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Illinois Affidavit accepting Responsibility To Supervise Visitation Under Court Order

State:
Illinois
Control #:
IL-46
Format:
PDF
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affidavit accepting Responsibility To Supervise Visitation Under Court Order

The Illinois Affidavit Accepting Responsibility To Supervise Visitation Under Court Order is a document that is signed by an adult, nominated by the court, who agrees to take responsibility to supervise visits between a parent and a child in accordance with the court's orders. The adult must be a neutral third party and not related to either the parent or the child. The affidavit outlines the responsibilities of the adult and the expectations of the court in supervising the visits. There are two types of Illinois Affidavit Accepting Responsibility To Supervise Visitation Under Court Order: the Standard Affidavit and the Expedited Affidavit. The Standard Affidavit is used in cases where the court has ordered that visits be supervised, and the Expedited Affidavit is used in cases where the court has ordered that visits be supervised on an emergency basis. Both affidavits must be signed by the adult supervisor, the parent, and the child (if they are 14 years of age or older).

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FAQ

At a supervised visitation time, a third party attends with the child. That party must observe and keep the child safe while the child spends time with their parent. These visits take place in the parent's home or in a public place. Sometimes the place must receive court approval.

But, the parents have to pay for the guardian ad litem usually based on a proportion of their respective incomes. The guardian ad litem gathers information via interviews and home visits and can testify to the judge about what they've learned and even provide an opinion as to what the judge should do.

A custodial parent can't unilaterally restrict the other parent's visitation rights unless it's an emergency situation and necessary to protect the child. Visitation isn't for the parents, it's for the children and the court's primary concern is their welfare.

Under Illinois law, supervised visitation can be ordered when unsupervised ?visitation would seriously endanger the child's physical, mental, moral, or emotional health.? The parent asking for supervised visitation must prove that the other parent would endanger the child in some way.

3-4-4-3 schedule: This is an equal parenting time schedule. First, one parent gets three days, and the other parent gets four. Then the schedule flips. Every extended weekend schedule: This schedule gives one parent 60 percent of the time with the child and the other parent 40 percent.

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Illinois Affidavit accepting Responsibility To Supervise Visitation Under Court Order