Categories
NPO in the media

May 26, 2016. Cameron Citizen-Observer, Cameron, Missouri, “Rep. Neely Supports Children’s Best Interests After Divorce with Bill Sponsorship,” By Linda Reutzel (National Parents Organization of Missouri)

As a mother and grandmother, I’d like to thank Rep. Jim Neely, R-Cameron, for standing up for Missouri’s children by sponsoring the shared parenting bill, and now that the state legislature has backed his proposal, it’s time for Gov. Nixon to follow suit.

I feel so strongly about this legislation, HB 1550, because I’ve felt the pain Missouri’s broken family court system inflicts on families. Children are hurting. Parents are hurting. Aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents – everyone’s hurting. This unfortunate reality occurs because our courts continue rubber stamping the outdated primary residential custody parenting model after divorce or separation, despite an overwhelming amount of research showing children need and want equal access to both parents.

Thankfully, the Missouri Legislature passed legislation that aligns with research and stands to turn families’ pain into joy – the bill arrived on Gov. Nixon’s desk on Wednesday, May 25. The bill, which unanimously passed the Missouri Senate and then passed the House 154-2, encourages our state’s courts to award shared parenting – a flexible arrangement where children spend as close to equal time as possible with each parent – when both parents are fit and there has been no domestic violence.

By passing this legislation, Missouri will join a national trend. While shared parenting is still unusual post-divorce – according to the U.S. Census Bureau, it occurs less than 20 percent of the time when parents live separately – Missouri joins nearly 20 states across the nation that have considered bills supporting shared parenting within the past year. At least two states have turned the proposals into law in recent months and several states have been supportive of shared parenting for years.

This national movement toward parental equality is rooted in research. As just one recent example, the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health published a 150,000-person study last year that concluded shared parenting after divorce or separation is in the best interest of children. In addition, federal statistics consistently show the devastating impact of single parenting. For example, children raised by single parents are significantly more at risk of dropping out of school, landing in prison, developing mental disorders and committing suicide when compared to children raised by both parents.

Not only does Missouri’s bill align with what data tells us is best for kids, it also aims to make child custody cases much less adversarial. When the conversation begins, rather than ends, with shared parenting, the conflict and never-ending legal costs that often follow, drop. What’s more instead of one parent “winning” and another parent “losing,” the entire family can heal with shared parenting in place.

Shared parenting is a common sense solution that addresses the concerns of all involved, from judges to parents.

To be clear, the proposal does not infringe on judicial discretion. Judges would still have just as much of a right to act when parents are unfit as they always have — the best interest of the child continues to be the top priority. Rather, the proposal simply seeks to make shared parenting the starting point of the judicial process, rather than an afterthought, as it is now.

That said, in the overwhelming majority of cases where a child has two equally loving and fit parents, this legislation encourages the court to provide that child as much time as possible with both mom and dad so that they can benefit from all that each parent has to offer.  

What’s particularly troubling about the current winner-takes-all family court tradition is that the practice routinely forces one of two wonderful parents, typically the father, into the loser position — a role that more resembles a visitor than a parent. In day-to-day life, this means a perfectly fit and willing parent goes from actively involved in his or her child’s life to spending time with a child just every other weekend and maybe once during the week. It’s heartbreaking.

Shared parenting is the solution for 21st century families. At a time when modern parents, regardless of gender, want to be as actively involved in their children’s lives as ever while also balancing professional ambitions and responsibilities, shared parenting allows both to be successful contributors at work and at home.

The absence of shared parenting in our family courts is an issue that impacts millions of families across our nation every day, but unfortunately it’s a challenge commonly overlooked until it hits close to home. Every day, parents walk into family court as loving, very involved and dedicated parents and walk out relegated to visitor status in their children’s lives. That feeling of hopelessness is deep and frightening, and this reality was apparent during recent hearings on the legislation.

