Parental
Responsibility
What is Parental
Responsibility?
What does that
mean in practice?
By having
Parental Responsibility, will I be included in matters that affect my
children’s lives?
If I can’t agree with
my ex-partner on matters such as schooling or education, what happens?
As a biological
parent, do I have Parental Responsibility for my child?
How do I obtain
Parental Responsibility?
As a father, how do I
enter into a Parental Responsibility Agreement?
As a mother, can I
make this Agreement with the child’s stepfather?
What do I do if my
child’s mother won’t sign an Agreement?
What will
the Court consider when deciding whether to grant my application?
Is the Court likely to
grant an application for Parental Responsibility to fathers?
Medical Information:
Do I have a right
to ask to see my children’s medical records?
Medical Information:
Are there
circumstances where the health professional can refuse to share information
with me?
Medical Information:
Will my consent
be required if my child needs medical treatment?
Medical Information:
How should I
contact the children’s local Primary Care Trust?
Medical Information: What
happens if the medical practitioner refuses my request?
Schooling: What
are the school’s responsibilities to parents?
Schooling: What can I do if
the school refuses to grant me these rights?
Schooling: Will I need to
prove I am the child’s parent?
Schooling: Template Letter
Early Years: What do I
do if the standards are not followed?
Early Years: Template Letter
Other Matters: Can my
children choose their own religion?
Other Matters: Is my consent
required if my children wish to marry?
Other Matters: Can anyone change my
children’s name?
Other Matters: Can my child leave
home without my consent?
Other Matters: Is it legal to
use corporal punishment to discipline your child?
What is
Parental Responsibility? <Back
to Top>
The legal definition
of Parental Responsibility is “All the
rights, duties, powers, responsibilities and authority which by law a parent of
a child has in relation to a child and his property.”
Parental
Responsibility is incredibly important. Most people think it simply
grants a parent the right to make decisions about their children's
schooling and medical matters.
Unless you hold
parental responsibility for your child, you have no right to automatic
involvement in some court proceedings. This might mean your
not being notified of an application by social services to take your children
into care, your not being notified of or involved in
decisions as to whether your children are placed for adoption should something
happen to their other parent or carer, and your consent need not technically be
sought prior to the children being removed abroad.
Your child's name can
also be changed without your consent.
What does
that mean in practice? <Back
to Top>
Parental
Responsibility affords the legal right to take decisions about such things as
your children’s education, medical matters and religion. Having Parental
Responsibility also grants you the automatic right to apply for, or to be
involved in, court proceedings that affect your children. This can
include matters such as adoption, contact issues involving other family
members, care applications by Social Services, changes to your child’s surname
and appointment of a guardian in the event of the death of the other parent.
By having Parental Responsibility, will I be
included in matters that affect my children’s lives? <Back to Top>
Not necessarily.
Either parent with Parental Responsibility has the right to independently make
decisions that affect their children. There is, however, an obligation on any
person exercising a parental responsibility or parental right to have regard to
the views of any other person with the same rights and responsibilities.
If I
can’t agree with my ex-partner on matters such as schooling or education, what
happens? <Back to
Top>
If you consider the
matter to be serious, you can approach the Court to make a Specific Issue Order
to resolve the matter.
Will professionals such as doctors and teachers
respect my right to be included in decisions that affect my children’s lives? <Back to Top>
They should, but some
professionals are ignorant of parents’ rights and their own duty to uphold
those rights. This can be a particular problem for non-resident parents, or, in
the case of parents with joint residence, where the children live for a
majority of the time with their other parent.
Information is
included in this Chapter to help you to remind professionals of what your
rights are.
As a biological parent, do I have Parental
Responsibility for my child? <Back to Top>
A mother
automatically has Parental Responsibility for her child. A father may not,
depending on whether he was married to the mother at the time of the child’s
birth or subsequently.
How do I
obtain Parental Responsibility? <Back to Top>
You obtain parental
responsibility in the following ways:
1. By being the child’s mother (automatic).
2. By having been married to the child’s mother if you are the
biological father.
3. If you are the child's father and weren't married to the mother,
but the child was born on or after 1 December 2003 and you jointly registered
the birth of your child, you will automatically have parental responsibility.
4. By having a Residence Order made in your favour by the Court (for
Shared or Sole Residence).
5. If the court has granted you parental responsibility via a
Parental Responsibility Order.
