New Study May Help Children of Divorce Retain Bonds with Both Parents
This column first appeared in the Pasadena Star-News & Affiliated Papers
(6/5/03).
http://www.pasadenastarnews.com
http://www.glennsacks.com/new_study_case.htm
New Study, Case May Help California Children of Divorce Retain Bonds with Both Parents
By Glenn Sacks
One of the greatest tragedies children of divorce in California face is the
way courts allow custodial parents to move hundreds or even thousands of
miles away after divorce, damaging or sometimes destroying the bonds
between children and their noncustodial parents. However, new research and
a case pending before the California Supreme Court may change that.
In the case of In re: Marriage of Lamusga, a Contra Costa County custodial
mother seeks to move out of state with her two young boys and her new
husband. The boys' father, who enjoys joint legal but not joint physical
custody, seeks to block the move, arguing that it is not in his children's
best interest because it will damage their relationship with him. The
mother, who first tried to move to Ohio, now seeks to relocate to Arizona
in order to provide her new husband with better career opportunities.
Since the 1996 Burgess decision California custodial parents, usually
mothers, have had the presumptive right to move. However, according to
Arizona State University researcher Sanford Braver, this decision and
others like it were made in a "vacuum" of information on the long-term
effects of move-aways.
Braver and his ASU colleagues Ira Ellman and William Fabricius have begun
to fill this vacuum with a newly released study which shows that move-aways
are correlated with damaging long-term consequences for children. The
study, published in the June 2003 issue of the Journal of Family
Psychology, found that among 14 variables related to a young adult's
overall well-being, move-away status was correlated to significant,
negative impact in 11 of them.
These negative consequences include: greater inner turmoil and distress
from parents' divorce; health problems, particularly in the case of girls;
more hostility in interpersonal relationships; negative feelings towards
their parents; greater conflict between divorced parents; and greater
problems in general life satisfaction and personal and emotional
adjustment. Not surprisingly, financial support, including financial
support for college expenses given voluntarily by the noncustodial parent,
was significantly higher when children grew up within a one hour drive of
their noncustodial parent.
The study, conducted from a pool of 2,067 college students enrolled in an
introductory level class at a large university, may even understate the
damage of move-aways. As the survey's authors point out, many of the
children most damaged by divorce and alienation from their noncustodial
parents were not measured because they probably never made it as far as
college.
The study's results also indict noncustodial fathers who move away from
their children, finding that such move-aways are also correlated with
long-term negative consequences for children. Noncustodial fathers often
justify their moves by arguing that the custodial mother is already denying
them access to the children anyway, or that these moves are necessitated by
their child support obligations. The second claim, however, is no more
legitimate than custodial mothers' claims that moving helps them financially.
While the study's findings on move-aways are new, studies documenting the
disastrous effects of fatherlessness on children are not. Research shows
that the largest single factor in predicting whether a child will graduate
high school, attend college, become involved in crime or drugs, or get
pregnant before age 18 is the presence (or absence) of a father in the
child's life. Studies show that this remains true even after adjustments
for household income.
The Burgess decision and others like it ignore the fact that children need
more from their fathers than a check in the mail--they need the love,
guidance and strength which fathers provide. Allowing a custodial parent to
move away often removes one of the two people in the world who love a child
the most from that child's life. How could that be in a child's best interest?