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Parenting

Law is important to the health of our community. Parenting is even more important. ClallamCountyBar.com is helping by posting local parenting news and resources. Please send us your activities to post.

First Teacher Zoom activity September 14 2020: Stretches and poses

August 26, 2020

On Monday, September 14, 2020, at 10:00 a.m., physical therapist Cherry Bibler will read aloud and demonstrate stretches and poses to get your bodies moving and flexible.

Please join and share your questions and experiences, and invite your children to ask questions and get involved. A Zoom link will be available at First Teacher’s Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/FirstTeacherPMF.

First Teacher Zoom activities are free to parents and children in Port Angeles, Sequim, Clallam Bay, Neah Bay, Forks, and anywhere in Clallam County. These activities will offered weekly during the coronavirus times. Check back for upcoming sessions. Contact First Teacher if you would like to host a Zoom activity.

First Teacher is a service of the Parenting Matters Foundation.

Law is an important service to the health of our community. Parenting is even more important.

Filed Under: Family Law, Parenting, Parenting Education

First Teacher Zoom session August 31, 2020 -training service dogs

August 25, 2020

On August 31, 2020, at 10:00 a.m., First Teacher will host a Zoom activity for parents and children about training service dogs. Great Futures preschool teacher Kim Rosales and Hadley, her Black Labrador Retriever, will talk about their experience training service dogs. Kim will read out loud, share some experiences, and take questions from everyone participating.

Please join and share your questions and experiences with service dogs, and encourage your children to ask questions and get involved. A Zoom link will be available at First Teacher’s Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/FirstTeacherPMF. Check back for future Zoom activity information.

First Teacher Zoom activities are free to parents and children in Port Angeles, Sequim, Clallam Bay, Neah Bay, Forks, and anywhere in Clallam County. Contact First Teacher if you would like to host a Zoom activity.

First Teacher is a service of the nonprofit Parenting Matters Foundation.

Law is an important service to the health of our community. Parenting is even more important.

Filed Under: Family Law, Parenting, Parenting Education

First Teacher Zoom activities for Clallam parents

August 25, 2020

The First Teacher program is hosting a series of parent-child online activities with Zoom events during the COVID-19 pandemic. These will be free parent-child activities, discussions, and educational events for parents, caregivers, and guardians in Clallam County. They will be weekly, at 10:00 a.m. every Monday. Parents and kids can ask questions via Zoom’s chat feature.

The sessions will usually involve a host reading a story and facilitating a discussion about a topic related to parenting and children’s needs. Topics will range from discussing childhood development to doing physical activities to considering special needs some people in our community have.

Topics in the first part of the series will include preparing preschoolers for kindergarten, exploring sibling rivalry, stretching and poses to promote body awareness and flexibility, and training and working with service dogs.

Topics will be of interest to toddlers, preschoolers, and elementary school children. If you have something you want to share, please consider being a session host. Contact First Teacher with your suggestions.

To join the Zoom session, go to First Teacher’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/FirstTeacherPMF.

The First Teacher Zoom sessions started August 10, 2020, and are expected to continue to run during the pandemic times. Families from Port Angeles, Sequim, Joyce, Neah Bay, Clallam Bay, La Push, Forks, and anywhere in Clallam County are invited.

Core parenting skills

Kids don’t come with manuals. Some parenting skills are innate and don’t need to be learned, but most parenting skills need to be learned or at least developed. The learning process is never ending.

When parents develop their parenting skills they can give their children many things. The act of developing our own skills models for our kids that life is a constant effort to improve ourselves. We can provide our kids a life full of meaning, kindness, flexibility and resilience. Helping our kids to stop and think about their experiences teaches critical thinking and self-control skills. When we learn to accept and acknowledge our children’s feelings, and help them work through their feelings, we help them learn to utilize all of their many neural networks. Developing our own parenting and relationship skills develops, to the fullest extent as possible, our child’s brains.

You can find a list of excellent and easy to use parenting books and resources based on modern neuroscience principles and attachment theory at this page.

Filed Under: Family Law, Parenting, Parenting Education

Patsene Dashiel is new Parenting Matters Foundation director

August 25, 2020

Sequim – Patsene Dashiell is the new Parenting Matters Foundation and First Teacher Executive Director.  She succeeds Executive Director Patty Waite, who has retired from the position.

