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Supervised Child Contact Is State-Imposed Parental Alienation

 A boy and father from Honduras are taken into custody by U.S. Border Patrol agents near the U.S.-Mexico Border near Mission, Texas, on June 12, 2018. (John Moore/Getty Images)

Commentary

re’s a thriving multi-million-dollar business at the heart of our family law system, which provides a classic example of how women’s advocacy groups have sewn up our justice system and are making life hell for many men.

children’s contact services were designed to provide supervised access between kids and risky parents and for a good and proper reason.

re are parents, both men and women, who put their children at risk, and it makes sense to have supervision in place to allow children to see these parents without coming to harm. But supervised contact has morphed in some places into state-imposed parental alienation, whereby contact centres implement the concept to children that their father is dangerous.

system is essentially about judicial officers deflecting scrutiny. So, for example, whenever an allegation of domestic violence or sexual abuse surfaces in a family court case, decision-makers in the court system will order supervised contact because they know that if they don’t do this and anything happens to the child, they will be hung out to dry.

But false allegations of violence and abuse have now become a tactic utilised by partners in family law battles. Some angry women have used it to remove their partner from the home based on a simple allegation.

Usually, these dads don’t get to see their kids for months, but it can even be years.

A false accusation can cause lasting damage to the relationship with his children. (fizkes/Shutterstock)

Eventually, when they are “allowed” access to their children, they inevitably end up in the clutches of the supervised contact system, paying through the teeth to have strangers monitor and report on their conversations with their children. process works very effectively to destroy children’s relationships with their fathers.

Imagine being part of your children’s everyday life, reading them bedtime stories, roughhousing on the lawn, making pancakes for Sunday breakfast. All it takes is one false allegation, and you face months, perhaps years of being treated like a dangerous criminal, never allowed near them.

Eventually, the court system “permits” your first supervised contact visit. n, finally, you are in the same room as your kids, at last able to see them, talk to them. But that intense experience comes with a number of painful humiliations. Here are some real-life examples of how fathers are treated:

One child greeted his father at the centre by saying, “You are not going to hit me, are you, Daddy?” child later explained to dad that mum had told him to say that, yet the supervisor who overheard the conversation refused to report it.

Fathers are told not to get emotional. “Steve failed to control his emotions when saying goodbye to the children despite instructions from the supervisor to do so,” was a note included in a report on one father.

A dad’s suggestion that he tosses a football around with his son led to the supervisor issuing the boy a safe word to use if he felt threatened.

A father asked to take his 4-year-old to the toilet, only to find this was noted in the report as if it was a sinister request.

A father reads to his twin daughters at his home in Berlin, Germany, on Aug. 31, 2010. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

So, it goes on. But, of course, it’s not always like this. Some centres treat fathers well, and individual supervisors who do their best to ensure every man has fair treatment.

But, even government-sponsored services run by some of the big players, like Relationships Australia, produce horror stories, with many counsellors in these organisations taking a decidedly anti-male approach.

n there are huge, private enterprise players capitalising on long waiting lists for the government-sponsored centres—delays of six months to a year—and charging horrendous fees to rip off men.

We’re talking up to $300-$400 (US$216-$288) a session, more for the sought-after weekend places, easily adding up to over $20,000 (US$14,400) for two years of contact visits. Plus, there’s the cost of travel, with some men forced to travel many hours to get to the prescribed place.

That’s the critical point. All too often, dads have no choice about which centre is chosen—that decision is sewn up by the relationship and negotiations between their former partner’s lawyer and the local registrars.

As a result, a malicious woman has any number of cards she can play to ensure the contact system destroys what’s left of her ex-partner’s relationship with his children.

A father who is given supervised contact can also find that he is treated as if there is a black mark against him with regard to later decisions about proper parenting arrangements and as leverage in property settlements.

Worst still is the plight of the man who drops out of supervised contact, even if he can’t afford to keep going. That’s seen as a lack of commitment to his children.

“Narcissists can’t handle supervised access,” commented one expert.

A father and daughter walk in the city centre in Berlin, Germany, on July 17, 2012. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Child contact services were intended to provide a transition to eventual self-managing of parenting arrangements, but that’s just not happening. Instead, most people just drop out.

It’s maddening reading the official literature on what’s going here, which attribute the dropouts to mental illness, substance abuse or “entrenched conflict between parents” (pdf).

Not one word about the fact that most of the fathers subjected to this humiliating process are not dangerous.

I’ve made a video about this whole shameful business—talking to lawyer Michael Jose who has worked for over 25 years to tackle prejudice against men.

We aim to find ways to make changes, starting with advice for fathers to help them avoid supervised contact.

More men and their lawyers need to actively resist supervised contact by offering alternate suggestions for managing conflict and organising safe handovers. Men given no choice must provide the best possible local options for services in their area.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Pezou.

Pezou : Supervised Child Contact Is State-Imposed Parental Alienation