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A person is considered to have abandoned a child if the person is unwilling to have physical custody of the child; unable, unwilling, or has failed to make appropriate arrangements for the child's care; unable to have physical custody of the child and has not arranged or cannot arrange for the safe and appropriate care ...
When Will the Court Consider a Child's Preference? When a child has reached the age of 14 in Vermont, the child can choose his or her guardian, subject to the court's approval. Children who are younger than 14 don't have the right to select the parent who they would like to have custody.
In fact, on the national average, a female parent is granted around 65% of custody time, whereas a male parent receives around 35%. Numerous States award shared custody, with both female and male parents each granted a full 50% of the time with their children.
The state of Vermont does not have any laws that grant child visitation rights to step-parents, which may make applying for visitation significantly harder.
The state of Vermont does not have any laws that grant child visitation rights to step-parents, which may make applying for visitation significantly harder.
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The child gets to express a preference if the court finds this is in the child's best interest. The court considers the preference if the child is old enough to form an intelligent opinion. There's a presumption a child 12 or above is old enough. The court considers the reasonable preference of a child 12 or older.
In Vermont, the court does consider the child's reasonable wishes when determining which parent wins custody. The judge may take the child's age, maturity, and judgement into consideration when considering the child's custody preference.
A stepparent may be appointed a legal guardian for the child, but the biological parents are still legally and financially responsible for the children. However, if something were to happen to the parents, there is a bit more legal room for the stepparent to have rights.
In most cases, step-parents in joint custody arrangements have fewer rights than biological parents. While step-parents can receive legal rights pertaining to their step-child, doing so often requires navigating a legal arrangement with at least one (and often both) of the child's biological parents.
Unfortunately, step parents do not have any legal rights to their stepchildren, even if you consider them to be your own children. Unless you legally adopted these children as your own, you cannot lay claim to them during your divorce proceedings.

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