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Gallia County, Ohio Parent Visitation Schedule and Custody Schedule

July 11, 2008

PLEASE TAKE NOTE:   Counties change their local visitation schedules.  The county you live in may have changed their rule(s) yesterday.  The county you live in may have different visitation schedules for Juvenile Court and Domestic Court. The rule may have been changed or updated since the last time this web page was updated.  In addition, if you already have a visitation schedule pursuant to local rule, and that schedule was attached to your parenting time orders, it is POSSIBLE that the court did not mean for YOUR visitation schedule to change if the local visitation schedule in your county changes. The local visitation schedules are put on this website as a courtesy and are updated as often as possible.  They are NOT legal advice and they are NOT meant to help you figure out if a decision you are about to make would be a violation of an existing court order.  If you want to make sure that you have the most current version of the local rule in your county, you can either look on your county Clerk of Court’s website, go to your local Clerk of Court’s office, or call your local Clerk of Court.

Click here to get a list of phone numbers for the Clerk of Court in your county.

If you know that the court in this county has implemented a new rule, PLEASE tell us by e-mailing us at info@cornwell-law.com and we will update our website.

The office of the Clerk of Court cannot give you legal advice.  This website, although prepared in part by attorneys, cannot and does not give you legal advice.  You can only get legal advice by talking to an attorney of your choice about the facts of your case, and the law as it applies to the facts of your case.

If you understand the information you have just read and would like to see the most recent local rule visitation schedule we have on our website, see the information below:

GALLIA COUNTY
(county seat – Gallipolis)
STANDARD ORDER OF VISITATION


Visitation is a time for children to do things with the parent with whom they do not live.  Activities you can do with them or skills you can teach them help the time be rewarding.  Helping the children find friends in your neighborhood also helps make it like home for them.

Liberal visitation arrangements are encouraged, as contact with both parents is important to the children. Specific items in the Journal Entry take precedence over this schedule.  Changes or modifications can be made by the Court if need for such is shown.  This schedule does not affect support payments.

Please be advised that this schedule is merely a guideline for visitation.  It is each party’s responsibility to tailor this schedule as necessary to meet the best interests of their children.  However, if parties are unable to agree, there is a specific schedule set forth.

VISITATION BETWEEN THE CHILDREN AND THE NON-RESIDENTIAL PARENT SHALL TAKE PLACE AT SUCH TIMES AND PLACES AS THE PARTIES MAY AGREE, BUT WILL NOT BE LESS THAN:

1.         Weekends.
Alternate weekends from Friday at 6:00 p.m. until Sunday at 6:00 p.m.  This alternating weekend schedule shall not change, even if interrupted by holiday and birthday, summer and/or vacation visitation.

2.         Weekdays.
One weekday evening per week from 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

3.         Extracurricular Activities.
Regardless of where the children are living, their participation in existing and renewed extracurricular activities, school related or otherwise, shall continue uninterrupted. The parent with whom they are residing at the time of the activity shall provide the physical and economic cost of transportation to these activities.  The residential parent shall provide the non-residential parent with notice of all extracurricular activities, school related or otherwise, in which the children participate, schedules of all extracurricular activities (handwritten by the residential parent if no formal schedule is provided by the activity) and the name of the activity leader (including address and telephone number if reasonably available to the residential parent).

4.         Pre-school Agers.
Pre-school children follow the same schedule of school age children in the school district where they live, regardless of whether or not other school age children live in the family.

5.         Holidays (Includes Birthdays).
In odd-numbered years, mother has Spring Break, Memorial Day, Labor Day and the first half of Winter Break.  In odd-numbered years, father has Martin Luther King’s Day, Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, and the second half of Winter Break.  In the even-numbered years, the schedules are reversed.

A. In the event of a conflict between regular visitation and holiday visitation, holiday visitation prevails. The alternating weekend/visitation shall be suspended as a consequence of the holiday schedule and shall recommence with the same rotation the first weekend immediately following.  For example:  If the weekend immediately preceding a holiday were mother’s weekend, the holiday weekend would be celebrated with the parent entitled to the holiday.  The weekend rotation would recommence the weekend after the holiday as father’s weekend.  This occurs even though one parent may have the children two weekends in a row.

For any holiday falling on a Monday or Friday, if the weekend immediately preceding or following the holiday visitation are spent with the same parent, there is no need for that parent to return the children that evening and then pick them up the next morning.  For a holiday falling on a Friday, visitation commences Friday morning and continues to Sunday evening; or a holiday falling on a Monday, visitation commences Friday evening and continues to Monday evening.

B. Mother’s Day and Father’s Day and the parent’s birthdays, only when they fall on a Saturday or Sunday, are to be spent with the appropriate parent.  These are as agreed or 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.  These do not have to be made up.

