Unless the court orders otherwise, a Parenting Plan is required to be filed in family law actions. Whether you are a party to an annulment, divorce, legal separation or paternity action, any time that legal custody or physical placement is contested, you will have to file a parenting plan.
You need to give the court and the other party notice of what you are proposing for your child. You must focus on legal custody decisions and physical placement of your child.
If you fail to timely file a parenting plan you may suffer significant consequences. If you do not timely file, the parenting plan the law states that you actually waive your right to contest the other party’s parenting plan. I cannot think of any more motivating reason to timely file a plan. If you do not file a parenting plan timely a court may adopt all aspects of the other party’s parenting plan.
When we work with clients in family law actions involving children, one of the first things we do is to help our clients complete and file a parenting plan.
A parenting plan must have purpose and meaning. This requires, you, as the parent to think critically about what is best for your child and to come up with a program that serves your child’s best interests.
We encourage you to close your eyes and free your mind for six minutes. Use that time to think about your child, and focus on simple questions, such as who, what, where, when, why and how. Your goal as a parent is to develop a great program for your child. A program that makes sense.
We will help you to complete the parenting plan by answering all the specific questions and topics that are necessary for the completion of the plan. We cannot stress how important it is for you to include detail in your plan. Courts will respect and give more credibility to a proposed parenting plan that is well thought out and detailed. The plans that are general, that include language like, “50-50” or “shared” or “we will figure out holidays later” simply are not specific. If you generalize, you are telling the court that you have not thought about it, and possibly that you do not care.
We find that our clients care about their children. Our job as divorce and child custody attorneys is to help you detail your parenting plan so that your children’s best interests are served.
One of our favorite things to do as divorce and child custody attorneys is to help our clients write, review and refine a parenting plan. We help you to get it right and to get it filed on time.
I have included a link to the proposed parenting plan form that Wisconsin courts use. Use the link to read the parenting plan form so that you understand all the questions and topics covered.
I am also including the Wisconsin Statute Section that lays out the law concerning parenting plans and the requirements of a parenting plan.
Wisconsin Statute Section 767.41(1m) states as follows:
(1m) Parenting plan. Unless the court orders otherwise, in an action for annulment, divorce, or legal separation, an action to determine paternity, or an action under s.
767.001 (1) (e),
767.501,
767.804 (2), or
767.805 (3), in which legal custody or physical placement is contested, a party seeking sole or joint legal custody or periods of physical placement shall file a parenting plan with the court if the court waives the requirement to attend mediation under s.
767.405 (8)
(b) or if the parties attend mediation and the mediator notifies the court under s.
767.405 (12)
(b) that the parties have not reached an agreement. Unless the court orders otherwise, the parenting plan shall be filed within 60 days after the court waives the mediation requirement or the mediator notifies the court that no agreement has been reached. Except for cause shown, a party required to file a parenting plan under this subsection who does not timely file a parenting plan waives the right to object to the other party's parenting plan. A parenting plan shall provide information about the following questions:
NOTE: Sub. (1m) (intro.) is shown as amended eff. 8-1-20 by 2019 Wis. Act 95. Prior to 8-1-20 it reads:
(1m) Parenting plan. Unless the court orders otherwise, in an action for annulment, divorce, or legal separation, an action to determine paternity, or an action under s. 767.001 (1) (e), 767.501, or 767.805 (3), in which legal custody or physical placement is contested, a party seeking sole or joint legal custody or periods of physical placement shall file a parenting plan with the court if the court waives the requirement to attend mediation under s. 767.405 (8) (b) or if the parties attend mediation and the mediator notifies the court under s. 767.405 (12) (b) that the parties have not reached an agreement. Unless the court orders otherwise, the parenting plan shall be filed within 60 days after the court waives the mediation requirement or the mediator notifies the court that no agreement has been reached. Except for cause shown, a party required to file a parenting plan under this subsection who does not timely file a parenting plan waives the right to object to the other party's parenting plan.
A parenting plan shall provide information about the following questions:
(a) What legal custody or physical placement the parent is seeking.
(b) Where the parent lives currently and where the parent intends to live during the next 2 years. If there is evidence that the other parent engaged in interspousal battery, as described under s.
940.19 or
940.20 (1m), or domestic abuse, as defined in s.
813.12 (1) (am), with respect to the parent providing the parenting plan, the parent providing the parenting plan is not required to disclose the specific address but only a general description of where he or she currently lives and intends to live during the next 2 years.
(c) Where the parent works and the hours of employment. If there is evidence that the other parent engaged in interspousal battery, as described under s.
940.19 or
940.20 (1m), or domestic abuse, as defined in s.
813.12 (1) (am), with respect to the parent providing the parenting plan, the parent providing the parenting plan is not required to disclose the specific address but only a general description of where he or she works.
(d) Who will provide any necessary child care when the parent cannot and who will pay for the child care.
(e) Where the child will go to school.
(f) What doctor or health care facility will provide medical care for the child.
(g) How the child's medical expenses will be paid.
(h) What the child's religious commitment will be, if any.
(i) Who will make decisions about the child's education, medical care, choice of child care providers and extracurricular activities.
(j) How the holidays will be divided.
(k) What the child's summer schedule will be.
(L) Whether and how the child will be able to contact the other parent when the child has physical placement with the parent providing the parenting plan, and what electronic communication, if any, the parent is seeking.
(Lm) Whether equipment for providing electronic communication is reasonably available to both parents.
(m) How the parent proposes to resolve disagreements related to matters over which the court orders joint decision making.
(n) What child support, family support, maintenance or other income transfer there will be.
(o) If there is evidence that either party engaged in interspousal battery, as described under s.
940.19 or
940.20 (1m), or domestic abuse, as defined in s.
813.12 (1) (am), with respect to the other party, how the child will be transferred between the parties for the exercise of physical placement to ensure the safety of the child and the parties.
Contact Hawley, Kaufman & Kautzer, S.C. for your family law needs.