Parenting Matters is a non-profit organization that serves as a resource for parents of young children.  Parenting Matters oversees the First Teacher program for parents of children from birth to kindergarten and provides parenting classes throughout Clallam County.

The group sends out monthly parenting newsletters with tips and information on parenting, child development, healthy practices and local activities.

It hosts a family resource room at the Sequim unit of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula at 400 W. Fir St. There, children are given free books and members of the community read with children.  The room is currently closed due to COVID-19 restrictions.

The foundation’s board voted Dashiell the new chief of the organization, which oversees the First Teacher program, earlier this year.  Dashiell began her new post in late June.

Dashiell has worked in school communications and community relations in the Sequim and Port Angeles School Districts during the last decade.  Prior to that, she managed the First Teacher room operations for two years. She is the former business owner of Jetxon U.S.A. Ltd. Apparel Sourcing and founder of Project Scrubs, a medical apparel retailer. 

“My first introduction to this program was attending a parenting meeting in 1993 when I had just arrived in Sequim with two daughters under the age of four. At that event, I met other parents who have remained good friends.  I also met Cynthia Martin, whose passion for providing parenting information all these years has benefitted countless families on the Olympic peninsula.”

Patsene Dashiell

Cynthia Martin is the founder of the First Teacher program and initial executive director of Parenting Matters Foundation.  Martin’s column on parenting advice appears weekly in the Sequim Gazette.

“Entering into this position feels very much like coming full circle, I am excited to apply my skills and experience in continuing the good work of this organization to strengthen families in our community.”

Patsene Dashiell

For more information about the group or to sign up for the free parenting newsletter, see www.facebook.com/FirstTeacher PMF.

To reach Patsene Dashiell, email [email protected] or call 360.681.2250.

Filed Under: Bar News, Family Law, Parenting

First Teacher program

August 25, 2020

Who is your child’s first and most important teacher? Yep, it’s you, and the First Teacher program is here to help you. They provide resources for parenting (free to Clallam County residents), including a monthly newsletter. They provide free child development cards which briefly orient parents to the activities and thoughts parents should see their children achieving, and associated parenting tips to promote healthy development and safety.

In response to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, First Teacher is hosting a series of parent-child activities online with Zoom sessions, to talk about parenting and childhood development. These usually involve a host reading a story and talking about a topic.

You can subscribe to the newsletter here.

Contact First Teacher here.

Visit the First Teacher Facebook page at www.facebook.com/FirstTeacherPMF

First Teacher is a program of the Parenting Matters Foundation, a non-profit corporation which works with United Way of Clallam County. The Parenting Matters Foundation was established by Dr. Cynthia Martin.

ClallamCountyBar.com supports the First Teacher concept. Courts can help parents resolve divorce and custody disputes, but not necessarily amicably. Court’s can’t help parents with parenting.

Filed Under: Parenting, Parenting Education

Parenting Plans and COVID-19

April 1, 2020

Governor Inslee’s Stay Home, Stay Healthy declaration does appear to mean Parenting Plans should continue to be followed. If things take a down turn because of the COVID-19 virus, it is possible this may change. This page will be updated as needed.

A number of county courts (not Clallam) have issued orders requiring that Parenting Plans must be followed absent an emergency and a court order allowing a deviation. Parents, of course, can agree to alter parenting plans, which should be confirmed in an email or text message. (Editor: I am not aware of any county court issuing a contrary order.)

The following article is from the Washington Courts web page, http://www.courts.wa.gov/newsinfo/?fa=newsinfo.internetdetail&newsid=35214&fbclid=IwAR23xGOZ6ZLQriM-IznuRGTUWifLLgJxVjt1kRZQAYJpEj02Yms5VmCLlL4

Washington Courts: News and Information

Information on Parenting Plans in Washington State

March 27, 2020

On March 26, Governor Jay Inslee issued the following order addressing parent/child visitation in dependency matters.  That order and the Governor’s messages announcing it clarify that Washington’s “Stay Home, Stay Healthy” order does not prevent compliance with private parenting plans for residents of Washington State.   

