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Have a quick question to be explored on the show? Send us a text message! Include your email address if you would like a personal response. Click HERE
Diane and Rick answer a question about what to do when the court-ordered parenting plan is vague, unclear, and doesn't account for practical situations -- especially when your co-parent likes to be the parenting plan police! Chris from Ohio says his plan states he cannot leave the state without informing his co-parent. But he lives only a few miles from the state line, and his ex filed a contempt against him when he took the kids to have lunch with his cousin in a neighboring state. Should he let it go and resign himself to reporting his every movement across state lines, or should he hold on to the conflict and fight it out in court?
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CO-PARENT RESOURCES:
FOR DIVORCE PROFESSIONAL...
By Diane Dierks & Rick Voyles4.9
6969 ratings
Have a quick question to be explored on the show? Send us a text message! Include your email address if you would like a personal response. Click HERE
Diane and Rick answer a question about what to do when the court-ordered parenting plan is vague, unclear, and doesn't account for practical situations -- especially when your co-parent likes to be the parenting plan police! Chris from Ohio says his plan states he cannot leave the state without informing his co-parent. But he lives only a few miles from the state line, and his ex filed a contempt against him when he took the kids to have lunch with his cousin in a neighboring state. Should he let it go and resign himself to reporting his every movement across state lines, or should he hold on to the conflict and fight it out in court?
Support the show
>>>>CONTACT US >>>>RATE THE SHOW >>>>VISIT OUR WEBSITE
CO-PARENT RESOURCES:
FOR DIVORCE PROFESSIONAL...

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