Yes
You, because you are the mother of the child. Unless you got the baby taken away form you and someone else has custody of him/her.
parents married or unmarried- taken out of state permanently or for a vacation- etc
Even with a custody award, if the child is in state care, his chances are 15% in getting the child. see links below
She will loose temporary custody of the child until she can prove that she is a fit parent. The child will go to the father, grandparents or; will be taken into foster care. But social services will not allow the child to live with her anymore. the state will have custody of the child.
No parent is going to consent to their child smoking - if they did then they should have their children taken off them as clearly they are terrible parents. It is illegal for anyone to sell cigarettes to someone under 18 years old, there is no law against smoking.
No, either waysee link
Rules vary from state to state. If there is really negligence, contact a child services organization for help in getting out of a dangerous environment.
no because it can be taken as child napping
The most likely meaning is that someone - probably the dreamer - has had an important idea, project or opportunity taken from them.
If it is a joint account yes.
Support is owed to the parent (or the State), not the child.
The latest official count, taken the end of January, 2011, says there were 801 people identified as homeless in Wyoming, with four counties not having filed their reports. Other sources list various counts between 1,000 and 2,000 homeless in Wyoming.
no
No, but they can take away tax refunds to pay a child support arrears. Child support is separate and for all purposes at a higher category than taxes. Money owed towards taxes will be taken by other methods, but it is easy and now legal for child support to be taken from tax refunds.
The amount designated by the laws of the state in which the child support order is issued.
You, because you are the mother of the child. Unless you got the baby taken away form you and someone else has custody of him/her.
You need to visit your local family court and request a copy of your state child support guidelines.