Thank you, Rep. Neely and the overwhelming majority of state lawmakers, for reacting to these pleas for change. The family court status quo must stop. Our children deserve better, and with Gov. Nixon’s signature on HB 1550, we can start to give our children what they deserve.

Linda Reutzel is a Missouri mother, grandmother and member of National Parents Organization

Categories
NPO in the media

May 13, 2016. The Missouri Times, Jefferson City, Missouri, “Shared Custody Measure Heads to Nixon’s Desk,” Quotes Ned Holstein (National Parents Organization)

The General Assembly sent HB 1550 to Gov. Jay Nixon’s desk this week, opening access for both parents of children in divorce cases.

The shared custody law creates guidelines for parenting plans, requires courts to disclose why shared parenting wasn’t awarded if another arrangement is ordered, requires courts to provide written findings and conclusions in a custody case, specifies that courts can’t “presume that a parent, solely because of his or her sex, is more qualified than the other parent and prohibits local courts from establishing their own rules, such as having a default parenting plan.

“Thank you, Missouri legislators, for voting to bring state child custody laws in line with the overwhelming body of research showing that most children desperately want and need shared parenting after divorce or separation,”  said Dr. Ned Holstein, founder and chair of National Parents Organization. “Too many families have suffered from the family courts’ outdated preference for giving sole custody to one parent.  I urge Gov. Nixon to act on his historic opportunity to sign HB 1550 into law. Instead of setting up parents for a bitter and unnecessary custody battle, HB 1550 will allow families to heal from the pain of divorce and separation from a position of equality and co-parenting.”

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 10, 2016. Yahoo! “National Parents Organization Applauds Missouri Legislature For Joining the Nationwide Shared Parenting Movement,” Features National Parents Organization

National Parents Organization celebrates the Missouri Legislature’s passage of a bill that embraces shared parenting and parental equality after divorce or separation and urges Gov. Jay Nixon to waste no time in signing HB 1550 into law so that more children can experience the continued love and support of not just one, but both, of their parents.

“Thank you, Missouri legislators, for voting to bring state child custody laws in line with the overwhelming body of research showing that most children desperately want and need shared parenting after divorce or separation,” Dr. Ned Holstein, Founder and Board Chair of National Parents Organization, said. “Too many families have suffered from the family courts’ outdated preference for giving sole custody to one parent. I urge Gov. Nixon to act on his historic opportunity to sign HB 1550 into law. Instead of setting up parents for a bitter and unnecessary custody battle, HB 1550 will allow families to heal from the pain of divorce and separation from a position of equality and co-parenting.”

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 9, 2016. Parent Herald, “Shared Parenting Laws News & Updates: Missouri Legislators Pass Bill Encouraging Parental Equality For Divorced Or Separated Parents,” Quotes Ned Holstein, Linda Reutzel (National Parents Organization)

The National Parents Organization, a charitable and educational organization, has long been urging lawmakers to legislate shared parenting laws. Now, Missouri legislators are contemplating to pass a shared parenting bill called HB 1550.

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 8, 2016. Columbia Tribune, Columbia, Missouri, “Shared-Parenting Bill Supports Children’s Best Interests,” By Linda Reutzel (National Parents Organization of Missouri)

As a mother and grandmother, there’s nothing I want more this Mother’s Day than for the Missouri legislature to pass the shared-parenting bill.

This is my hope because I have felt the pain that Missouri’s broken family court system inflicts on families. Children are hurting. Parents are hurting. Aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents — everyone’s hurting. This unfortunate reality occurs because our courts continue rubber-stamping the outdated primary residential custody parenting model after divorce or separation, despite an overwhelming amount of research showing children need and want equal access to both parents.

Thankfully, Missouri legislators are considering legislation that aligns with research and stands to turn families’ pain into joy. HB 1550, which unanimously passed the Missouri Senate as well as the Fiscal Review Committee and is headed to the House floor, encourages our state’s courts to award shared parenting — a flexible arrangement where children spend as close to equal time as possible with each parent — when both parents are fit and there has been no domestic violence, and I urge all lawmakers to support this crucial proposal.

