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Value fathers says UN report

 

A United Nations report launched today challenges many of the current practices and institutional presumptions that tend to exclude rather than include fathers. The report entitled Men in Families by the Department of Economic and Social Affairs is co-authored by the co-director of the University of East Anglia's Centre for Research on the Child and Family. This report is clearly consistent with Article 9 of United Nations Convention of the Right’s of the Child, that the child has a right both parents after separation and divorce.

 

The report recognises the need of effective public policy that is supportive of men’s involvement in their families. It highlights that men, like women, are an asset to family life and that their absence is detrimental to child development. One of the most valuable aspects of the report is the acknowledgement that much more needs to be done to ensure the recognition of the value that fathers bring to the lives of children.

 

We are, however, concerned with the report’s generalised recasting of fatherhood as a series of temporary relationships. We know that in the UK 11% of parents share the care equally of their children after separation and divorce.

 

“Child outcomes are significantly improved by a meaningful relationship with both parents. This cannot be achieved by a temporary relationship but by shared parenting. Many more fathers would share the parenting given the opportunity and the support. We do need to put an end to defining motherhood and fatherhood against each other as carer and breadwinner. We simply cannot define fatherhood as a temporary relationship. This is not fair for the child or either parent,” commented Becky Jarvis, FNF Director of Policy.

 

Notes for editors:

 

You can access the full report here http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/family/docs/men-in-families.pdf

 

Article 9 of the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child;

 

3. States Parties shall respect the right of the child who is separated from one or both parents to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both parents on a regular basis, except if it is contrary to the child's best interests.

 

Web link: http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/44/a44r025.htm

 

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17 February 2011

Shared Parenting Clause a Welcome Step for Children and Families

Families Need Fathers welcomes the Government’s announcement that they intend to introduce a ‘shared parenting clause’ into the Children Act 1989. 

 

Ken Sanderson, CEO of Families Need Fathers, commented, “The Government has rightly acknowledged that in the vast majority of cases a child’s welfare will be best served by ensuring that they can continue to benefit from the full involvement of both parents in their lives. This is a very positive move, and will help to ensure that as many children as possible can continue to benefit from a meaningful relationship with both parents following separation and divorce.”

 

 

The shared parenting clause forms part of a wider package of reforms to the family justice system which the Government is publishing for pre legislative scrutiny. The public consultation on the proposed shared parenting provisions ran from 13 June – 5 September 2012. Four options for reform of the Children Act 1989 were presented, with Option 1 (the ‘presumption’ approach) being the one favoured by the majority of respondents and being taken forward by Government. The announcement today confirms that the Government intends to introduce legislation modeled on this approach to ensure that more children can maintain as full a relationship as possible with both parents unless it’s not safe for them to do so.

 

 

Further details on the shared parenting clause can be found on the Department for Educations website: http://www.education.gov.uk/childrenandyoungpeople/families/familylaw/a00216607/family-justice-reform-shared-parenting.


ENDS
For comment, case studies or information please contact:
Ross Jones, Policy & Communications Manager 0300 0300 110
 
Note for editors: Families Need Fathers (FNF) is a registered charity providing information and support on shared parenting issues arising from family breakdown, and support to divorced and separated parents, irrespective of gender or marital status. 
 
Our primary concern is the maintenance of the child’s relationship with both parents.
Founded in 1974, FNF helps thousands of parents every year.

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05 November 2012

Lord Mackay's Proposed Amendement for Child Maintenance Charges is Unworkable

NEARLY HALF OF PARENTS PAYING MAINTENANCE THROUGH THE CSA ARE UNEMPLOYED; PLACING ALL CHARGES ON THESE PARENTS WOULD RESULT IN CYCLES OF DEBT AND ARREARS THAT WOULD PREVENT THEM FROM BEING ABLE TO PROVIDE FOR THEIR CHILDREN

 

Figures released this morning by the Child Maintenance Enforcement Commission for December 2011 show that 46.5% of ‘non-resident parents’ using the CSA are unemployed (http://www.childmaintenance.org/en/publications/stats1211.html). This demonstrates that the proposed amendment from Lord Mackay of Clashfern scheduled today in the House of Lords to place all charges for collection of child maintenance on the ‘non-resident parent’ would be unworkable. His belief that the CSA is used almost exclusively to target fathers who wish to shirk their parental responsibilities is a gross misrepresentation of the financial and personal realities of many separated families, and the amendment would be damaging to the best interests of children in the long term.

