. see link
First, he should introduce himself, but yes. see link
mother or father?
No, however a father should and not wait for the mother to. see links below