Child Custody And Support Attorneys In Omaha
Raising a child is expensive, from paying for schooling and extracurricular activities to clothes, food, health care, and other basic needs. When parents get divorced, the ability to maintain the family’s previous standard of living can be called into question, which can result in you losing time with your children or forfeiture of some or all of your parental rights.
With the help of Walz Law Offices, these pitfalls can be avoided. We’ll help you negotiate and enforce fair child custody and support terms while protecting your relationship with your children.
A Hands-on Approach To Every Case We Handle
Walz Law Offices has helped many couples through complicated child support and custody battles, always with the best interests of the children front and center. If your child’s other parent refuses to compromise or expresses hostility toward you during court proceedings, or if they pose a danger to your child’s well-being, our skilled and persistent attorneys will work to make sure that your children’s safety and parental rights are secure. We can help you in matters related to:
- Primary and joint custody arrangement: Determining who gets custody can be especially contentious for parents. We help fight for your parental rights and present a strong case for seeking custody that will allow you to be involved in your child’s life.
- Negotiation of child support: Parents should be financially responsible for their child, and child support payments help ensure a child has the resources they need to grow up. We help parents seek fair and attainable child support orders.
- Visitation rights: When a parent does not have physical custody of their child, we help ensure they’re able to still see their child through fair visitation orders.
- Modification of custody and visitation orders: Over time, custody and visitation orders may no longer apply to your current lifestyle. We can help modify these orders due to relocation, new work or school schedules and other factors.
- Enforcement of orders: When a parent violates their custody or support orders, they can be held accountable. We have experience in enforcing these court orders when necessary.
- Juvenile delinquency and dependency proceedings: Children who get in trouble with the law deserve to have someone who will fight for them. We will help protect your child’s future and protect their legal rights against any criminal accusations.
- Decisions related to religion, education, and upbringing of the child: We can help parents resolve disputes regarding their child’s upbringing and guide them toward positive decisions that prioritize their child’s well-being.
Our attorneys will thoroughly explain Nebraska child support guidelines and how they apply to you while keeping you informed and empowered at every step. With Walz Law Offices in your corner, you will know what your children are entitled to and what you can expect from the legal process.
Making Child Support Arrangements That Work
Children do best when their parents can be civil to one another. They also fare better when they can be secure in the knowledge that their food, clothing, shelter, and other needs are covered. That’s where child support comes in.
Through the structured process of mediation, parents can often put aside their differences and focus on the importance of their child’s well-being. In our extensive experience in child support and custody cases, Walz Law Offices has found that mediation provides a means for creating fair child support plans that allow both parents to share in the financial obligations of raising their children, while maintaining a comfortable standard of living for all concerned. Let our skilled negotiators guide you toward equitable solutions that save time and money.
When All Else Fails, We Won’t
Although mediation can be an effective tool for resolving child support or custody disputes, sometimes a trial is necessary to get what your child needs and deserves. At Walz Law Offices, our family law attorneys meticulously prepare for litigation.
We are unrelenting as we fight for your child’s right to a financially stable upbringing. If your child’s other parent tries to evade their financial obligations, we can compel the enforcement of your child support order. If your circumstances change, we can petition the court for a modification to the support order.
Never forget that we are always here for you and your family, anytime.
Frequently Asked Child Custody And Support Questions
It’s normal to have questions when you’re going through this process. Our attorneys have collected common questions we’ve received from clients below to offer you some clarity during this confusing and difficult time.
How do I file a petition to establish custody?
Whether you are married to your child’s other parent or not married, the procedure for establishing custody of a child is basically the same. Filing for custody starts with either a Petition or Complaint to Establish Custody of Minor Child(ren) or a Petition/Complaint for Divorce. A custody or divorce complaint will state that the parties have a minor child (or children), that the person filing the complaint (Plaintiff) is fit and proper to be awarded custody of the children and that the person receiving the complaint (Defendant) is capable of paying child support and should be ordered to contribute to expenses.
Being the first to file does not mean that the Plaintiff has won the custody battle, as long as the defendant responds to the complaint. The defendant has 30 days from the date they got served to file an “Answer and Counter Complaint” to the plaintiff’s custody or divorce petition. The Answer and Counter Complaint typically denies many of the allegations in the Plaintiff’s Complaint and states that the defendant should be awarded custody and the Plaintiff should pay child support.