6. Biological fathers can get parental responsibility by signing
a Parental Responsibility Agreement with the child’s mother if she will
agree to this. A separate agreement is needed for each child.
7. Step-parents can acquire Parental Responsibility by entering into
a formal Parental Responsibility Agreement with the mother and all other
parties who have parental responsibility for the children. See our separate
factsheet for Step-Parents.
8. People other than parents can acquire parental responsibility if
they are appointed as a guardian in a parent's will and if those with parental
responsibility for the child have died.
9. You will be granted parental responsibility if a Special
Guardianship Order is made in your favour (refer to our factsheet on Special Guardianship Orders).
10. A local authority may gain parental responsibility for a
child if it is placed in their care.
As a
father, how do I enter into a Parental Responsibility Agreement? <Back to Top>
The agreement must be
written out in the correct format. The form to use is a C(PRA)1.
The agreement must be
signed in front of a Justice of the Peace (Magistrate), Justices’ Clerk or a
Court official who is authorised by the Judge to administer oaths. You will
need to complete the Parental Responsibility Agreement and present it along
with the child’s full birth certificate and photographic evidence identifying
both parents (ideally a photo driving licence or passport) to a Family
Proceedings Court, County Court, or the Principal Registry of the Family
Division where it can be signed and witnessed.
Two copies must then
be made, and sent along with the original to the Principal Registry of the
Family Division.
As a
mother, can I make this Agreement with the child’s stepfather? <Back to Top>
Refer to our
factsheet on Step-Parents.
What do I
do if my child’s mother won’t sign an Agreement? <Back to Top>
If the mother refuses
to sign a Parental Responsibility Agreement, you can apply to the Court asking
them to grant you parental responsibility by making a Parental Responsibility
Order in your favour. The form to use is the C1.
What will the Court consider when deciding whether
to grant my application? <Back
to Top>
The following points
are likely to be considered by the Court when assessing your application for a
Parental Responsibility Order:
1. whether your name appears on the birth
certificate.
2. how active you have been in maintaining
contact with your children and meeting your commitments to them.
3. your previous involvement in your
children’s education.
4. what financial support you provide for your
children.
5. the reasons for your application.
6. the strength of the relationship between
you and your children and the degree of commitment you’ve previously shown to
your children.
7. The Court will also consider the
principles set down in the Welfare Checklist.
Is the
Court likely to grant an application for Parental Responsibility to fathers? <Back to Top>
Yes. Less than 2% of
applications made to the Courts in 2004 and 2005 were refused.
Your Right
to Medical Information <Back to Top>
Do I have
a right to ask to see my children’s medical records? <Back to Top>
If you have Parental
Responsibility, yes. Health professionals must provide information when an
application is made by an individual with parental responsibility where the
child is under the age of sixteen.
If you have Parental
Responsibility for your children, a medical practitioner is obliged to see you
when you request this, and to discuss matters relating to your children’s
health.
The Custody Minefield
website includes letter templates to assist you in gaining involvement in your
child’s medical welfare.
Are there circumstances where the health
professional can refuse to share information with me? <Back to Top>
Yes. Unless the
health professional considers the child to be too young to understand the
nature of your application and that it is in their best interest that
information is shared with you, the health professional can only pass on
information if they have the child’s consent.
An example of
circumstances where a doctor may feel it inappropriate to share your child’s
records would be where a fifteen-year-old girl had approached the doctor for
birth control advice, and the child wanted the matter to be treated in
confidence.
The health
professional may withhold information if they consider that disclosing it would
cause serious harm to the physical or mental health of their patient or any
other individual.
A further scenario
where information could be withheld is where your child’s record contains
information about another individual, and to share this record with you would
break that other person’s right to confidentiality unless you had their consent
Where one parent is involved in decisions about
medical treatment, is the other parent entitled to be involved? <Back to Top>
Yes, but only if they
also have Parental Responsibility. In such circumstances, your views should be
taken into account so long as they are deemed to be in the child’s best
interests.
Will my
consent be required if my child needs medical treatment? <Back to Top>
Consent to treatment
is only normally required from one person with parental responsibility.
At what
age is my child’s opinion considered relevant to matters involving the
disclosure of information and consent to medical treatment? <Back to Top>
In England and Wales,
no legislation specifically sets out the rights of children under sixteen to
give their consent to medical treatment, so there remains some uncertainty
about this in common law.