Further, “the governor encourages parents who are co-parenting under a parenting plan to communicate with one another during this difficult time in order to both maintain family relationships and to protect the best interests and health of each child.”  Further information can be found online at www.governor.wa.gov.

For additional information on co-parenting during this difficult time, a special resource page of the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts (AFCC) can be found at www.afccnet.org/Coronavirus.  The AFCC and the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers has also published seven guidelines for parents who are divorced/separated and sharing custody of children during the COVID 19 Pandemic.  

Both links and additional information can be found on the Washington Courts’ dedicated COVID Response web page at www.courts.wa.gov/COVID19 

Filed Under: Bar News, COVID-19, Family Law, Judicial matters, Parenting

Washington’s new Grandparent’s (and Relative’s) Rights law: Senate Bill 5598

April 1, 2018

Mark K. Baumann, custody and divorce lawyer
Mark Baumann, Family Law litigation and counseling

By Mark K. Baumann, J.D., © 2018

Effective June 7, 2018, Washington has a new law that allows for grandparents and other relatives by blood or marriage (including step-family members) the potential chance to gain visitation rights with a child who is not their own biological child. The non-parent must prove they have a strong relationship with the child and that the child will suffer harm if visitation is not granted. (Please note, as of January 1, 2021, Washington has another new law for nonparental custody. The law for visitation described in this article is still valid. The new custody law, called minor guardianship, is described here.)

The new law is complex, requires the non-parent to prove certain matters, and only provides the non-parent one chance to request visitation (known as the “one and done” clause). The law does not eliminate a parent’s strong rights under the U.S. constitution to parent their child. This means that the non-parent asking for visitation has a high burden of proof to show a they had a strong relationship, and that the child or children will suffer harm. Proving a legally sufficient amount of harm will likely be a challenging issue in most cases.

Some of the provisions of the new law are summarized below. To see the full text of Senate Bill 5598, click here.

Is the law just for grandparents?

No. The law allows several other types of people to request visitation rights, including people related by blood or marriage. These include:

  • Any blood or half-blood family members, such as first and second cousins, nephews, nieces, and great and great-great grandparents;
  • Step-family members may request visitation rights, including stepfathers, stepmothers, stepbrothers, stepsisters;
  • Family members of an adopted child;
  • A spouse or family member of any person allowed by the law to request visitation;
  • If the child is a Native American tribal member, any person defined by the tribe as an extended family member

What must be proven in order to get visitation rights?

If the parent objects to visitation, the court must presume that the parent’s reasons are valid and in the best interest of the child. The non-parent must overcome this presumption by proving with “clear and convincing evidence” the following;

  • That they are allowed to request rights (must be in the list above);
  • That they have an ongoing and substantial relationship with the child, which means the relationship with the child has existed for two years (or half of the child’s life if the child is less than two years old), has involved interaction, companionship, mutuality of interest and affection, has been without expectation of financial compensation, and there has been a shared expectation of and desire for an ongoing relationship;
  • That the child is likely to suffer harm or a substantial risk of harm if visitation is not allowed;
  • That visitation is in the best interest of the child or children. To prove this, the court must consider 12 factors listed in the statute. These include factors such as the quality of the relationships between the child and parent, child and non-parent, and parent and non-parent, the parent-time sharing arrangements, the good vs. bad faith of all parties, and any history of physical, sexual or emotional abuse or neglect by any party involved in the child’s life.

 What kind of “harm” must be proven?

This can be a complicated legal question. Certainly, provable physical and sexual abuse and neglect constitute harm. Emotional, psychological, and attachment harm are common in our culture, but they can be harder to prove, especially in a way that meets the “burden of proof” required by a court of law.

There are some important procedural requirements

A person who wants to request visitation may only do so only one time. If the request is denied by the court, the person may not ask again.

The request must be make in the county where the child(ren) primarily live. Notice of the legal action must be given properly to the biological parents and anyone else having legal custody or court ordered visitation time.

The standard of proof is high. That is, the person requesting visitation must show by clear and convincing evidence that they have met all of the requirements of the law. This standard is not as high as “beyond a reasonable doubt”, but is higher than what would be required in a custody dispute in a regular divorce case (by a preponderance of the evidence).

If visitation is granted, it does not mean the non-parent gains the rights and duties of a parent.

