Bill Text: CT HB05395 | 2012 | General Assembly | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: An Act Concerning Custody Orders For Deployed Members Of The Armed Forces And Confidential Communications Made To Members Of The Armed Forces Who Are Victim Advocates Or Sexual Assault Prevention Coordinators.

Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Democrat 37-10-1)

Status: (Passed) 2012-06-06 - Signed by the Governor [HB05395 Detail]

Download: Connecticut-2012-HB05395-Introduced.html

General Assembly

 

Raised Bill No. 5395

February Session, 2012

 

LCO No. 1752

 

*01752_______VA_*

Referred to Committee on Select Committee on Veterans' Affairs

 

Introduced by:

 

(VA)

 

AN ACT CONCERNING CUSTODY ORDERS FOR DEPLOYED MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened:

Section 1. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) For the purposes of this section:

(1) "Deploy" means military service in compliance with military orders received by a member of the armed forces to report for combat operations, contingency operations, peacekeeping operations, a remote tour of duty or other active duty service for which the deploying parent is required to report unaccompanied by a family member. Deployment includes a period during which a military parent remains subject to deployment orders and remains deployed on account of sickness, wounds or other lawful cause;

(2) "Deploying parent" means a military parent who has been notified by military leadership that he or she will deploy or mobilize with the armed forces, or who is currently deployed or mobilized with the armed forces;

(3) "Mobilize" means the call-up of National Guard or Reserve service members to extended active service. For purposes of this definition, "mobilization" does not include National Guard or Reserve annual training, inactive duty days, drill weekends, temporary duty or state active duty; and

(4) "Armed Forces" means the United States Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and Air Force and any reserve component thereof, including the Connecticut National Guard performing duty as provided in 32 USC.

(b) If a deploying parent is required to be separated from a child due to deployment or mobilization, a court shall not enter a final order of custody or visitation modifying a final order of custody or visitation issued pursuant to section 46b-56, 46b-56a or 46b-61 of the general statutes until ninety days after the deployment ends, unless such modification is agreed to by the deploying parent.

(c) Upon motion of a deploying or nondeploying parent, a court may enter temporary orders of custody or visitation modifying final orders of custody or visitation during the period of deployment when (1) a military parent who has joint or sole custody has received notice from military leadership that he or she will deploy in the near future; (2) the deployment would have a material effect upon his or her ability to exercise parental rights, responsibilities or parent-child contact as set forth in the existing final orders of custody or visitation; and (3) modification is in the best interests of the child. In issuing such temporary modification orders, the court shall be guided by the provisions of the general statutes pertaining to custody and visitation. Motions for temporary modification because of deployment shall be heard by the court as expeditiously as possible and shall be given priority for this purpose. All temporary modification orders shall include a specific transition schedule to facilitate a return to the predeployment order over the shortest reasonable time period after the deployment ends, taking into consideration the child's best interests. Temporary modification orders issued pursuant to this section shall designate the deploying parent's parental rights, responsibilities and parent-child contact during a period of leave granted to the deploying parent, in the best interests of the child. Upon motion of the deploying parent, the court may delegate his or her right of contact, or a portion thereof, to a family member, a person with whom the deploying parent cohabits, or another person with a close and substantial relationship to the minor child or children for the duration of the deployment, if it is in the child's best interests. Such delegated contact does not create separate rights to parent-child contact for a person other than a parent. The temporary modification orders shall expire upon the completion of the transition schedule, and the prior final order issued pursuant to section 46b-56, 46b-56a or 46b-61 of the general statutes shall be in effect.

(d) A temporary court order modifying final orders of custody or visitation issued under this section shall require that: (1) The nondeploying parent make the child reasonably available to the deploying parent when the deploying parent has leave; (2) the nondeploying parent facilitate opportunities for telephonic, electronic mail, and other such contact between the deploying parent and the child during deployment; and (3) the deploying parent provide timely information regarding his or her leave schedule to the nondeploying parent. Changes in actual leave dates shall not be used by the nondeploying parent to prevent parent-child contact.

(e) A temporary court order modifying final orders of custody or visitation because of deployment shall specify that the deployment is the basis for the order and shall be entered by the court as a temporary order. The order shall further require the nondeploying parent to provide the court and the deploying parent with thirty days' advance written notice of any change of address and any change of telephone number.

(f) If pendente lite orders of custody or visitation are in place or if there are no existing orders of custody or visitation establishing the terms of parental rights and responsibilities or parent-child contact and it appears that deployment or mobilization is imminent, upon motion by either parent, the court shall expedite a hearing to establish temporary parental rights and responsibilities and parent-child contact to (1) ensure the deploying parent has access to the child; (2) ensure disclosure of information; (3) grant other rights and duties set forth herein; and (4) provide other appropriate relief. Any initial pleading filed to establish parental rights and responsibilities or parent-child contact with a child of a deploying parent shall be so identified at the time of filing by stating in the text of the pleading the specific facts related to deployment.

Sec. 2. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) Nothing in section 1 of this act shall preclude the court from hearing a motion ninety days after the return of the deploying parent for permanent modification of final orders of custody and visitation issued pursuant to section 46b-56, 46b-56a or 46b-61 of the general statutes. The nondeploying parent shall bear the burden of showing that reentry of final orders of custody or visitation, issued pursuant to section 46b-56, 46b-56a or 46b-61 of the general statutes, in effect before the deployment is no longer in the child's best interests. The deployment and any resulting temporary disruption to the child shall not be considered in determining whether there has been a real, substantial and unanticipated change of circumstances in regard to the motion to modify.

(b) Nothing in this section and section 1 of this act shall impair the court's ability to hear an emergency motion to modify final orders of custody or visitation issued pursuant to section 46b-56, 46b-56a or 46b-61 of the general statutes and to grant an ex parte order on such motion prior to ninety days after the deployment ends and upon the filing and service of a verified application for the same which alleges an immediate danger of irreparable harm to the child. Any such motion shall be heard as expeditiously as possible, but in no event more than fifteen days from the date of filing.

This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections:

Section 1

from passage

New section

Sec. 2

from passage

New section

Statement of Purpose:

To protect the best interests of minor children of members of the armed forces by minimizing the disruption caused by deployment.

[Proposed deletions are enclosed in brackets. Proposed additions are indicated by underline, except that when the entire text of a bill or resolution or a section of a bill or resolution is new, it is not underlined.]

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