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Press Releases

Families Need Fathers - Information For Media

As well as our support services, Families Need Fathers campaigns for the reform of family courts, increased support for separated and separating families and the promotion of Shared Parenting. As a result, we are keen to work with and provide assistance to the media wherever possible. 

 

Journalists & Researchers

 

If you are a journalist, researcher or similar seeking information or comment on the work of Families Need Fathers or any related issues, please contact the FNF office on 0300 0300 110 / media@fnf.org.uk  who will be extremely happy to speak with you and discuss how FNF may be able to help.

 

 

Spokespeople 

Families Need Fathers has a range of spokespeople with a wide variety of expertise and experiences available around the country (please click here to view our local branch listings). We have provided spokespeople for local and national media, including BBC Television, ITN, Radio 4 and Radio 5.

 

If you would like to arrange a spokesperson from Families Need Fathers, please contact the FNF office on 0300 0300 110.

 

 

Case Studies

 

 

FNF provides many case studies on a regular basis to local and national media. We have a significant cohort of members around the UK, including fathers, mothers, grandparents, extended families and new partners, who have had a range of experiences related to separated families and parenting.

 

We also have a short selection of significant case studies which can be made available to journalists and researchers.

 

If you are seeking a case study on a particular subject or in a particular area, please contact the FNF office on 0300 0300 110.

 

 

FNF Press Releases

 

 In addition to contacting FNF, you may wish to visit our Press Releases page to view our recent comments and responses. 

 

 

FNF in the Media

 

 

 You can see where Families Need Fathers has featured in the media by visiting our Online PR Diary.

 

 


 

 

 

Contact the FNF Office

 

0300 0300 110

media@fnf.org.uk

Unit 501, The Pill Box Building, 115 Coventry Road, London, E2 6GG

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24 April 2014

Father's Day Manifesto

The Manifesto and progress on it.

1) No child shall be denied a full and proper relationship with both of its parents unless it has been shown that such a relationship presents a risk to the child.

The Lord Chancellor for the Government, and the Conservative Party have acknowledged the problem, but the attempt to change the Law to promote this was defeated.

2) Gender discrimination in social attitudes towards parenting, in policy in relation to the family and the family ‘justice’ system should end.

Social attitudes are changing, albeit slowly, but with negligible support from public policy.  Children can expect their relationship with their non-residential parent to be cut by two thirds or more in the event of their parents separating, and this is terribly wrong.

3) The 'winner takes all' nature of legal proceedings about children should end. The objective should become the best blend of both parents.  Both parents should be given Residence Orders. Demeaning ‘Contact Orders’ should be replaced by ‘Parenting Time Orders’ given to both parents.

Only very slight change here. No bold action to bring this about.

4) Breach of a court order to allow a child a relationship with both parents should become legally and socially unacceptable.

We welcome the Children and Adoption Bill which could result in changes here, but its possible impact was dramatically undermined by the statement of the President of the Family Division of the High Court saying he did not think judges would use the new sanctions for such breaches.

5) Fathers' involvement with their children is increasing rapidly. This should be welcomed and encouraged until it equals the care provided by mothers. 

The Equal Opportunity Commission's research has shown that fathers now provide nearly one third of parental childcare in intact families. This is still a 20% shortfall in our view, but change is rapid. There has been a spontaneous change in social behaviour, but support from public policy has been lacking.

6) No child shall be put in day care or looked after by others if parental care is available.

No progress. The Childcare strategy, a very expensive programme to provide institutionalised daycare for children whose mothers are in paid employment, continues to ignore the possibility that they could be looked after better and more cheaply by their 'other parent'.

7) Legal aid should cease to be available to fuel conflict between parents. Public funding should be available only to seek child centred and non-adversarial solutions to differences between parents.

There have been modest improvements in public finance for mediation services, but the state still funds many parents to seek the exclusion of the other from the children's lives by rubbishing their parenting, character and conduct.  

8 )‘Family friendly’ entitlements should be available to both parents equally.

Again slow changes in social attitudes are largely without official backing.

9) Public money to support parenting - Child Benefit, Family Tax credits and the like - should be shared between carers according to the care and costs that fall on each.  Child Support Agency calculations should be changed to reflect these costs fairly.

The failure of the CSA has finally been properly recognised. It is possible that a replacement service may be based on fairer principles, but there has been no material action on other benefits.

10) Allegations of violence and abuse should be investigated even-handedly with a thoroughness and speed that reflects their seriousness and urgency. Action should be taken against false or malicious allegations.

No action has been taken on these points. The making of false allegations is still an easy route to prevent a child seeing their 'other parent'.

11) Parental Alienation should be recognised and dealt with.

No progress

12) Funding should cease to agencies that promote gender stereotypes.

No progress

13) Parenting should be given more social respect. The decline in the amount of time children spend with a parent - the cause of many of our social problems - should be reversed with priority going to making the contributions of the parents equal.

No progress

14) The importance of grandparents needs recognition. They should have the right to apply directly for court orders for the children to have time with them. 

No progress

15) The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child should be incorporated into British domestic law.

No progress

16) The clause 'equality between spouses' in the European Convention on Human Rights should be ratified by the UK and included in the Human Rights Act.

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10 April 2014

Coping with Parental Alienation: 2 Day Course

Description:

Parental Alienation is one of the most difficult issues that a separated parent can deal with.  Many children of separated parents will, at one time or another, struggle with relationships, finding transitions between parents difficult.  But is it alienation, and what does Parental Alienation really mean?

 

This workshop will deal with the spectrum of children's reactions, from the mild to the most severe and will help participants to identify what is happening in their own relationships as well as how to prevent, manage and reverse an alienation reaction.

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26 May 2012
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Forum

The FNF Forum is for Members only.  You will need become a member here to access the forum.

 

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20 March 2014

Response to Sir Alan Beith

On 11th July 2012 Sir Alan Beith, Chair of the Justice Select Committee, wrote to the Prime Minister criticising proposed changes to the Children Act 1989.  Sir Alan’s letter was a response to the current government consultation which recommends changing the Act to promote shared parenting.

Among other points, Sir Alan argues that the changes would undermine children’s welfare.  To read Sir Alan’s letter in full, please click here.

Ken Sanderson, CEO of FNF, has responded to Sir Alan’s letter, addressing each concern individually.  Copies of the letter have also been sent to the Prime Minister, Secretary of State for Justice, the Minister of State for Children and Families, and to the Parliamentary-Under Secretaries of State for Justice and Education.

You can read FNF’s response here or read a summary below:

•    Shared parenting does not undermine a child’s welfare as, unless there are safety concerns, shared parenting is usually in the best interest of the child;
•    Changing the wording of the Children Act 1989 will strengthen children’s rights, not their parents’;
•    In Australia there has been a 32% decrease in court cases involving children since the introduction of their shared parenting legislation;
•    Australian judges do not measure the quality of a child’s relationship with their parents in temporal terms or assume the legislation refers to equal time.

We hope to have reassured Sir Alan and Ministers that a presumption of shared parenting would be a hugely positive step towards making children’s best interests the heart of family law.

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26 February 2014

Public Affairs

This section is currently being redesigned; check back soon for updates!

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02 March 2014

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  6. What is Shared Parenting?
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