The court can limit parenting time for the noncustodial parent to less than 25% if it is likely to harm the child’s physical or emotional health or emotional growth. It can also limit parenting time if the noncustodial parent breaks the court’s order on parenting time without a good reason.
The court can limit parenting by:
- Not allowing overnight visits.
- Ruling it must be supervised by the other parent, a supervised visitation center or a relative.
The court can also put conditions on parenting time, like making the noncustodial parent be sober for a certain period before and during parenting time. The court can order drug or alcohol treatment.
If the person who wants parenting time has been convicted of certain crimes like:
- murder, manslaughter
- assault
- kidnapping
- depriving someone else of custodial or parental rights
- soliciting, inducing or promoting prostitution involving a minor
- criminal sexual conduct
- incest
- malicious punishment of a child
- neglect
- terroristic threats
- domestic assault by strangulation
They have to prove that spending time with the child is in the child’s best interest. This rule applies only to certain degrees of some crimes and only in certain circumstances. Like if the victim of the crime was a household or family member or if the conviction happened in the past 5 years.