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Rep. John McCoy, serving the 38th District Serving Snohomish County, including the communities and neighborhoods of Everett, Marysville and Tulalip. |
House passes McCoy’s measure
for custody rights
of military parents
Lawmaker: ‘We should always respect
service
dads and moms who are deployed’
February 24, 2009
OLYMPIA – The full House of
Representatives yesterday (Monday, Feb. 23) approved a Snohomish County
legislator’s plan to protect the child-custody rights of military parents
who are deployed.
“When they’re away from home serving their country,
military parents shouldn’t have to spend time worrying about their
child-custody orders being changed around,” emphasized state Rep. John
McCoy, D-Tulalip.
“It just stands to reason and common sense that we
should always respect service dads and moms who are deployed.”
McCoy’s
bipartisan
House Bill 1170 would make sure any that changes made in a parent’s
custodial arrangements because of his or her military duty “would only be
temporary changes in nature.”
Right now in the state of Washington,
he explained, there have been at least some court decisions that are
“indifferent to the rights of military parents.”
“Military fathers
and mothers away from home because they’re serving our country shouldn’t
have to suffer through their parental rights being abused, including any of
their custodial arrangements.
“Furthermore, people in the armed
forces should have every right to participate in any custody proceedings,”
McCoy said. “But right now they obviously can’t participate in the hearings
if they’re deployed. We should always respect service dads and moms who are
deployed and serving in a wartime capacity.”
The issue hits home
particularly hard here in the state of Washington, which of all the states
has the seventh highest population of active-duty military personnel.
Unfortunately, McCoy noted, “the obvious stresses of wartime military
service lead to more divorces than is usually the case in military families.
And for that reason, this is an issue that comes up these days more
frequently than when our nation isn’t at war.”
Military parents will have
an opportunity to resolve custody questions before they’re deployed,
according to other terms of the McCoy legislation.
The bill would
make it possible for a court to delegate the residential time or visitation
of a military parent to a person other than the parent during the military
parent’s deployment. The family member or other person to whom residential
time or visitation is delegated would have to be someone who has a close and
substantial relationship to the youngster. Also, a court would have to speed
up hearings and make it possible for a military parent to testify
electronically if the military parent cannot be in court in person.
McCoy said another key objective in the bill “is to make the custody
proceedings more streamlined so that any unresolved issues can be sorted out
more fairly and efficiently.
“This measure also seeks to have folks
use the dispute-resolution process more extensively in order to discuss the
delegation of residential time, as well as disagreements about visitation
issues.”
Representatives from the National Guard Association of
Washington, the U.S. Department of Defense, and the Washington Military
Department testified for McCoy’s legislation in a committee hearing.