Welcome to Divorce Prevention Legislation

This site continues, but does not duplicate, the work of the legislation web sites on the Americans for Divorce Reform web site and John Crouch’s Divorce Reform Page. Those sites have an immense amount of legislation that was introduced over the past 12 years, including some bills that passed, legislative history and fiscal impact statements. Their main sections are: mutual consent bills, waiting periods, marriage education and counselingbest-interests-of-children requirements, Covenant Marriage, other proposals for free choice of divorce rules, "Marriage Penalties", state Marriage Commissions, and model legislation. Another very useful, up-to-date legislation site is part of the Smart Marriages web site.

June 13, 2007

Details from Puerto Rico: As bad as I feared

My great former intern from Puerto Rico, Melissa Diaz, sent me the web site of the Civil Code reform commission. The effort goes back to the mid-90s, so it may not be related to the American Law Institute Principles of Family Dissolution, but the reforms proposed for divorce grounds are pretty bad. The official summary of the changes to Title IV, Dissolution of Marriage, says:

- divorce would be available by joint OR INDIVIDUAL petition, including by a guardian of an incapacitated spouse

- there would be four grounds for divorce:
- - voluntary, informed agreement by both spouses to end the marriage
- - irreparable rupture of the commonality of life that marriage creates
- - declared absence of a spouse, with complete separation for one year after the declaration
- - a spouse's incompletion of the conjugal and family duties assumed in contracting marriage

All the material about mutual consent is little but a distraction from the fact that this is unilateral divorce, available either by leaving the marriage for one year, or even faster by claiming "irreparable rupture". In all but one of the U.S. states that have a similar divorce ground, judges hold that if one spouse wants a divorce, that proves this ground of divorce and thus requires a divorce. So even the one-year waiting period in this proposal should not be taken very seriously, because with "irreparable rupture", you don't need to have the one year. However, for what it's worth, this proposal says that unilateral divorce petitioners need to prove specific facts behind their claims, and includes some other language emphasizing that the "rupture" must be fundamental and long-term.

The general introduction to all the family law changes say they are intended to conform the law to advances in human rights, pluralism of family forms, and women's empowerment. It doesn't say how these changes to divorce grounds further those purposes, nor claim that there is a right to unilateral divorce, although in describing existing law it speaks of a "right" to have mutual-consent divorce without disclosing what led to it.

The introduction to the divorce-grounds section does speak of a "right to divorce", in the context of explaining why neither the state nor a third party can initiate a divorce, except for guardians of incapacitated persons. "El derecho a divorciarse, asi como el de contraer matrimonio, es un derecho personalísimo que forma parte del catalogo de derechos de   la personalidad." [Query: if they mean a right to unilateral divorce, that severely diminishes the long-standing "right to contract matrimony"  which they equate it with.]

 


Spanish text of the official summary concerning divorce grounds, etc.:

Continue reading "Details from Puerto Rico: As bad as I feared" »

June 10, 2007

Netherlands ditches quick divorce procedure

According to this story from the Smart Marriages listserv, the Dutch parliament either changed the law, or defeated a proposed change, or both, but in any case, it was a victory for slightly stricter divorce laws. However, the goalposts were already at a far more permissive point than in most other European countries, or even than in the U.S., because the issue was apparently having divorce through an administrative process rather than a court, and letting people convert marriages to registered partnerships.

If anyone can tell us more, please do so by posting a comment.

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June 07, 2007

Puerto Rico proposes quickie unilateral divorce, other reforms.

This Stephen Baskerville Interview in El Visitante Newspaper in Puerto Rico is mostly about joint custody, but it appears to say, by the way, that the legislature there is introducing quickie unilateral divorce. According to the charts in the ABA's Family Law Quarterly, Puerto Rico currently has a 2-year waiting period for unilateral no-fault divorce, like Pa., Md. & Ill. The article talks about existing "mutual agreement divorce" which is probably quicker. But it also says that as part of a comprehensive family law reform, "the Civil Code has been revised. The draft proposed for public discussion:

 

--Reorganizes the divorce causes, so all divorce process will be a "no-blame divorce".

[If anyone has any more information about this, please post a comment or e-mail me.  From the other proposals listed, it sounds like it may be based on the aptly-named American Law Institute Principles of Family Dissolution.]

