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FAMILY COURT SERVICES
[General information only. Talk to a lawyer for legal
advice.]
Family Court Services is generally a division within the involved
County's Corrections Department. The jobs of Department of Court
Services' are to conduct mediation and evaluations for parenting
time (formerly and most commonly called "visitation")
and/or custody. Court Services "CS" works for the Courts
(Referees and Judges) to provide the information requested to
help the bench make decisions about families.
- If parents cannot agree on custody or parenting time (formerly
and most commonly called "visitation"), the Family
Court may require you to meet with Family Court Services to work
something out between yourselves.
- Family Court Services is an important agency that helps the
Family Court decide custody and parenting time (formerly and
most commonly called "visitation") cases.
Departments in different counties have different deadlines
in which to complete the mediation and evaluation stages. Typically,
the Court Services' officer has 6 to 8 weeks to submit a report
to the court. Most Minnesota counties do not have a Department
of Court Services to conduct custody evaluations and other services.
Those counties may contract those assignments to private agencies
or require parties to hire their own evaluators.
- Mediation is a process where the two parents sit down
with a Court Services staff person (a mediator) and talk to each
other to obtain parenting time (formerly and most commonly called
"visitation") and/or custody arrangement you can live
with. The mediator will make suggestions and help you reach agreement
but the two of you are the ones who must agree with one another.
You generally have a period of weeks to mediate an agreement
with one another. Mediation can be provided as a free service,
such as in Hennepin County, but is generally charged to the parties.
Þ If there has been domestic
abuse in the relationship, you will automatically go into an
evaluation unless you agree to mediate. Mediation between a victim
and an abuser will not occur, absent an express waiver of statutory
protections by the domestic abuse victim. |
If you are unable to mediate an agreement, you will most likely
be court ordered into an evaluation.
- Evaluation is a process where the Court Services'
officer listens to the information provided by each parents,
checks out the information from collateral sources, usually teachers,
babysitters and other involved persons, to make recommendation
to the Court about legal and physical custody. In an evaluation,
you may have a joint meeting with the other parent but most of
your contact with the evaluator will be in individual appointments.
The evaluator will gather information from you, meet and interview
your child(ren) if they are old enough, come to your home and
see you with the child(ren), and have you sign releases of information
so that they can gather more information from other professionals
(i.e., schools, daycare providers, police, probation officers,
prisons, chemical dependency treatment problems, psychologists,
therapists, psychiatrists, hospitals, etc.) The evaluator will
run drivers' license and Bureau of Criminal Apprehension computer
checks on parents going through the custody or parenting time
(formerly and most commonly called "visitation") evaluation
process.
Þ Fees for an evaluation
may be as much as $500.00, with the costs generally divided between
the two parents. |
Terms that you will hear frequently are legal custody and
physical custody.
- Legal Custody covers four areas: education, medical
treatment, religious upbringing, and cultural differences, if
there are any.
Þ Sole legal custody means
you make all the decisions about the children regarding these
areas.
Þ Joint legal custody means
you must talk with the other parent about these issues and reach
agreement on a course of action. |
- Physical Custody determines where the child(ren) live
on a day-to-day basis. It identifies which parent gets the children
up in the morning, puts them to bed at night, makes lunch, does
the laundry, gets them to their activities such as school and
daycare, etc.
Þ Sole physical custody
means the child(ren) live primarily with you and have parenting
time (formerly and most commonly called "visitation")
with the other parent.)
Þ Joint physical custody means
you and your partner somehow share having the child(ren) live
with you (i.e. summer with one parent, and school year with one
parent, or alternate weeks or months with the other parent, etc.). |
Any form of joint custody, whether joint legal custody and/or
joint physical custody, means there must be a great deal of communication
and cooperation between you and the other parent as you will
need to talk with one another on a frequent and regular basis.
When there has been a domestic abuse proceeding between you and
your partner, joint custody, whether legal or physical, can be
much more difficult to obtain under Minnesota law.
- Parenting Time (formerly and most commonly called "visitation").
This means how the other parent (with whom the child does not
live) is scheduled to see the child.
Þ Reasonable parenting
time (formerly and most commonly called "visitation")
means that it is worked out between the parents.
Þ Supervised parenting time
(formerly and most commonly called "visitation")
means that someone else is there with the child during parenting
time (formerly and most commonly called "visitation").
This is usually ordered when there are safety concerns as a protection
for the child against physical abuse or intoxication of the visiting
parent. |
Copyright © 1997 Mary
C. Lauhead. This document was obtained from http://mclauhead.com.
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