It also can occur when there are legitimate concerns about safety due to known instances of drug use or child abuse. It is important to remember that the grandparent does have the responsibility in these cases to identify themselves as a potential custodial parent and to got to the courts and follow up on this to obtain their proper grandparents rights.
If grandparents can prove to the courts that their home offers adequate resources for raising a child then they will be strongly considered. Overall, grandparent custody is a generally preferred alternative in most every state to foster care.
The bottom line is that grandparents do have rights when it comes to custody and their grandchildren. The courts recognize them as an integral part of the family support system.
The key however is for grandparent’s to make their wishes known and get involved with custody process. The Custody Center is a wonderful, updated resource for finding out just how and when to exercise your grandparent rights, so that you have every bit of legal knowledge at your disposal that you need to take your case to the courts.
NEIL
Grandparenting workshops are in high demand. Learn what makes them effective, which topics resonate most…
Neil Taft's speaking topics address the real challenges modern grandparents face - from estrangement to…
Finding the right grandparenting speaker means looking beyond credentials to real-world experience, viral reach, and…
A grandfather's letter to his granddaughter on her 21st birthday. Wisdom on identity, relationships, risk,…
Strained grandparent-parent relationships are more common than families admit. When the bridge breaks, rebuilding requires…
The most important grandparenting relationship isn't with your grandchildren – it's with their parents. When…