 

Research from Australia has previously shown that the costs of parenting are much higher for parents who are not living with their children than they are in intact families (http://washingtonsharedparenting.com/web/cswg/2001HenmanNCPCostofContact.PDF). This means that low-income fathers who wish to have an active role in their children’s lives are already often placed in untenable financial positions, which would be exacerbated by Lord Mackay’s proposals.

 

 

Ken Sanderson, CEO of Families Need Fathers, commented, “Low income fathers are not bad parents as Lord Mackay’s comments suggest. Many, though, are forced to live on the bread-line if they want to remain a part of their children’s lives. Placing all of the charges for collection of maintenance onto these parents would only result in a vicious cycle of accumulated debts and arrears, harming their capability to get back in to work and to a position where they would be able to support their children in the long term. This clearly would not be in the best interests of the children involved, and would be a regressive step for child maintenance in the UK,”

 

 

The majority of families using the CSA are those where trust has broken down irrevocably between the parents. Lord Mackay’s view that this is almost always a result of fathers who do not wish to support their children is dangerously misguided.

 

 

Ken Sanderson commented, “The reduction of shared parenting or a meaningful relationship to time alone in the report is a complete misunderstanding of the issues. Shared parenting is not about an equal share of time; it is about ensuring the full involvement of both parents in a child’s life, with both parents having an equal say in areas such as education and health, as well as routine and leisure time. The adoption of these proposals would continue to deny thousands of children the full involvement of two loving parents following family breakdown, and to do so would be a betrayal of yet another generation of children in this country in family law. 

 

 

Ken Sanderson, CEO of Families Need Fathers, commented, “It is wrong for someone in Lord Mackay’s position to give the impression that the CSA exists because fathers do not want to support their children. The existing culture around maintenance though is that the CSA is the default option, which the Government is attempting to change. Lord Mackay’s assumption that the CSA is only used because fathers want to avoid their responsibilities has no justification, and is not only an insult to those providing for their children, but also perpetuates a negative stereotype of separated fathers which is outdated and wrong.”

 

ENDS 

 

 

For comment, case studies or information please contact:

 

Ross Jones, Acting Director of Policy and Research 0300 0300 110

 

Vahsti Hale, Policy and Research Officer 0300 0300 110

 

 

Note for editors: Families Need Fathers (FNF) is a registered charity providing information and support on shared parenting issues arising from family breakdown, and support to divorced and separated parents, irrespective of gender or marital status.

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25 January 2012

Government Proposals on Family Law have the Potential to Dramatically Improve Outcomes for Children in the UK

STATEMENT OF IMPORTANCE OF BOTH PARENTS IN LAW WILL COMPLEMENT THE WELFARE NEEDS OF CHILDREN; IMPROVEMENT OF ENFORCEMENT WILL INCREASE PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN SYSTEM

 

 

Families Need Fathers welcomes the Government’s response to the Family Justice Review. Although there is much work to be done to ensure that the family justice system provides better outcomes for children and families in practice, the Government’s proposals mark a clear step forward for private family law in the UK.

 

Families Need Fathers agrees that disputes about parenting arrangements are best settled out of court, and supports the Government’s proposals to increase the frequency and strength of private family arrangements. However, there will always be a sizeable minority of intractable cases where court becomes unavoidable, and it is in these cases that today’s recommendations mark a positive development for the family justice system. Key proposals include the intention to introduce a legislative statement on the importance of children having an ongoing relationship with both parents following separation wherever possible, and a desire to strengthen enforcement sanctions where court orders are breached.

 

Ken Sanderson, CEO of Families Need Fathers, commented, “The proposals announced today will help to improve public confidence in the family justice system. By reinforcing the law’s commitment to ensure children benefit from the love and support of both parents following separation, the Government will help to ensure that it is not children who continue to be punished when acrimony between separating parents is played out in the courts.”

 

“This is not a question of equally dividing time, but of ensuring that children get to benefit from the full involvement of both parents following family breakdown. We support the Government’s belief that developing legislation emphasizing the importance of both parents in a child’s life is complimentary to the welfare needs of the child, and hope that this will be the beginning of a process of reform that will see the development of a family justice system fit for the needs of children and their families.”

 

Other important proposals include the replacement of ‘contact’ and ‘residence’ orders, which encourage a ‘winner takes all’ mentality in private family law disputes, with ‘child arrangements orders’, which are more child focused. However, the decision to continue requiring grandparents to apply for permission before they can make an application to court to see their grandchildren indicates that there is still work to be done to ensure that the rights of children to a relationship with their wider family are adequately protected.

