|
Vol. 71, No. 7,
July 1998
Debating the Standard
in Child Custody Placement Decisions
Help or interference?
Searching for Solutions
How can custody/placement outcomes be better handled for children? One
idea advanced by new research is that the optimum arrangement would be whatever
most closely resembles the preseparation pattern. "It's based on the
concept that you want to maintain continuity in the children's lives,"
explains La Crosse psychologist Kip Zirkel. "Any drastic change in
what the pattern was is probably not good for parent or child. That would,
of course, presume that parents were cooperative and supportive of the idea."
Madison psychologist Kenneth Waldron points to three elements that he
believes are linked to smoothing the custody/placement decision-making process:
More parent education. "One of the findings of parent education
programs around the country," Waldron reports, "is that if you
give parents information about what their kids need, about half of them
do what's right. So that's a first step."
Mediation. Mediation has proven to be a better route for resolving
child-related issues than litigation. When parents can reach a voluntary
agreement, chances are much higher they'll try to make it work.
Deemphasizing placement. Shift the focus from placement schedules,
a preoccupation in too many custody disputes, to developing a coparenting
plan, advises Waldron. That entails determining how the parents will attend
to the myriad of tasks involved in parenting, even though they're no longer
living together. In addition, says Waldron, "The burden of child support
needs to be taken off the shoulders of children's placement schedules." |
Some observers remain unconvinced that divorcing parties will always put
their children's needs first. "Many do, many don't," notes Thomas
Barland, circuit court judge in Eau Claire County. "Often custody disputes
are not so much about having the child's interests in mind as they are about
the parents' desires to be the main adult in the child's life, for their
own personal gratification."
Nor does Barland believe that an across-the-board presumption of equal
placement/custody, unless both parents choose otherwise, is workable or
realistic in all cases. While he recognizes the merits of the argument that
both parents should be fully involved in their children's lives after divorce,
for both the parents' and children's sakes, "that's different from
mandating [equal placement]," Barland says. "Mandating it is what
creates problems."
Similarly, Barland agrees it's crucial to maximize each parent's time
with the child, but, he says, "that doesn't always work out to an equal
basis. Children need stability, a routine. For some children shuttling back
and forth is very upsetting. I think [the placement arrangement] has to
vary with the child. You just can't do it the same way for all."
Echoing that sentiment is Ozaukee County court commissioner Darcy McManus.
Rather than adopting a uniform placement strategy for all cases and eliminating
guardians ad litem to represent the child's interests, as AB 442 proposed
to do, McManus argues instead for an "intensive, one-on-one, individualized
approach," in which guardians ad litem play a vital role.
"The selection of the guardian ad litem is probably the single most
important step in a custody dispute," McManus says. "The best
way to resolve a case is to have a good guardian ad litem who can educate
the parents and steer them into parent education classes, or counseling,
or whatever needs to be done to get them to work together."
Backers of the equal placement presumption, on the other hand, feel such
help - whether it be from guardians ad litem or other court-appointed professionals
charged with assessing the family's situation - is unnecessary intervention.
"I don't think we want judges, the courts, and psychologists interfering
in normal family relationships if it can be avoided," George points
out. Furthermore, if equal custody/placement is not in the child's best
interests, under his proposed legislation, "the judge can variate from
that - with cause," George adds.
The "cause" would have to be so severe, however, that in effect
judicial discretion in custody disputes would be eliminated, says Madison
attorney Tom Glowacki. "The court has to approve whatever the parties
agree to unless it's 'unconscionable,'" he notes, "and that's
an extremely high legal standard to meet. There would have to be so much
overreaching and inequality in the bargaining relationship that [the resulting
agreement] is shocking to the court's conscience." Relationships with
a history of abuse present other problems in working out equal placement/custody
agreements. "How do you make decisions on an equal footing with someone
who has terrorized you?" asks Kathleen Krenek, policy development coordinator
with the Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence. "You don't.
You cower in the corner. And the other person gets anything he or she wants."
As a practical matter, Glowacki questions how divorcing parties entangled
in custody disputes will cope with problems that do erupt between them -
if the guardian ad litem and other court-appointed professionals are out
of the picture. He points to an example from his own guardian ad litem experiences:
A woman hung four stockings at Christmas, including one for her ex-husband,
in which she placed a lump of coal, telling the children daddy had been
bad and that's what he deserved.