Continue reading "Puerto Rico proposes quickie unilateral divorce, other reforms." »

May 24, 2007

Illinois "Has it backwards" with violence tax on marriages

Diane Sollee of Smart Marriages wrote:
ILLINOIS: ANOTHER STATE THAT HAS IT BACKWARDS

Marriage may cost more
By John Patterson
Daily Herald State Government Editor
Saturday, May 19, 2007

((Auuuugh. Here is another state, ILLINOIS, getting it backwards with
ridiculous legislation that would increase marriage license fees to fund
domestic violence programs.  That is wrong-headed and misguided and sends an
unfortunate and just plain WRONG message about marriage. Marriage IS a
domestic violence prevention program. Married women are least likely to
be victims of domestic violence. Cohabiting women are the #1 victims of
domestic violence. That is also true for children - they are safest in
intact first marriages, safer from both physical and sexual abuse.  If we're
going to tap marriage license fees, that money should pay for MARRIAGE
EDUCATION Classes to help marriages stay healthy, stable and intact.  Again,
this is why it's so important to give credit to TEXAS where they got it
right.  They're using a differential in marriage license fees to provide and
incentive to couples to take an 8-hr marriage education class. And, it's not
just the money, it's the message. Attaching "getting married" to domestic
violence is misleading. If you live in Illinois, state of the infamous "Life
is Short, Get a Divorce" billboard, do something. Call someone. - diane  ))

Continue reading "Illinois "Has it backwards" with violence tax on marriages" »

May 17, 2007

Texas passes marriage education funding

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TEXAS MARRIAGE EDUCATION LEGISLATION ON GOVERNOR'S DESK

Texas House Raises Marriage Fee For 'Healthier Marriages'
AP - May 16, 2007
[sent by Diane Sollee of Smart Marriages and Mike Thompson of Americans for Divorce Reform.]
AUSTIN, Texas -- The Texas marriage license fee will would increase from
$30 to $60 but would be waived for couples who take a premarital education
course under a proposal the Legislature passed Tuesday, sending it next to
Gov. Rick Perry.


Continue reading "TEXAS MARRIAGE EDUCATION LEGISLATION ON GOVERNOR'S DESK" »

April 17, 2007

Info on all pending Texas divorce prevention bills

Please, if you have more current new on these, post it as a comment.

Link: Proposed marriage and divorce bills at a glance  - Houston Chronicle.

April 14, 2007, 9:38AM

Proposed marriage and divorce bills at a glance

By The Associated Press

Proposed legislation potentially affecting Texans getting married or divorced are:

_House Bill 180, by Rep. William Zedler, R-Arlington: Allows couples applying for a marriage license or couples already married to designate theirs a "covenant marriage," declaring it is to last for life and making divorce more difficult.

_House Bill 1704, by Rep. William Zedler, R-Arlington: Moves the marriage waiting period from 72 hours to 120 hours.

_HB 2684, by Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa: Encourages couples filing for divorce to attend a 10-hour crisis marriage counseling course. The instruction must include conflict management and forgiveness skills.

_SB 583, by Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston: Requires a 180-day, or six-month, waiting period for couples seeking a no-fault divorce, up from the current two months. The waiting time would be three months if the couple undergoes 10 hours of marital counseling.

_House Bill 2685, by Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa: Waives the $30 marriage license fee and 72-hour marriage waiting period for couples who take premarital instruction courses. An accompanying bill would make some federal money allocated to the state available for courses.

Nebraska marriage waiting/education bill

April 6: The Total Divorce Blog reports that Nebraska "Senator Mark Christensen has introduced legislation which would make it harder to get married in the state. A McCook Daily Gazette story said ... LB696 would require a 30-day waiting period and a $100 fee for couples who have not attended at least eight hours of marriage education classes. ... couples who do attend ... would not be bound by any waiting period and would just have to pay the current $15 marriage fee
"...   classes would focus on ... conflict management, financial responsibility, and communication and parenting skills. The classes would be taught by ... clergy, marriage counselors or any other qualified instructors.
"... there is an “out” for the terminally ill, people who are going to be transferred to a combat zone, and others who have compelling circumstances. If such circumstances existed, that couple could possibly have the $100 fee and 30-day waiting period waived by the county clerk."
------
This sounds like a really well thought out bill. I'd appreciate any more current news anyone has -- please use the comments section.

April 16, 2007

Federal tax marriage penalty "alive and well"

According to this article from the Wall Street Journal, by way of the Smart Marriages listserv.

> Among those stung by the marriage penalty are couples in which each spouse
> earns roughly the same and who itemize their deductions. In certain cases, the
> penalty can be so large that accountants urge some clients planning to get
> married to consider delaying the ceremony until the following year.

For the full article see the continuation.

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Latest on Texas Marriage Education bills

Mike Thompson writes:

As my friend David Moody of Lubbock put it--

The Legislators need to hear from us supporting these bills.  (See Below.)

Tomorrow the legislature will vote on HB2684 (described below).  Please
call, fax or e-mail to let your
state rep's know where you stand on this important legislation and how you
want them to vote. 

From Austin American Statesman
http://www.statesman.com/news/content/region/legislature/stories/04//14//14marriage.html
Pampa House member pushes three pro-marriage bills

One bill has already lost much of its bite in floor debate

Continue reading "Latest on Texas Marriage Education bills" »