Vermont Statutes
Chapter 11 - Annulment and Divorce
§ 683. Temporary modification

§ 683. Temporary modification
(a) Upon motion of a deploying or nondeploying parent, the court shall enter a temporary order modifying parental rights and responsibilities or parent-child contact during the period of deployment or mobilization when:
(1) a military parent who has shared, sole, or primary legal or physical parental rights and responsibilities for a child or who has parent-child contact pursuant to an existing court order has received notice from military leadership that he or she will deploy or mobilize in the near future; and
(2) the deployment or mobilization would have a material effect upon his or her ability to exercise such parental rights and responsibilities or parent-child contact.
(b) Motions for modification because of deployment shall be heard by the court as expeditiously as possible, and shall be a priority for this purpose.
(c)(1) All temporary modification orders shall include a specific transition schedule to facilitate a return to the predeployment order over the shortest reasonable time period after the deployment ends, taking into consideration the child’s best interests.
(2) The temporary order shall set a date certain for the end of deployment and the start of the transition period. If deployment is extended, the temporary order shall remain in effect during the extended deployment, and the transition schedule shall take effect at the end of the extended deployment. In that case, the nondeployed parent shall notify the court of the extended deployment. Failure of the nondeployed parent to notify the court in accordance with this subdivision shall not prejudice the deployed parent’s right to return to the prior order once the temporary order expires as provided in subdivision (3) of this subsection.
(3) The temporary order shall expire upon the completion of the transition, and the prior order for parental rights and responsibilities and parent-child contact shall be in effect.
(d) Upon motion of the deploying parent, the court may delegate his or her parent-child contact rights, or a portion of them, to a family member, a person with whom the deploying parent cohabits, or another person with a close and substantial relationship to the minor child or children for the duration of the deployment, upon a finding that it is in the child’s best interests. Such delegated contact does not create separate rights to parent-child contact for a person other than a parent once the temporary order is no longer in effect.
(e) A temporary modification order issued pursuant to this section shall designate the deploying parent’s parental rights and responsibilities for and parent-child contact with a child during a period of leave granted to the deploying parent, in the best interests of the child.
(f) A temporary order issued under this section may require any of the following if the court finds that it is in the best interests of the child:
(1) The nondeploying parent shall make the child reasonably available to the deploying parent when the deploying parent has leave.
(2) The nondeploying parent shall facilitate opportunities for telephonic, electronic mail, and other such contact between the deploying parent and the child during deployment.
(3) The deploying parent shall provide timely information regarding his or her leave schedule to the nondeploying parent. Actual leave dates are subject to change with little notice due to military necessity and shall not be used by the nondeploying parent to prevent parent-child contact.
(g) A court order modifying a previous order for parental rights and responsibilities or parent-child contact because of deployment shall specify that the deployment is the basis for the order, and it shall be entered by the court as a temporary order. The order shall further require the nondeploying parent to provide the court and the deploying parent with 30 days’ advance written notice of any change of address and any change of telephone number. (Added 2009, No. 69 (Adj. Sess.), § 2, eff. March 3, 2010.)

Structure Vermont Statutes

Vermont Statutes

Title 15 - Domestic Relations

Chapter 11 - Annulment and Divorce

§ 511. Void civil marriages; consanguinity, affinity, or living spouse

§ 512. Voidable civil marriages—Grounds for annulment generally

§ 513. Party under age of 16 years

§ 514. Party is mentally incapable of entering into civil marriage

§ 515. Party physically incapacitated

§ 516. Force or fraud

§ 517. Custody and maintenance of issue

§ 518. Declarations of parties not sufficient proof

§ 519. Decree of nullity

§ 520. Children of civil marriage annulled

§ 551. Grounds for divorce from bond of matrimony

§ 552. Reconciliation

§ 553. Collusion

§ 554. Decrees nisi

§ 555. Legal separation

§ 558. Woman allowed to take maiden name

§ 559. Change of children’s names

§ 560. Remarriage

§ 562. Recrimination

§ 563. Condonation

§ 591. Jurisdiction and power of courts

§ 592. Residence

§ 593. Place for bringing action; caption of divorce action

§ 594. Representation and testimony of child

§ 594a. Temporary relief

§ 603. Contempt

§ 604. Costs on motion to revise

§ 606. Action to recover maintenance, child support, and suit money; sanction for noncompliance

§ 607. Action by attorney to recover suit money

§ 631. Generally

§ 632. Jurisdiction; guardian ad litem for libelee with a mental incapacity

§ 633. Duty of State’s Attorney

§ 634. Alimony; distribution of property; care and custody of children

§ 635. Support of defendant

§ 636. Filing certified copies of orders with court which committed party with a mental condition or psychiatric disability

§ 637. Costs and expenses

§ 650. Legislative findings and purpose

§ 653. Definitions

§ 654. Support guideline

§ 655. Total child support obligation

§ 656. Computation of parental support obligation

§ 656a. Adjustment for additional dependents

§ 657. Shared or split physical custody

§ 658. Support

§ 659. Child support order

§ 660. Modification

§ 661. Child support maintenance supplement

§ 662. Income statements

§ 663. Support orders; required contents

§ 664. Definitions

§ 665. Rights and responsibilities order; best interests of the child

§ 665a. Conditions of parent-child contact in cases involving domestic violence

§ 666. Agreements between parents

§ 667. Evidence

§ 668. Modification of order

§ 668a. Enforcement of visitation

§ 669. Guardian ad litem

§ 670. Access to records

§ 681. Definitions

§ 682. Final order; modification

§ 683. Temporary modification

§ 684. Emergency motion to modify; permanent modification

§ 685. Testimony and evidence

§ 686. No existing final order

§ 687. Duty to cooperate and disclose information

§ 688. Failure to exercise parent-child contact rights

§ 689. Attorney’s fees

§ 711. Sale of property

§ 712. Whole of real estate may be sold

§ 713. Execution

§ 714. Disposition of proceeds

§ 715. Subsequent default

§ 751. Property settlement

§ 752. Maintenance

§ 753. Conveyance of realty after legal separation

§ 754. Judgment effective to convey real estate

§ 755. Judge out of office may sign judgment for maintenance

§ 756. Court may order money paid to trustees

§ 757. Security for payment

§ 758. Revision of judgment relating to maintenance

§ 762. Insurance benefits

§ 780. Definitions

§ 781. Withholding wages upon issuance or modification of support order after July 1, 1990

§ 782. Expedited procedure for wage withholding

§ 783. Wage withholding; notice and hearing

§ 785. Wage withholding orders

§ 786. Obligee’s responsibility

§ 787. Employer’s responsibility; compensation

§ 788. Parent’s responsibility

§ 789. Wage withholding exemptions; priorities and limitations

§ 790. Employee protected; penalty

§ 791. Arrearage judgment lien

§ 792. Lottery offset

§ 793. Credit reporting

§ 794. Tax offsets

§ 795. Licenses or governmental contracts

§ 796. Assets held in escrow

§ 797. Civil penalties

§ 798. Enforcement of child support orders; suspension of licenses

§ 799. Trustee process

§ 800. Contract with sheriff for service of civil process