About KidsFirst!
There are 600,000 divorces with minor children each year in the U.S, this is a number that is literally growing each day. When parents divorce, children become caught in the struggle and potentially cause emotional damage for their lives.
Custody agreements and parenting plans that focus on the needs of the children can assist parents to become positive role models and reduce the trauma of divorce on their children.
www.Kids-First.com, has parenting advice, legal tips ( all 50 states), valuable reports and visitation calendars for both parents.
Using KidsFirst! unique and interactive software helps both parents work together- keeping the best interest of the children at the forefront.
Step by step questions and answers to YOUR questions during this difficult time- KidsFirst! takes your difficult questions and situations and offers advice, tips and direction to assist you become a better parent.
KidsFirst! was launched in September 2007 to the acclaim of family law experts, including judges, attorneys, therapists, and other professionals.
Henry Koltys founder of KidsFirst!, is a former judge, currently a family law attorney and mediator who developed www.Kids-First.com after a difficult custody fight that lasted 3 years. Seeing this need Henry invested his life savings and sold everything to create software that would help everyone going through this situation-no law degree required.
Please visit KidsFirst! and make the best decision for your child!
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Oliver Roberts | April 7, 2008 at 2:10 pm
Congratulations and good luck. This looks like a much-needed information source for parents heading towards divorce.
From our own research looking at statistics in the US, UK and Australia, we estimate that one in five kids will see their parents split up by the time they reach school age. It’s hard to give an exact figure, because separation statistics aren’t so easy to come by for unmarried parents; but whatever the numbers are, that’s a lot of personal tragedy.
As co-author of ‘No Sex Please, We’re Parents’, which aims to help couples survive parenthood with their relationships intact, I can’t stress enough how important it is that couples give their relationship every chance they can. Part of that is realising just how tough a job it is to be an ‘ex-partner/co-parent’. Parents can never separate entirely: your kids mean that you’ll always have to maintain something of a relationship – and for your own and your kids’ sakes, you don’t want that to be acrimonious.
Oliver Roberts