In Washington state, there are no specific laws prohibiting opposite-sex children from sharing a room. However, guidelines may vary based on local regulations, housing arrangements, and the preferences of parents or guardians. It's important for parents to consider the children's ages and comfort levels when deciding on shared living spaces. Additionally, if there are any custody or child welfare concerns, those might influence room-sharing decisions.
After some reading, I've determined that unless it is a foster care situation and the children are not related, there is no law stating that siblings of the opposite sex can not share a room. In fact, it appears that they can share a room indefinitely, unless they don't want to. I am not an expert on this at all, just a regular person researching the topic.
Oregon, Idaho and British Columbia , Canada
In 2007, 202,862 children were assisted by the Department of Social and Health Services in Washington state. See the Dept. link below for more information.
Yes.
A large share of the operations in this category was located in the state of Washington.
No, they are on opposite sides of the state. Spokane is near the Washington/Idaho border and Stanwood is about 44 miles north of Seattle.
north-washington east-idaho south-california,nevada
two or more children of the same sex can share a room anywhere in the world, including Missouri.
I think there is and the law might very from state to state if they are foster kids but a family joyed together by parents might be a different story adel
no there isn't i looked it up on ask.com and it says nothing about opposite sex children sharing a bedroom being illeagal.
In Georgia, there are no specific state laws prohibiting children of the opposite sex from sharing a room. However, parents and guardians are generally encouraged to consider the age and maturity of the children involved, as well as the potential impacts on their privacy and comfort. Many families choose to have children of different sexes share rooms during early childhood, but as they grow older, it may be more common to separate them for personal space and privacy reasons. Ultimately, it's a decision that should be made based on individual circumstances and family dynamics.
Most states don't have laws like that anymore. If the children are related then there should certainly not be a problem (brothers and sisters share rooms all the time) if unrelated then some states might have something still "on the books" but usually things like that are considered private matters, not state ones.