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SB 162

An Act making appropriations from the Workmen's Compensation Administration Fund to the Department of Labor and Industry and the Department of Community and Economic Development to provide for the expenses of administering the Workers' Compensation Act, The Pennsylvania Occupational Disease Act and the Office of Small Business Advocate for the fiscal year July 1, 2025, to June 30, 2026, and for the payment of bills incurred and remaining unpaid at the close of the fiscal year ending June 30, 2025.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Scott Martin

The bill creates a rebuttable presumption that joint custody with shared parenting is in the child’s best interest, aiming for near-equal parenting time.

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Bill Summary · SB 162

SB 162 — Shared Parenting (Summary)

Status: Passed first reading (filed Feb 26, 2025). Effective: “when it becomes law” (per bill text).

Purpose
- Establish a statutory, rebuttable presumption that joint custody with “shared parenting” is in the best interest of a child. The bill encourages custody arrangements under which the child spends as close as possible to an equal amount of time with each parent.

Key provisions
- Rebuttable presumption of joint custody and shared parenting
- “Shared parenting” is defined as the child spending as close as possible to an equal amount of time with each parent.
- The presumption may be rebutted if:
- the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that shared parenting is not in the child’s best interest, or
- the parties have reached a custody agreement already, or
- one party does not request sole, primary, or joint custody.
- Factors the court must consider in setting a shared parenting schedule
- Parental wishes; the child’s wishes (with due consideration of influence); interaction and relationships with parents, siblings, and others; motivations of adults in the case; the child’s adjustment and proximity to home/school/community; physical and mental health of involved individuals; history and effect of any domestic violence (including treatment efforts); who has provided care/financial support; reasons and circumstances for any prior placements with others; and the likelihood that a parent will encourage frequent, meaningful contact with the other parent.
- Domestic violence and safety
- Courts must consider acts of domestic violence and the effect on the child; if domestic violence is found, the court must enter orders that protect the victim and child. Absence or relocation caused by domestic violence will not be held against the victim parent.
- Mediation
- Contested custody or visitation matters (where a mediation program exists) are to be set for mediation before or alongside a hearing unless waived. Mediation aims to reduce acrimony and to develop custody/visitation plans that further the child’s best interest and equalize parental time where appropriate.
- Orders and findings
- Custody orders must include written findings reflecting consideration of the enumerated factors and how the child’s best interest was determined.
- Records access
- Unless the court orders otherwise, each parent has equal access to the child’s health, education, and welfare records.

Who is affected
- Parents involved in custody disputes in state family courts
- Children whose custody is contested
- Family court judges, mediators, custody evaluators, family law attorneys, and related court services (mediation programs)
- Potentially school and medical record custodians who respond to parental records requests

Potential impacts and considerations
- Law shifts default custody analysis toward 50/50/shared parenting, likely increasing joint-custody outcomes where parents can safely co-parent.
- Courts must apply a clear-and-convincing evidentiary standard to overcome the presumption, raising judicial burdens to order sole custody.
- The statute stresses safety: findings of domestic violence can limit/shared-parenting suitability and require protective measures.
- Possible downstream effects on child support and relocation disputes (not directly addressed in this bill) because shared-time arrangements can affect support calculations and relocation analyses.
- Likely increase in mediation use as an early step to reach shared parenting agreements, possibly reducing trial dockets but increasing demand for mediation services and parenting-plan development.

Procedural note
- The bill amends North Carolina’s custody statutes (G.S. 50-13.01, 50-13.1, 50-13.2). It took effect “when it becomes law” (no specified delayed effective date in the bill text).

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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