How do I file a parenting plan in Florida?
Table of Contents
How do I file a parenting plan in Florida?
Petition to Establish a Parenting Time Plan. Supreme Court Approved Family Law Form 12.995(a) Parenting Plan form including Time-Sharing Schedule. Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.928, Cover Sheet for Family Court Cases Required when filing Petition to Establish Parenting Time Plan.
What happens when a parent breaks a parenting plan?
A parenting plan is not legally binding in the sense that it is not a legally enforceable agreement. For example, if Parent A breaches a parenting plan by failing to stick to what was agreed,Parent B cannot ask a court to impose a penalty on Parent A for that breach.
What is a non custodial parent?
A noncustodial parent is a parent who does not have physical custody of his or her minor child as the result of a court order. When the child only lives with one parent, in a sole custody arrangement, then the parent with which the child lives is the custodial parent while the other parent is the non-custodial parent.
How does Colorado calculate child support?
Child support is a percentage (roughly 20% for 1 child, and an additional 10% for each additional child) of the combined gross income of the parents, which is then split between both parents, depending on other factors.
Is Colorado a mother or father state?
Colorado does not have joint custody or sole custody. Colorado uses the term parental responsibility – which can either be joint or primary. If you equally share in overnight visitation with the minor child, you have joint parental responsibility.
Is there a cap on child support in Colorado?
The amount of the child support award should total roughly 20% of both parents’ combined gross annual income, plus an additional 10% for each additional child. This amount is then split between the parents as the courts see fit.
What makes a parent unfit in Colorado?
A parent can be found unfit based on the inability to set age-appropriate limits, inability to care for the child’s needs, previous involvement in the child’s care, substance abuse, and indifference to the child.
What considers a parent unfit?
A parent may be deemed unfit if they have been abusive, neglected, or failed to provide proper care for the child. A parent with a mental disturbance or addiction to drugs or alcohol may also be found to be an unfit parent. The best interest of the child is the determining factor.