When Glowacki relayed the story before the Legislature's Committee on
Children and Families during hearings on AB 442, "they thought that
was pretty bad stuff, and they said they hoped I got on the mother about
that," he recalls. "I told them I did, but show me where in AB
442 I could have done anything. I wouldn't be involved, for starters, because
there'd be no guardian ad litem. And even if somehow I were involved, I
could do nothing" to curtail the mother's behavior.
Placement - the "wrong battlefield"
Under AB 442, or whatever new version appears in coming months, 50/50
physical placement would become the standard for all families in divorce.
But what might appear clear-cut on the books often becomes fuzzy in real
life, points out Baraboo attorney and guardian ad litem Gretchen Viney.
When she gets a case in which a parent demands equal placement, she says,
"I ask the parent, 'Are you talking 50 percent of the overall time?
Or would you be happy having the child from 9 p.m. to 9 a.m., so you'd never
see the child awake? That is 50 percent of the time. Would that make you
happy?'"
Even narrowing the focus to waking hours presents dilemmas in calculating
a parent's time with a child, Viney adds. Do you subtract time for the child's
piano lessons or Little League practice? Which hours do you actually include
in "parental time"? "Eventually, relatively healthy parents
come to the realization that this 50/50 thing is sort of a fiction,"
Viney points out. "What they really want is good access. Once you get
it worked around to that, you can do all kinds of things" in devising
a placement schedule.
Of course, many parents do opt to equally share both custody and placement
after divorce. And some make it work, both for themselves and their children.
But research shows it's the toughest schedule for parents to manage, according
to Kip Zirkel, a La Crosse psychologist. Zirkel cites multiple factors that
determine the success or failure of equal placement arrangements. To list
just a few: Does the child have a flexible temperament to cope with dual-living
arrangements? Do the parents share similar child-rearing values? Are the
parents able to consult frequently about rules, school activities, expectations
of the child, and so on? Do the parents live near each other, and in the
same school district?
Children get angry at their parents for violating the unwritten rules
of parenthood - parents are supposed to make sacrifices for children, not
the other way around.
- - Judith Wallerstein,
noted family psychologist
|
If juggling an equal placement schedule is a challenge for divorced spouses
who are on fairly cordial, or at least civil, terms, it's almost certainly
a disaster for parents who can barely speak to each other. "Usually
when a parent thinks in terms of everything having to be equal, counting
it down to the minutes - which I've seen - those are highly conflicted situations,"
observes La Crosse attorney Pat Heim, chair of the Child Custody Subcommittee
of the State Bar's Family Law Section. "Then the interests of the child
are not paramount, and the parents are not communicating. That's the worst
situation for equal placement."
What often gets overlooked when adults wrangle over placement schedules
is that children don't care about percentages or counting hours and minutes,
notes Zirkel. He splits his professional employment between the Family &
Children's Center in La Crosse, where he works with families undergoing
divorce, and the U.W.-La Crosse, where he counsels college students, many
of whom endured parental divorces and custody disputes during childhood.
"For 15 years in my work with college students," Zirkel says,
"I've asked them to tell me what they remember most about their parents'
divorce. They never remember the placement schedule, unless they heard their
parents argue about it. They do remember the good times with their parents,
the special occasions, vacations, meals together. And, significantly, they
remember the fights - very vividly."
How do different placement schedules affect children's adjustment after
divorce? Research has no definitive answers, and it would be nearly impossible
to measure anyway because numerous variables enter into child adjustment,
not just placement. In the eyes of the law, placement is "where a child
sleeps," points out Kenneth Waldron, "which is silly. There isn't
a single piece of research that correlates where a kid sleeps with adjustment
after divorce."
Psychologists emphasize that the primary task for parents, whether they're
living together or separately, is to raise their children. The parents'
relationship has changed; what the child needs to grow up to be an adjusted
human being has not. "A healthy family doesn't care about time,"
says Waldron. "They just want to figure out how they're going to get
their kid to do well in school, who's going to take the kid to soccer, how
they're going to work out the orthodontics payments. Carving up the time
is not the task. That's the task the legal system places on people, and
now it's become a gender battle over 50/50."
Add to the gender equity issue another complication: the fact that child-support
formulas are tied to placement schedules. Child support amounts decrease
as placement time with the child increases. This situation further fuels
contention between divorcing spouses. "I understand the frustration
many fathers feel," Waldron says, "especially when historically
they've had so little chance. There are good arguments on all sides of these
issues. But it's a battle being waged on the bodies of children. It's a
mistake to try to resolve these issues on placement because, for kids' sake,
it's the wrong battlefield. That's the sad part."
Dianne Molvig operates Access Information Service,
a Madison research, writing, and editing service. She is a frequent contributor
to area publications.
|