Attorney fees may be awarded. Petitioners, the person asking to establish visitation rights, must pay for the parent’s attorney fees up front, unless it is unjust to do so based on the financial situation of all the parties involved.

The petitioner shall be required to pay all transportation costs involved with having visitation.

Necessary technical steps to take

The person asking for visitation must file a petition with affidavits to meet the legal requirements. The court must review the petition and affidavits for sufficiency. At this initial review, the court may not grant visitation rights. If they are sufficient, a hearing is then held.

Under the current version of the statute, it appears that a trial is not necessary after the initial hearing to allow or deny visitation.

A visitation order may be changed, but the person asking for the change must show new facts and a substantial change in circumstances, and the requested change is necessary for the best interest of the children. Requests to change a visitation order must be made to the same court that issued the visitation order.

Highly advisable steps to take

Because the non-parent only gets one chance to ask for visitation rights, and because the legal standard is very high, it is important to seek legal advice before filing a petition. Preparation for a non-parental case will be very important in all cases. If you don’t seek legal advice and lose the hearing for visitation, it may be possible to ask the court to reconsider, but a motion to reconsider, always difficult to win, must be drafted, filed, and served within 10 days of the court’s ruling.

If the court finds the petition was brought in bad faith, the non-parent (petitioner) will be required to pay attorney fees to the parent.

Limits on parental rights

A parent’s rights to visitation (or custody) of a child may be limited and restricted, but only if the court finds substantial issues with their parenting or with the parenting of their live-in partner, such as: extended abandonment; physical, sexual, or a pattern of emotional abuse of a child; a history of domestic violence; assault or sexual assault which causes grievous bodily harm or the fear of such harm; conviction of certain sex offenses.

Of note, the current version of the statute does not include any specific limitations based on a parent’s drug use. Drug use may be relevant if it leads to neglect or abuse.

Impact on existing non-parental right laws

How this new statute will impact existing laws that allow for non-parental rights is unclear and may not be known for several years. It appears that this law does not eliminate any other major legal methods a non-parent may request custody or visitation rights. However, the new law does repeal RCW 26.09.240, which is a rarely used statute that allows non-parents to intervene in divorce/custody cases.

Is Washington the correct state for jurisdiction?

The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act applies, so the child(ren) must have resided in Washington for the last six months. There are some exceptions to this requirement in unusual and domestic violence situations.

Will this law pass constitutional muster?

Grandparent’s rights laws (non-parental visitation and custody) have been difficult to implement because of the high risk the law will interfere with a parent’s rights under the U.S. Constitution. Similar to gun rights under the second amendment, The U.S. Supreme Court has previously stricken down many such laws. This new law appears to be designed to address the Supreme Court’s concerns, but whether or not those concerns are adequately addressed will likely be fought in court in the years to come. It may be the new law will eventually be completely stricken down, or be modified by court rulings or modifications to the statute. It may also be that some judges will narrowly interpret the law, that is, make it harder for non-parents to prove their case, in order to avoid constitutional challenges on appeal.

Procedural history notes

The law was passed as Senate Bill 5598, and will be codified in the Revised Code of Washington under a new chapter under title 26 (number yet to be determined). The law is currently known as Session Law Chapter 183, 2018 Laws. The companion House Bill was HB2117. To see the full text of SB 5598, click here.

This article was written by Mark Baumann, and does not reflect the opinion of the Clallam County Bar Association. This article does not provide legal advice. Anyone interested in pursuing non-parent visitation rights is advised to contact an attorney. Family law attorneys who practice in Clallam County can be found here.

Mark Baumann has practiced law in Clallam County since 1988. His practice focuses on family law, domestic violence, and applying childhood development science and psychology to parenting matters and conflict management.

Filed Under: Bar News, Family Law, Litigation, Parenting

Parenting Class: Play and Learn

January 11, 2017

When:
Parents of infants and toddlers: 9:00-10:30 a.m.
Parents of pre-schoolers: 11:00-12:30 p.m.

