BETTER? Divorce mediation empowers the couple to handle their own negotiations, making them active at a time when they most need to feel in control. It builds competence in decision making, communication skills, and often fosters an atmosphere of trust and cooperation, all of which will help them in their continuing shared role as parents. The couple is helped to separate their spousal roles, which are ending, from their parental roles, which will continue. The mediator helps them evaluate their present financial situation and future needs, making sure that decisions are based on openly shared information and reasonable assumptions rather than on threats, manipulation, or concealment. Most mediation includes agreements on parenting arrangements, parental decision making, division of property, spousal maintenance (alimony), and child support. With divorce mediation there are no winners or losers, only solutions that are fair and acceptable to both parties. Both parties take an active part in shaping an agreement called a Memorandum Of Understanding, or MOU. Because of this they can both have a sense of ownership of the results. That is why agreements arrived at in mediation tend to hold up. SHORTER? In many cases divorce mediation requires only 4 to 12 hours. CHEAPER? For anything more than a simple divorce, not involving division of property, child or spousal support , or custody and visitation with children, the average retainer for matrimonial attorneys just to begin the adversarial process in cases is usually many times greater than the cost of achieving a mediated agreement . The same would be true for settling unresolved or contested conflicts over custody or visitation issues between already divorced partners. Because mediation is usually a much shorter process than litigation and involves only one mediator, rather than two opposing attorneys, a complete mediation can easily cost a very small fraction of just starting legal proceedings. And the mediator may be able to help the couple reduce the tax consequences and other costs of separating. The couple will still need to see at least one attorney (two if they wish), but only to review and translate their MOU into a legal separation agreement, and to file papers. This will still be far less expensive than having the lawyers involved from the beginning.
|
| Previous Page - Home Page - Services - Articles, Thoughts and Ideas - Bibliographies - Resources - About Dr. Trachtman - Contact Dr. Trachtman |