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 6, 2016. WND, “Healing Broken Families: The Latest Trap For Mothers — And Their Kids,” By Ned Holstein (National Parents Organization)

It almost seems that each generation lays a new fantasy trap for unwary mothers. Fifty years ago, it was the Donna Reed or June Cleaver fantasy – happiness as the perfect housewife in the perfect family in the perfect home. Twenty-five years ago, it was the Gloria Steinem fantasy – you can have it all, girl, the ambitious career, the fulfillment of motherhood, an evergreen marriage (or not) and time to write.

This generation’s fantasy trap is that if things don’t work out, you can get rid of the jerk, win sole custody of the children and the home and sail on proudly as a single mom like a ship through calm waters. Since you probably can get rid of the jerk and win sole custody, it’s the last part of that trilogy that doesn’t work – for you and also for your children.

The reality is that mountains of research now show that your children are likely to be happier and better adjusted, do better in school, be less likely to need special education interventions, more likely to graduate and go to college, have more and better friendships, be less likely to use drugs or alcohol, be less likely to run in gangs or get in trouble with the law, suffer less stress, be healthier and have lower chances of teenage pregnancy if they have shared parenting rather than sole custody.

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 6, 2016. Examiner.com, “National Parents Organization Embraces Shared Parenting for the Single Mom,” Quotes Ned Holstein (National Parents Organization)

National Parents Organization urges single moms to join the push to make shared parenting the new norm, specifically, to support legislative proposals in many states, including Missouri, that advance it.

“Caught up in the pain and anger of a divorce, it is often very hard for a parent to accept the fact that the child loves and needs the other parent too,” said Dr. Ned Holstein, Founder and Board Chair of National Parents Organization. “On top of that, the family courts are still stuck in the mindset that their job is to pick one parent to be the custodial parent. The attorneys often prey on parents by creating fears of losing custody, and also entice them with the supposed advantages of winning sole custody. These so-called ‘advantages’ include a bitter and expensive custody battle, children who do more poorly than with shared parenting, a permanently hostile ex, and a relentless ordeal of work and childcare.”

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 6, 2016. Augusta Free Press, Augusta, Virginia, “Celebrate Mothers – and All Parents – on Mother’s Day and Beyond,” By Kristen Paasch and Christian Paasch (National Parents Organization of Virginia)

As Mother’s Day nears, first and foremost, let’s celebrate all mothers – they are a critical part of our American society and families.  Importantly though, as a society, we must recognize that women and men together are indispensable partners to our country’s most valuable treasure: our children.  We need to celebrate our children’s parents – both of them – as often as possible.

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

May 2, 2016. NPR affiliates WVXU/WMUB, Cincinnati and Oxford, Ohio, “The Growing Number Of Stay-At-Home Dads And The Stigma They May Face,” Interviews Don Hubin (National Parents Organization)

When people think about a parent staying home to raise children in lieu of building a career, they may tend to think about the mother; but what about stay-at-home dads? According to Pew Research Center, the number of fathers choosing to stay home to care for their kids is on the rise.

See more

Categories
NPO in the media

April 28, 2016. Parent Herald, “Shared Parenting Laws: A Solution To End ‘Parental Alienation’?” Quotes Ned Holstein (National Parents Organization)

In cases of divorce or separation, children often fall victims to a common concept that promotes conflict among parents, traumatizing kids in the process. That’s why a charitable and educational organization known as the National Parents Organization is promoting shared parenting because it believed that no child should endure the difficulty of choosing between his or her parents after a divorce or separation.

Maintaining a strong bond between children and their parents is exceptionally vital to the emotional, mental and physical well-being of kids. In celebration of the National Parental Awareness Day on Monday, April 25, National Parents Organization is calling for a family law reform that will promote shared parenting.

See more