Where: First Step, 323 E. 6th Street, Port Angeles, WA

Infants and Toddlers:
This play group will serve primarily infants and toddlers and their parents and/or caregivers. Babies and toddlers learn through playtime, story time, games and music activities with thier loved ones. January 4th-March 15th.
(This class is worth one credit through Peninsula College)

Pre-Schoolers:
This play group will serve preschool age children and their parents and/or caregivers. Age appropriate learning activities are provided through art, music, song and dance, circle and story time, literacy, science and many more opportunities for families to work hands on together. January 4th-March 15th.
(This class is worth one credit through Peninsula College)

Contact Kelsi at 912-2248 for more information.

Filed Under: Parenting, Parenting Education

Webinar with Dr. Tina Payne Bryson on No Drama Discipline

December 1, 2016

Please join the staff at the law office of Mark Baumann to watch a webinar with Dr. Tina Payne Bryson: Going Against the Grain When it Comes to Changing Problematic Behavior: An IPNB approach to shifting the culture of parenting, education and clinical practice.

Dr. Payne Bryson co-authored the parenting books The Whole Brain Child and No Drama Discipline with Dr. Daniel Siegel who is a child psychiatrist, developer of the field of Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB), and author of numerous other books. These practical and parent-focused parenting books are based on IPNB foundational fields such as attachment, human development, neuroscience, biology, and physiology.

The webinar is hosted by the Global Association for Interpersonal Neurobiology Studies (GAINS), http://mindgains.org.

Feel free to bring your own lunch and join us for a post-webinar discussion/sharing about attachment and attachment-based parenting techniques. Mark Baumann, J.D., has completed one-year trainings in the attachment measures the Strange Situation Protocol (SSP) and the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI), has a graduate certificate in Interpersonal Neurobiology, and he uses the concepts from attachment and IPNB in his family law practice on a daily basis. Mark frequently utilizes The Whole Brain Child as a workbook to help his clients enhance their parenting skills, and has incorporated it into his Targeted Integrative Parenting Strategies (TIPS) coaching model for therapists and parenting professionals working with divorcing clients in high conflict cases.

Who should come: Lawyers, therapists, parenting professionals, GAL’s, educators
Where: Law office of Mark Baumann, 1337 W. 5th Street, Port Angeles WA
When: Webinar, Monday, December 5, 2016, 11:00 a.m. to noon. Post webinar discussion, noon to 1:00 p.m.
Price: Free
RSVP to office @ markbaumann.com (delete spaces before and after @ symbol), space is limited
No CLE/CE, no host, yes coffee and water, yes fun
(Lawyers may be able to get CLE credit applying on their own, the form to apply for approval of a CLE activity is available at this page: http://wsba.org/Licensing-and-Lawyer-Conduct/MCLE/Members)

Filed Under: Bar News, CLE, Family Law, Mental health, Parenting, Parenting Education

Internet/Social Media Safety & Digital Literacy for Parents

October 20, 2016

When: Wednesday, November 2, 2016, 6:00pm-8:00pm
Where: Sequim High School Auditorium

Internationally recognized safety expert and speaker Darren Laur is coming to Sequim! Don’t miss the chance to hear his presentation and learn ways to help keep your children safe while using the Internet and Social Networking. Parents of Teens, Tweens, Younger Children and Interested Community Members are welcome to attend!

Topics to be covered include:

• The Internet and Social Networking
• What our kids are doing on-line
• Chatrooms, Ims, SMS/MMS and how to stay safer using them
• Cellphone/smartphone and webcam safety
• How students are placing their privacy at risk on-line
• Your “digital dossier” and how to protect it
• How to secure your Social Network
• Understanding everything you post online is public, permanent and searchable
• Dangers of screen names and profiles
• Digital peer aggression and what can be done to stop it
• Sexting, its consequences, and what can be done to stop it
• The law specific to texting and digital peer agression
• Social engineering and how students are falling prey to this vulnerability
• When to be concerned as a parent
• Internet filtering pros/cons
• The threats of internet pornography
• Steps to keep kids safe online
• Plus a whole lot more…!

Darren Laur, co-ownerand head instructor of Personal Protection Systems, Inc. Is an internationally recognized safety expert, published award winning author, and highly sought after speaker. Darren is deeply immersed in social media and has taught digital safety for the past 12 years.

Sponsored by: Prevention Works! A Community Coalition of Clallam County

Filed Under: Family Law, Parenting, Parenting Education

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