Parenting Plans
A parenting plan is supposed to protect your child's routine and your time together. But when the other parent keeps showing up late, skipping exchanges, or ignoring the schedule entirely, telling the court "it keeps happening" isn't enough. You need documented proof that shows a pattern - not just a single frustrating weekend.
- What we look into: parenting-plan compliance, schedule deviations, late exchanges, no-shows, and whether the other parent is consistently following the court order.
- Also useful for: relocation or move-away disputes, denied parenting time, repeated holiday schedule violations, and situations where a deceptive opposing party is twisting the facts to make you look like the problem.
- Evidence focus: we track exchanges and timing across multiple dates to show whether the order is being followed - or whether the violations form a pattern the court needs to see.
- Goal: build a factual violation timeline that supports enforcement, contempt motions, or plan modification.
- What you get: exchange logs, chronology reports, and evidence summaries ready for hearings.
- What we won't do: harassing contact or anything that conflicts with active court orders.