This undated photo provided by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class John Moreno shows Moreno and his daughter, Vanessa. Moreno, who lives in New Orleans, has been fighting a custody battle for years over his daughter, who lives in Arizona with her mother. A national legal group that is meeting in Nashville this week wants to simplify custody and visitation laws for military service members, whose frequent deployments can leave them without legal recourse when family disputes erupt. (AP Photo/Courtesy John Moreno)
This undated photo provided by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class John Moreno shows Moreno and his daughter, Vanessa. Moreno, who lives in New Orleans, has been fighting a custody battle for years over his daughter, who lives in Arizona with her mother. A national legal group that is meeting in Nashville this week wants to simplify custody and visitation laws for military service members, whose frequent deployments can leave them without legal recourse when family disputes erupt. (AP Photo/Courtesy John Moreno)
This undated photo provided by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class John Moreno shows Moreno and his daughter, Vanessa. Moreno, who lives in New Orleans, has been fighting a custody battle for years over his daughter, who lives in Arizona with her mother. A national legal group that is meeting in Nashville this week wants to simplify custody and visitation laws for military service members, whose frequent deployments can leave them without legal recourse when family disputes erupt. (AP Photo/Courtesy John Moreno)
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ? A national legal panel that works to standardize state laws wants to simplify child custody rules for military service members, whose frequent deployments can leave them without clear legal recourse when family disputes erupt.
The Uniform Law Commission, an influential group of some 350 attorneys appointed by all the states, is meeting in Nashville on Wednesday to give final approval to the Deployed Parents Custody and Visitation Act, a set of uniform codes that state legislatures can adopt to standardize custody rights for parents who are deployed.
With deployments on the rise from the first Gulf War through the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, especially for National Guard and Reserve members, a majority of the states have implemented a patchwork of laws designed to protect service members in child custody and visitation cases. But the rules aren't consistent across the country, says Eric Fish, legal counsel for the Uniform Law Commission.
Some of the issues state courts have struggled with include how to determine jurisdiction when a military member is assigned to a base in another state, whether a step-parent or grandparent can have visitation rights when a parent is deployed, and whether a temporary custody arrangement should be made permanent when a parent returns from deployment.
"States are all across the board on those issues, so the impetus for the uniform act was to provide states with a well-conceived piece of legislation that takes the best practices from all the states that we have seen and give them some guidance," Fish said.
The commission has been crafting uniform state laws for over a century, including the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act, which is used in 49 states as a standard for establishing jurisdiction and child support orders between states. Its drafts are recommendations and need to be enacted by state legislatures.
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class John Moreno deployed in 2007 while his wife was pregnant with his daughter, Vanessa, at their home in Virginia. But when he returned he found his wife had moved to Arizona and refused to let him see his daughter.
"She had fled from Virginia, where my daughter was born, to Arizona along with everything I owned and my daughter," he said. "She was seven months old."
He petitioned a judge in Virginia to order her to return his daughter, but he said the judge claimed that he didn't have jurisdiction in the case because Moreno had been given military orders to leave Virginia.
"The state of Virginia had jurisdiction and had every right to bring her back," Moreno said.
He's gone through a string of attorneys, but never had any legal success. He said he feels like he has fewer rights in the custody case because he is a service member and the courts don't know what rights he is afforded under the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, which offers legal protections to service members during their military service, such as suspending certain judicial proceedings.
"It seems like every time I go to court I get beat up because I am in the military," said Moreno, who is 31 and living in New Orleans, working as an air traffic controller for the Navy.
Federal legislation has been introduced in Congress to amend the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act to include protections for deployed service members in child custody cases, but the Uniform Law Commission, which writes only state legislation, has opposed this effort because they argue family law is a state's rights issue.
Fish said while the proposed federal law and the uniform state code share some similarities, he said the federal law is vague and would create unnecessary complexity to an already complicated area of law.
"Service members themselves are going to be completely lost because they are going to hear there is a federal law and not understand the difference of who is in charge, federal or state law," he said.
U.S. Rep. Michael Turner (R-Ohio) is the sponsor of the federal legislation that passed in the House for seven straight years but has stalled in the Senate. He said his bill wouldn't create federal jurisdiction for custody matters, but instead would ensure minimum protections for military parents.
"Our bill only establishes a floor minimum," he said. "States could have and do have much more stringent pro-military custody statutes."
Turner said family law courts are biased against parents who are absent, even if it's because of a military deployment.
"Our bill certainly permits the courts' taking into consideration the best interests of the child, however, it does not permit the service member's absence in serving our country to be used against them," he said. "The uniformed law that's currently being considered would do absolutely that and would result in service member's losing their children."
Attorney Mark Sullivan, who practices family law in North Carolina and is a retired Army reserve JAG colonel, was the chair on the committee that helped draft the uniform code. He said one of the key points of the law establishes that the mere absence of a military parent from a state will not be used to deprive that state of custody jurisdiction.
"For most cases, a move is a purely voluntarily thing. For service member, the move is not voluntary and that involuntary move should not be punished by the loss of jurisdiction," said Sullivan, who is the author of the Military Divorce Handbook, 2nd edition, 2011, published by the American Bar Association.
Sullivan believes that states should regulate child custody, divorce and other family law and that has traditionally been the rights of the states.
"We shouldn't be writing rules, specific rules about custody, in the U.S. code," he said.
Once the uniform code is approved, the commission's members plan to push for the code to be introduced starting next year in state legislatures, said Fish.
"This is an approach to maintain states' rights and protect service members across the country, without creating an invasive federal system that is just going to confuse child custody," Fish said.
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Follow Kristin M. Hall on Twitter at http://twitter.com/kmhall .
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