C. Other days of special meaning, such as religious holidays, etc. (i.e. New Year’s Eve and Day, Kwanzaa, Passover, Easter, Rosh Hashana, Christmas Eve and Day) should be decided together as follows:

These do not have to be made up.

D. Hours for parents who cannot agree are as follows:
Martin Luther King’s Day 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Spring Break 6:00 p.m. on the day school is out to 7:00 p.m. on the day before school recommences, to be coincidental with days of the school vacation and not to interfere with school.
Memorial & Labor Days 6:00 p.m. Friday to 6:00 p.m. Monday
Fourth of July 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. July 5
Thanksgiving 6:00 p.m. Wednesday to 6:00 p.m. Sunday
Winter Break first half commences at 6:00 p.m. the last day of school before Winter Break begins, until December 25 at 1:00 p.m.; second half commences at 1:00 p.m. December 25 until 6:00 p.m. the day before school recommences.

E. 48-hour notice should be given by the parent with whom the holiday is being spent for any arrangements for out of town travel on the holidays or of a change in pick-up/return times.

F.         The children’s birthdays should be alternated per child, between the parents on an annual basis.  Hours for parents who cannot agree are 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.   Brothers and sisters attend the birthday event.  These do not have to be made up.

6.         Transportation.
The parties shall divide the transportation equally.  The parent who is exercising his/her parenting/visitation rights shall pick up the children.

7.         Waiting.
Neither parent shall be more than 30 minutes late picking up the children.  If the non-residential parent has not arrived to pick up the children within the 30 minute period, visitation is forfeited and shall not be made up.

8.         Cancellation.
The non-residential parent should give 24 hour notice to cancel. The time canceled by the non-residential parent is forfeited.

9.         Illness.
If a child is ill, the residential parent should give 24 hour notice, if possible, so appropriate plans can be made.  However, if more than one day of visitation, weekend, holiday/birthday, or vacation is missed due to non-emergency and/or non-critical illness, then any missed visitation shall be made up as soon as practicable.

10.       Summer.
The non-residential parent shall have visitation with the children for the last half of the summer each year.  The summer school vacation commences the day after the children are out of school and continues until seven days before school begins.  The number of intervening weeks (full and/or partial) shall be divided in half, and the non-residential parent shall have the last half of the summer as visitation with the children.

During the summer visitation, the residential parent receives weekday and alternating weekend visitation as afforded the non-residential parent the rest of the year.

11.       Vacations.
Each parent may arrange an uninterrupted vacation of not more than two weeks with the children.  Each parent shall schedule this vacation during his/her half of the summer. A general itinerary of the vacation shall be provided for the other parent, including dates, locations, addresses, and telephone numbers.  Holiday and birthday celebrations with either parent shall not be missed, requiring scheduling of the vacation around these events or that the missed occasion be made up.  Alternate weekends are missed during vacation and are, therefore, not required to be made up.

12.       Moving.
Upon either parent learning that he/she will be moving, he/she shall immediately notify the other parent except in those circumstances wherein notice is not required by R.C. 3109.051(G), and provide the other parent with the moving date, new residence address and telephone number, and such other pertinent information necessary to effectuate a smooth move for the children.  The parents shall attempt, in good faith, to renegotiate an appropriate and beneficial new visitation schedule.

13.       Telephone Access.

A.        As Between the Parents.
Telephone communication by the children with the parent with whom they are not residing shall occur not less than three times per week for not less than 15 minutes. Children can call the other parent as often as the parent and child agree, at reasonable times, so long as the call is collect if it is a long distance call. The non-possessory parent shall be allowed to communicate with children not less than one time per week for not less than ½ hour by either calling or having the children call him/her.  Possessory parent shall not interfere with or stop the telephone communication.

B.        At School, Day Care Facilities, Extracurricular Activities, or All Other Public Locations.
Provision 13A shall not in any way contravene the statutory directives granting equal access by both parents to their children at any and all times while the children are at school, at a day care facility, babysitter, attending extracurricular activities, etc.

14.       Make-Up Visitation.
Any make-up visitation required by this schedule shall occur the first weekend of the other parent immediately following the missed visitation and shall continue during the other parent’s weekends until made up in full, including partial weekends.

15.       Current Address and Telephone Number.
Except as provided in the Court Order, each parent shall keep the other informed of his/her current address and telephone number at all times.

Emergency Contact. Both parents shall at all times, regardless of whether the children are with him/her, provide the other parent with a telephone number for contact in the event of an emergency.

16.       Car Seat.
For any and all children required by law to ride in a car seat, the parents shall transfer the car seat with the child as visitation exchanges occur.

17.       Clothing.
he parents shall cooperate in the exchange of the children’s clothing prior to any following visitation.

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Law Offices of Virginia C. Cornwell
408 Emory St
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(614) 225-9316
Latitude: 40.00734
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