In the landmark
Victoria Gillick case, the Judges held that “parental
rights were recognised by the law so long as they were needed for the protection
of the child and such rights yielded to the child’s right to make his own
decisions when he reached a sufficient understanding and intelligence to be
capable of making up his own mind”. This has become known in law as the Gillick Principle.
Circumstances where a
doctor would consider this principle would be where a girl under the age of
sixteen asked the doctor for contraceptive advice.
What do I
do if I don’t know who my children’s doctor is? <Back to Top>
If you are unable to
find out which doctor your children are registered with, you can contact the
children’s Local Area Health Authority (or Primary Care Trust).
The Local Area Health
Authority must provide written details stating where the children are
registered to anyone with parental responsibility for the children.
How
should I contact the children’s local Primary Care Trust? <Back to Top>
Make the request in
writing. Include proof of your parental responsibility in relation to the
children by providing the Authority with either a copy of your Marriage
Certificate, the children’s Birth Certificates or a copy of any Parental
Responsibility Orders made in your favour. Feel free to use our template
letter.
How should I approach a health professional for
information about my children? <Back to Top>
It may be more
expedient to write to the medical professional to request information. Include
a copy of your Marriage Certificate or Parental Responsibility Order or a copy
of the birth certificate if your child was born after December 2003 or your
Parental Responsibility Agreement. In the event your request is refused, you
will have proof that a request was made. Feel free to use our template
letter.
What happens if the medical practitioner refuses my
request? <Back to
Top>
They may have good
reason to decide not to disclose information to you. Should your request be
refused, ask the professional concerned for information about how you can make
a complaint.
You could consider
making a complaint either to the head of the medical practice (such as the
Practice Manager), the Local Area Health Authority or to the Information
Commissioner (if you want access to a copy of your child's medical
records but this has been refused).
Your Right to
Involvement in Your Child's Schooling <Back to Top>
As a
parent, do I have a right to be involved in my children’s schooling? <Back to Top>
Yes. Under education
legislation any parent (regardless of whether they hold Parental
Responsibility for the children), has the following
rights to involvement in their children’s schooling:
·
To participate in decisions about
their child’s education (e.g. deciding which subjects the child should study).
·
To be treated equally to any
other parent by the school and Local Education Authority (LEA) staff.
·
To receive information from the
school (e.g. copies of the governors’ annual report, pupil reports and
attendance records).
·
To participate in certain school
activities (e.g. vote in elections for parent governors, attend sports days and
school performances).
·
To be asked for their consent for
their children to take part in extra-curricular activities.
·
To be advised about meetings
involving the child (e.g. where a governors’ meeting is being held to discuss
the possibility of a child’s exclusion from school for bad behaviour).
·
To be included on an equal basis
with the other parent in their children’s school records.
The Custody
Minefield website includes letter templates to assist you in gaining
involvement in your child’s education.
What are the school’s responsibilities to parents? <Back
to Top>
·
To note the details of Court
Orders on the pupil’s record.
·
Not to allow the name of the
child to be changed without the consent of every other person with parental
responsibility for the child.
·
To ask the resident parent for
the address details of the non-resident parent.
·
To make the resident parent aware
that the other parent is entitled to be involved in the child’s education.
·
To keep address records for all
parents / guardians in the admission register and any written or computerised
pupil records, and passing this information on to any new school that a child
may attend.
·
To provide information to a
parent directly if that parent requests such information.
·
To seek parental consent in
relation to extra-curricular activities.
·
To uphold the principle that
parental consent has not been given in relation to the child undertaking
activities if one parent gives consent and the other withholds it.
·
To inform the resident parent as
soon as possible when a child has had an accident and the non-resident parent,
if they have asked to be kept informed, of events involving the child.
·
To consider the welfare of the
child to be paramount and try to resolve problems without becoming involved in
conflict.
·
To involve parents in issues
relating to their child’s education.
·
To keep parents informed about
school matters.
What can
I do if the school refuses to grant me these rights? <Back to Top>
Refer the Headmaster
or Headmistress to the Guidance for Head Teachers published by the Department
for Education and Skills
If you still have
problems, the chain of complaint for maintained schools (state schools) about
issues such as admissions policy, behaviour, exclusions and non-receipt of
information is: Headteacher, Chair of the governing
body, LEA, then the Department for Education and Skills.
