Custody When A Military Parent Deploys
Published for On the Civil Side on February 27, 2015.
Since I discussed service members in my recent post about the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, it’s a good time to review North Carolina’s Uniform Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act, GS 50A-350, et. seq, effective since October 1, 2013. The Act is important for military families and for judges struggling to resolve custody issues when a military parent must deploy.
Required Communication
First the Act requires that any deploying parent notify the other parent of a pending deployment not less than seven days after finding out about it. Deployment is defined in as:
“The movement or mobilization of a service member to a location for more than 90 days, but less than 18 months, pursuant to an official order that (i) is designated as unaccompanied; (ii) does not authorize dependent travel; or (iii) otherwise does not permit the movement of family members to that location.”
GS 50A-351(9).
After notice is provided, each parent is required to provide the other with a plan for addressing Custodial Responsibility during deployment.
Agreements Between Parents
Part 2 of the Act authorizes parents to enter into agreements that are enforceable by courts and that temporarily supersede any existing custody order. The agreements terminate when deployment ends unless terminated earlier by agreement or by court order.
These agreements address Custodial Responsibility during deployment. The parents may grant Caretaking Authority to each other and to nonparents and specify what Decision-Making Authority accompanies that authority. Parents also may grant Limited Contact to nonparents. Those terms are defined as:
- Custodial Responsibility : “A comprehensive term that includes any and all powers and duties relative to caretaking authority and decision-making authority for a child. The term includes custody, physical custody, legal custody, parenting time, right to access, visitation, and the right to designate limited contact with the child.”
- Caretaking authority: “The right to live with and care for a child on a day-to-day basis, including physical custody, parenting time, right to access, and visitation.”
- Decision-making responsibility: “The power to make important decisions regarding a child, including decisions regarding the child’s education, religious training, health care, extracurricular activities, and travel. The term does not include day-to-day decisions that necessarily accompany a grant of caretaking authority.”
- Limited Contact : “The opportunity for a nonparent to visit with a child for a limited period of time. The term includes authority to take the child to a place other than the residence of the child.”
- caretaking authority to a nonparent “who is an adult family member of the child or an adult with whom the child has a close and substantial relationship if it is in the best interest of the child;” and
- decision-making authority to a nonparent if the deploying parent is unable to exercise that authority.
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