Uniform Law Commission
111 N. Wabash Ave., Suite 1010, Chicago IL 60602
312/450-6600, www.uniformlaws.org
Contact: Kate Robinson, ULC Communications Officer, katie.robinson@uniformlaws.org
Eric Fish, ULC Senior Legislative Counsel, eric.fish@uniformlaws.org
For Immediate Release:
New Act on Custody and Visitation Rules for Deployed Military Parents Completed
July 23, 2012 — A new act approved recently by a national law group addresses issues of child custody and visitation that arise when parents are deployed in military or other national service. The Uniform Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act (UDPCVA) was approved by the Uniform Law Commission (ULC) at its recently concluded 121st Annual Meeting in Nashville, Tennessee.
The deployment of a custodial parent raises custody issues that are not adequately dealt with in the law of most states. In many instances, deployment will be sudden, making it difficult to resolve custody issues before the deployment by ordinary child custody procedures. There is a need to ensure that parents who serve their country are not penalized for their service, while still giving adequate weight to the interests of the other parent, and most importantly, the best interest of the child.
Currently, there is considerable variation in how courts approach custody issues on a parent’s deployment. Many courts will grant custody to the other natural parent for the duration of the deployment, even over the wishes of the deploying parent; some courts, however, will grant custody to the person that the service member wishes to designate as custodian, such as a grandparent.
In recent years, the majority of states have sought to fill this gap by passing statutes that govern custody issues when service members are deployed. These statutes, however, vary widely from state to state, and often fail to address the range of custody issues that service members face. There is a need for uniformity in state law, since many military personnel often move between states and any attempt to address the issue through federal legislation would further complicate this area of family law, which is traditionally governed by state law.
The UDPCVA contains provisions that apply generally to custody matters of service members, as well as provisions that arise on notice of and during deployment.
One of the key points of the new act provides that the absence of a military parent from a state will not be used to deprive that state of jurisdiction over the custody or visitation proceeding.
By providing that the deploying parent’s residence will not be deemed changed on account of the deployment, the UDPCVA allows states that have entered existing child custody orders (either existing permanent orders before notice of deployment, or temporary orders on notice of deployment) in many instances to retain jurisdiction during deployment even if the nondeploying parent and child were to leave the state during the service member’s deployment.
The Uniform Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act will standardize and simplify the rules covering custody and visitation issues for deployed parents. Further information on the Uniform Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act can be found at the ULC’s website at www.uniformlaws.org.
The drafting committee on the Uniform Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act was chaired by Paul M. Kurtz of Athens, Georgia. Other committee members included: Barbara A. Atwood, Tucson, Arizona; Effie Bean Cozart, Memphis, Tennessee; Lorie Fowlke, Provo, Utah; Kay Kindred, Las Vegas, Nevada; Debra H. Lehrmann, Austin, Texas; Bradley Myers, Grand Forks, North Dakota; Thomas C. Owens, Overland Park, Kansas; Anne H. Reigle, Dover, Delaware; and Ken Takayama, Honolulu, Hawaii. Maxine Eichner of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, served as the committee’s reporter.
The ULC, now in its 121st year, comprises more than 350 practicing lawyers, governmental lawyers, judges, law professors, and lawyer-legislators from every state, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Commissioners are appointed by their states to draft and promote enactment of uniform laws that are designed to solve problems common to all the states.
After receiving the ULC’s seal of approval, a uniform act is officially promulgated for consideration by the states, and legislatures are urged to adopt it. Since its inception in 1892, the ULC has been responsible for more than 200 acts, among them such bulwarks of state statutory law as the Uniform Commercial Code, the Uniform Probate Code, the Uniform Partnership Act, and the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act.
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