 

ENDS 

 

For comment, case studies or information please contact:

 

Ross Jones, Acting Director of Policy and Research 0300 0300 110

 

Vahsti Hale, Policy and Research Officer 0300 0300 110

 

 

Note for editors: Families Need Fathers (FNF) is a registered charity providing information and support on shared parenting issues arising from family breakdown, and support to divorced and separated parents, irrespective of gender or marital status.  

 

 

Our primary concern is the maintenance of the child’s relationship with both parents. 

 

Founded in 1974, FNF helps thousands of parents every year.

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09 May 2012

'One million children growing up without a father' - comment from Families Need Fathers

CENTRE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE REPORT FINDS ONE MILLION CHILDREN ARE GROWING UP WITHOUT A FATHER, AND THIS FIGURE IS GROWING AT A RATE OF 20,000 A YEAR

 

In response to today’s research from the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) which has found that around 1 million children in the UK are growing up without a father, Jerry Karlin, Chair of Families Need Fathers, commented:

 

“These figures are a sobering reminder of how much more work needs to be done to ensure that children in separating families are able to maintain a meaningful relationship with both parents following family breakdown.

 

The important thing is ensuring that children are able to maintain and develop a strong relationship with both parents and their wider family that enables them to flourish, whether they live in the same household or not. Sadly, the family justice system all too often fails to support parents in achieving this, particularly when handling acrimonious separations.

 

The issue is not whether two-parent households are better than single-parent households; it is whether parents are able to rise above their own differences and focus on the best interests of their children, and this is what the Government, and we as a society, should consider a priority when it comes to family life.”

 

ENDS 

 

For comment, case studies or information please contact:

 

Ross Jones, Policy & Communications Manager 0300 0300 110

 

 

Note for editors:

 

CSJ press release:  http://www.centreforsocialjustice.org.uk/UserStorage/pdf/Press%20releases%202013/CSJ-Press-Release-Lone-Parents.pdf

 

Families Need Fathers (FNF) is a registered charity providing information and support on shared parenting issues arising from family breakdown, and support to divorced and separated parents, irrespective of gender or marital status.  

 

 

Our primary concern is the maintenance of the child’s relationship with both parents. 

 

Founded in 1974, FNF helps thousands of parents every year.

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10 June 2013

Victory for Children as Importance of a Relationship with Both Parents is set to be Recognised

Reports this morning in the press suggest that the Government will announce plans on Monday to introduce legislation ensuring children have the right to maintain a meaningful relationship with both parents following divorce and separation. This move would represent a tremendous step forward for family law, and benefit the thousands of children who lose contact with a loving parent unnecessarily each year.

 

Ken Sanderson, CEO of Families Need Fathers, commented, “A move to introduce legislation enshrining a child’s rights to an ongoing meaningful relationship with both parents would be a victory for children. For too long, we have seen children of many separating couples across the country lose out on the emotional and social benefits of a loving relationship with both parents following separation and divorce, and we are delighted that the government intends to address this situation. This is not a question of fathers’ or mothers’ rights; it is about protecting the rights of children to have two loving parents fully involved in their lives wherever possible, to the benefit of the children, their families, and wider society.”

 

 

Families Need Fathers will release a more detailed response on Monday, once the details of the Government proposals have been officially announced.

 

 

ENDS 

 

For comment, case studies or information please contact:

 

Ross Jones, Acting Director of Policy and Research 0300 0300 110

 

Vahsti Hale, Policy and Research Officer 0300 0300 110

 

 

Note for editors: Families Need Fathers (FNF) is a registered charity providing information and support on shared parenting issues arising from family breakdown, and support to divorced and separated parents, irrespective of gender or marital status.

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03 February 2012

More Articles ...

  1. Enforcement of court-ordered child arrangements: welcome, but limited, progress
  2. Legal Aid Procedures Causing Problems for the Family Court, Says President of the Family Division

Press Releases 2023 Archive Article Count: 4

Press Releases 2022 Archive Article Count: 4

Press Releases 2021 Archive Article Count: 5

Press Releases 2020 Archive Article Count: 5

Press Releases 2019 Archive Article Count: 6

Press Releases 2018 Archive Article Count: 6

Press Releases 2017 Archive Article Count: 11

Press Releases 2016 Archive Article Count: 7

Press Releases 2015 Archive Article Count: 10

Press Releases 2014 Archive Article Count: 6

Press Releases 2013 Archive Article Count: 3

Press Releases 2012 Archive Article Count: 4

Press Releases 2011 Archive Article Count: 12

Press Releases 2010 Archive Article Count: 17

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