Showing posts with label child custody laws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child custody laws. Show all posts

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Rob Hahn forming Reform Family Law Now Group to Seek Change in Child Custody Laws

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Former Independence Party gubernatorial candidate Rob Hahn is expected to announce today that he has formed Reform Family Law Now, an organization that will seek to change child custody laws in Minnesota and other states.

A website — rflnow.com — has been established.

Hahn wants the "legal presumption" in a divorce situation to be joint "50-50" custody arrangements. Hahn believes that fathers are often discriminated against in post-divorce custody battles.

Hahn is divorced and the father of two children. During his campaign to win the IP primarhy election against eventual standard bearer Tom Horner, the Star Tribune reported that Hahn's ex-wife filed a protection order against him that is still in force.


Read more here.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Child-Custody Cases Demand Discretion, Not New Laws

NO ONE can argue against the goal of giving fathers a large presence in their children’s lives. The question is how to ensure that, when unmarried or divorcing parents cannot agree on child-custody arrangements, men get a fair hearing in family court. Fathers’ rights advocates in Massachusetts argue that custody orders generally favor mothers and are pinning their hopes on House Bill 1400, which promotes the concept of “shared parenting.’’ But the bill, now before the Joint Committee on the Judiciary, is too broad an approach to a challenging issue that demands nuanced, case-by-case decisions based on the best interests of the child.

House Bill 1400 would create a legal presumption for joint custody in situations where there is no evidence of child abuse or neglect. Judges would still have the right to award sole custody to one parent, but would have to provide written justification for their decisions. Massachusetts law currently has no legal presumption in favor of either parent, or even to the primary caregiver

Read more here.