What if the opposing party does not respond to the complaint?
If the opposing party does not file an answer to the complaint and fails to take the parenting class as required by law, they will be in “default.” The court will likely only approve a default parenting plan stating that you shall have sole care, custody, and control of the minor children, with visitation occurring solely at your discretion. Should the other party decide they want a parenting plan at a later date, they will be required to take the parenting class and participate in mediation before regularly scheduled visitation may occur.
What is a parenting plan?
The goal of every custody case is to establish a parenting plan that meets the family’s needs and the best interests of the children. Some parents can easily co-parent and are very cooperative in maximizing each parent’s time with the child. Some parents have a hard time communicating and getting along and need the courts to tell them how to co-parent. A parenting plan specifically addresses all the aspects of physical custody and responsibilities between the parties. Specifically, the plan will include the following:
- Normal, day to day parenting schedule, stating when each parent’s time with the child will start.
- Holiday and summer vacation schedules. Typically, one parent will get a given holiday in even numbered years and the other parent will get the holiday in odd numbered years. Holidays prevail over the regular visitation and the plan will state when each holiday begins and ends.
- Transportation. The plan will specify who the children will be transported from one parent’s home to the other. If the parents live in separate towns, the parenting plan may state where the parties shall meet to exchange the children.
- Extended family. Generally, each parent is responsible for providing their extended family with access to the child during that parent’s time with the children.
- Extra-curricular activities. Usually, the plan will forbid a parent from planning or scheduling activities during the other parent’s time to thwart visitation.
- Decision making. This is sometimes referred to as “legal custody.” Parties that can communicate typically have joint “legal custody” of the child where they share in the decision-making.
What if we can’t agree on custody?
Your custody case is a lawsuit. The end result of any lawsuit that does not settle is a trial. The judge will be presented with your case and the other parent’s case and render a decision. You may call witnesses to testify on your behalf and present documents (exhibits) to the judge just like on TV. Leading up to the trial, you are permitted to request documents and send written questions (called interrogatories) to the opposing party and they are free to do the same for you. If the child is old enough to voice an opinion, the judge may speak to the child, in what is called an “in-camera interview.” This would take place in the judge’s chambers outside the presence of the parents for reasons of sensitivity. In some cases, it is necessary to appoint an attorney, called a “guardian ad litem” to represent the child’s best interest.
Is child support mandatory?
Yes. Since the 1980s, the U.S. Congress has required each state to create a child support enforcement office and child support guidelines to be applied (as a rebuttable presumption) in every custody case. The intent of this was to reduce the number of families receiving aid benefits when there is an able-bodied, noncustodial parent capable of contributing to the support of the children. Your custody matter may have even been initiated by the State of Nebraska after the child received some sort of aid.
The child support guidelines and calculations take both parents’ incomes into consideration. The parents providing health insurance for the minor child will get a credit equal to the cost of providing health insurance. If parties have joint physical custody, sharing close to 50% of the time, the child support obligation will be calculated using a “joint custody calculator,” which will yield a smaller support amount or none at all if the parties have roughly the same income. The courts are not permitted to set a child support amount that would reduce the payor’s income below the poverty level. While the child support guidelines are the presumption, the courts may deviate from the guidelines for good cause. This may include but is not limited to health issues of either party or the child, student loan payments, travel expenses of the noncustodial parent, etc.
How much will this cost?
The cost of a custody case varies greatly. If two parents agree on everything, then the lawyers only have to draft the paperwork memorializing the agreements into a court order. This is considerably less expensive than a contentious custody battle resulting in a full-blown trial. You may ask the court to order the other party to pay your attorney fees, but judges have a considerable amount of discretion on this. In my experience, judges deny requests for attorney’s fees far more than they grant them.
Talk To A Skilled Omaha Child Custody Lawyer Today
Parents want the best for their children and our lawyers are committed to achieving that goal. Whether through negotiation, mediation or trial, we will aggressively advocate for your parental rights and the best interests of your child in matters of custody and child support.
Call us today at 402-998-5044 to schedule a free consultation or email us online.