Advice is available
from the National Education Law Advice Line which provides legal advice and
representation to children and/or parents with concerns relating to schools or
Local Education Authorities.
Will I
need to prove I am the child’s parent? <Back to Top>
Possibly, but under
Education Act legislation you only need to prove you are the biological parent.
A copy of a birth certificate naming you as the parent or a letter from the
Child Support Agency showing you make maintenance payments in respect of your
child should be sufficient to prove parentage.
Template Letter <Back to Top>
Please feel free to
use our template
letter for access to school information. A follow up template
letter is also available, should the first be unsuccessful.
Your Right to Involvement in Early
Years Education and Development <Back to Top>
Do I have
a right to receive information about my children in relation to their Early
Years Education? <Back to
Top>
The Statutory Framework
for the Early Years Foundation Stage sets out the
child care providers’ duty to work in partnership with parents. Paragraph 1.16
states:
"Close working between early years practitioners and parents is vital for the
identification of children’s learning needs and to ensure a quick response to
any area of particular difficulty. Parents and families are central to a
child’s well-being and practitioners should support this important relationship
by sharing information and offering support for extending learning in the
home."
The Glossary section
within each National Standard document defines a parent as “anyone who holds
Parental Responsibility for a child”.
The Custody Minefield
website includes letter templates to assist you in gaining involvement in your
child’s early years education.
What do I do if the standards are not followed? <Back to Top>
The childcare
provider has a duty to investigate your complaint. You have several routes of
complaint that you can pursue if the playgroup won’t address your concerns.
You could raise a
complaint with Ofsted Early Years that the childcare provider is in breach of
the National Standards.
If Ofsted won’t
pursue your complaint, or suggest it’s a contractual matter between parents and
the playgroup, contact your Member of Parliament and have them challenge
Ofsted’s interpretation of the National Standards (which make no distinction
between either parent other than a need to have
Parental Responsibility for the children).
Contact your
child's Local Education Authority (LEA) to find out if the childcare
provider is LEA maintained or private. If they are LEA maintained, you can ask
the LEA to provide you with a copy of your child’s educational record.
Template Letter <Back to Top>
Please feel free to
use our template
letter to assist your involvement in your children’s early years education.
Other Matters Related to Parental
Responsibility <Back to
Top>
Do I have the right to choose my children’s
religion? <Back to
Top>
Yes, but again, only
if you hold Parental Responsibility for your child. Where two parents disagree
over the choice of religious upbringing for their children, the considerations
regarding the children’s welfare will prevail should the Court become involved
in resolving the conflict.
A religion cannot be
imposed on a child if the Court considered that the child would suffer harm as
a result of following the religion’s tenets. As an example, if a religion
stated that a follower shouldn’t receive modern medical treatment, the Court may
decide the imposition of that belief could cause the child harm.
Can my children choose their own religion? <Back to Top>
The Human Rights Act
1998 protects the children’s right to make their own decisions as it protects
the individual’s right to the freedom of thought, conscience and religion. A
child who is sufficiently mature to take the decision as to which religion they
wish to follow may do so.
Is my consent required if my children wish to
marry? <Back to Top>
Where the child is
aged between 16 and 18 they can only marry if all parties with parental
responsibility agree unless the Court is approached to consider the matter as a
Specific Issue.
Can
anyone change my children’s name? <Back to Top>
No, unless they have
the agreement of all the parties with parental responsibility for the child or
the Court give their permission by way of a Specific Issue Order.
Can my
child leave home without my consent? <Back to Top>
Children under the
age of sixteen cannot leave home without parental consent.
Is it legal to use corporal punishment to
discipline your child? <Back
to Top>
Individuals with
parental responsibility have the legal right to use “reasonable” physical
punishment. It is illegal to punish a child to the extent that the child is a
victim of battery, suffers grievous bodily harm, actual bodily harm or
experiences punishment that could be considered to be cruelty. Essentially, if
you have Parental Responsibility you can smack your child as a form of
punishment, but if the smack leaves a mark you may be found guilty of causing
actual bodily harm.
The Custody Minefield
fully supports the NSPCC Full Stop Campaign.
Support
<Back to Top>
The Custody Minefield offers support forums
where you can ask our team of experienced support staff questions about family
law, the courts and separation. Collectively, we have answered more than 10,000
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The Custody Minefield website to find out how to register.