Domestic Relations Division ItemCost Divorce - Children $300.00 Counterclaim - Children $250.00 Divorce - No Children $200.00 Counterclaim - No Children $200.0010 more rows
What are the most common co-parenting schedules parents use? Week on week off - Alternative weeks. The 2-2-5 Plan. Alternating weeks with a visit in between. Alternative weekends. School holidays.
Two consecutive overnights every other week. An additional three- to six-hour period or overnight may be added each week. The parents share time with the child during alternating 7-day periods. A midweek overnight period is optional with the parent who does not have parenting time that week.
A 70/30 child custody schedule grants the primary custodial parent significantly more time (70%) with the child than the other parent gets (30%). It also allows both adults to be involved with their child's life while minimizing how often a child must move from one parent's home to the other's residence.
Joint custody schedules Remember that Ohio encourages joint residential custody, as long as it benefits the children involved. Below are examples of joint custody schedules. The alternating weeks schedule has your child spend seven days with one parent, then seven days with the other.
Bring your completed, signed and notarized forms to the Clerk of Court. The Domestic Relations Clerk of Court is located on the ground floor of the Cuyahoga County Court House at 1 W. Lakeside Ave. Give the clerk your forms to file.
Below are the basic steps to file for shared parenting in Ohio: One parent must file a Complaint requesting the court enter a shared parenting decree. Both parents must meet and agree on the terms of a shared parenting plan, preferably with the support of a qualified family law attorney.
It's a written document that outlines how you and your co-parent will spend time with, care for, and make decisions about your children after your divorce or separation. The parenting plan is an agreement between you and your co-parent, but after the court signs off on it, it becomes a binding court order.