Im reaching out to this board because I lurk too much and yall know what youre talking about.
My situation is... Divorced when LO was 3 month, her BD came and saw her when she turned one and has no plans to do it again. He occasionally wants to Skype her and then it goes away for awhile. Our CO says I have full physical, joint legal and visitation is upon mutual agreement. She turns 2 this month.
I have a huge fear of me dying and he gaining custody of her and the older she gets the more this is her life here. Right after our separation I mentioned severing his rights and he didn't turn it down.. financially I wasn't in a spot to do that but now I might be.
TIA

Single mama - beautiful baby - learning to live
Re: Im back... severing parental rights?
Unless there is more to the story I would not do it. Who would you want to have custody should something happen?
There's not a whole lot more to the story and we actually get along ok. If something happened to her I'd want my mother or her god parents to gain custody.
Is there some other legal option I have? This isn't something I'm trying to rush, I just want to work on the long term plan.
If there are no other reasons, I would simply as him to approve of the godparents gaining custody should you pass away. That he would still have visitation/contact and to make that very clear in your will.
Do you not live near each other? Does he give reasons for not wanting to visit?
My DH has a younger cousin whose daughter is the primary custody of her maternal grandmother and her biological father is the NCP, the biological mother had no legal custody. The grandmother took her teenage daughter to court for this and they agreed upon it through mediation. If grandmother does our becomes disabled, child goes to BD, not BM.
Your BD also might be able to sign a power of attorney regarding custody to change guardianship of the child where his name is concerned. You should consult an attorney
A note on beneficiaries. Making your child a beneficiary gives that money to their custodial parent. I'm not saying your BD is like this but it's motivation for some to take custody. By listing a parent or a power of attorney you could avoid that.
Has there been any talk in establishing visitation?
If you are on good terms I would try talking to him about it.
What I tell clients with that sort of plan ("I'll give it to SoandSo who knows what I want") is this: (1) SoandSo is then under no legal obligation to use the money how you want. You may trust SoandSo, but people do strange things when they have access to lots and lots of money and no oversight. (2)SoandSo may have perfectly wonderful and honorable intentions, but things happen. SoandSo can be sued (and thus that money becomes subject to her creditors); die, get divorced; whatever - and suddenly that money is in play in her estate or with her estranged husband.
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