Child Contact Centres


An article in the 11 November 2014 Solicitors Journal (www.solicitorsjournal.com) called “Child contact centres perform a valuable function” is well worth a look.

They are closed centres with each parent entering from separate secure entrances to keep them apart.

These facilities are applicable where there is a drug or alcohol problem, typically with the male absent parent.

Fathers and the children often hate them because they are not a good place to have quality contact.  Nevertheless the advice to the absent parent, typically the father, is to accept any humiliation and condition to maintain contact with the child.

Things will work out.  As the child gets older he or she will not want to go to a contact centre and will make a big fuss about not going to a theme park or the zoo.  So stick in there.

These contact centres are often used to frustrate contact by the main caring parent but with careful use of tactics and recording events on a chronology, matters can be turned around and contact advanced.

As always expert legal advice should be taken at an early stage.

An article in the 11 November 2014 Solicitors Journal (www.solicitorsjournal.com) called “Child contact centres perform a valuable function” is well worth a look.

They are closed centres with each parent entering from separate secure entrances to keep them apart.

These facilities are applicable where there is a drug or alcohol problem, typically with the male absent parent.

Fathers and the children often hate them because they are not a good place to have quality contact.  Nevertheless the advice to the absent parent, typically the father, is to accept any humiliation and condition to maintain contact with the child.

Things will work out.  As the child gets older he or she will not want to go to a contact centre and will make a big fuss about not going to a theme park or the zoo.  So stick in there.

These contact centres are often used to frustrate contact by the main caring parent but with careful use of tactics and recording events on a chronology, matters can be turned around and contact advanced.

As always expert legal advice should be taken at an early stage.

An article in the 11 November 2014 Solicitors Journal (www.solicitorsjournal.com) called “Child contact centres perform a valuable function” is well worth a look.

They are closed centres with each parent entering from separate secure entrances to keep them apart.

These facilities are applicable where there is a drug or alcohol problem, typically with the male absent parent.

Fathers and the children often hate them because they are not a good place to have quality contact.  Nevertheless the advice to the absent parent, typically the father, is to accept any humiliation and condition to maintain contact with the child.

Things will work out.  As the child gets older he or she will not want to go to a contact centre and will make a big fuss about not going to a theme park or the zoo.  So stick in there.

These contact centres are often used to frustrate contact by the main caring parent but with careful use of tactics and recording events on a chronology, matters can be turned around and contact advanced.

As always expert legal advice should be taken at an early stage.