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Westchester Divorce Lawyer – Arnold D. Cribari

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COLLABORATIVE DIVORCE: PERSUADE YOUR SPOUSE TO CONSIDER COLLABORATIVE

Let’s say you have decided to get a divorce and that the collaborative divorce process makes the most sense to you. For the collaborative process to work, both you and your spouse need to engage your own collaborative attorneys. So, what’s the best way to get your spouse to consider a collaborative divorce? Ideally, involve your spouse when you are exploring the options of litigation, mediation or collaborative. We all are much more likely to “buy in” to an idea if we feel that we discovered it. You can mention to your spouse that you have learned that collaborative divorce is cutting edge; when people in the know – like divorce lawyers, financial professionals, and therapists – are facing a divorce in their personal lives, they “go collaborative,” so they can get its benefits. Here are some of the benefits of a collaborative divorce: • It usually is less expensive … Read More...

After Divorce: Co-Parenting and the “Holiday Shuffle”

When a couple going through a divorce has had children together, there is going to have to be an ongoing co-parenting relationship. Having just spent an enjoyable Easter holiday with my own family, I was reminded that co-parenting during the holidays is often fraught with conflict and stress, even many years after a divorce. We have all heard tales of couples who go back to court multiple times after their divorce to re-litigate holiday visitation issues that were “settled” through the adversarial process. For couples who choose a collaborative divorce, however, the stress of the “holiday shuffle” is reduced, if not eliminated. The collaborative process allows the divorcing parents to structure a holiday plan for the children tailored to the needs of their specific situation. This brings to mind one of the most important reasons to consider a collaborative divorce. The collaborative process makes it possible for the two divorcing … Read More...

NYACP: THE PLACE TO FIND A NEW YORK DIVORCE LAWYER

The NYACP (New York Association of Collaborative Professionals) is the place to go if you are looking for a divorce lawyer in the New York City metropolitan area. What is the NYACP? It is an association of like-minded collaborative professionals who share a powerful commitment. This commitment includes achieving excellence in their work as collaborative lawyers, divorce coaches, child specialists and financial specialists. Every NYACP member in good standing is required to satisfy ongoing and rigorous collaborative training requirements, which include attending numerous seminars each year that continuously improve the collaborative professional’s skills. This results in more and better divorce settlements that stand the test of time, meeting the reasonable needs of divorcing couples and their children. Why go collaborative and why settle? For the benefits of a collaborative divorce, which include: (1) protecting children from the trauma of a divorce war in Court; (2) avoiding the monumental legal and … Read More...

MY NYACP MEMBERSHIP IS PRICELESS

Since joining the New York Assocation of Collaborative Professionals (NYACP) in 2002, I represented 50 to 75 clients who were able to successfully settle their collaborative divorce cases during those dozen years. Then, during the past several months, I have not been retained on any new collaborative divorce cases. Yet I still regard my NYACP membership as priceless. Here’s why. At its essence, the NYACP is an association of like-minded professionals. They share a powerful commitment that is three-fold: (1) to achieve excellence in their work as collaborative lawyers, divorce coaches, child specialists and financial specialists; (2) to obtain long-lasting interest-based divorce settlements; and (3) to promote collaborative so that people think collaborative first when considering a divorce. Sharing such a commitment with others over the years, building trust and having fun at the same time, makes the relationships between NYACP members priceless for three basic reasons. First, these relationships … Read More...

Collaborative Divorce: Avoid Nuclear Option

T. Boone Pickens knows a thing or two about preserving financial assets. He is one of many financially savvy individuals who have decided on Collaborative Divorce, rather than the “nuclear option” of a court-based divorce. An article on CNBC.com cites Pickens as having saved millions of dollars by choosing the Collaborative Divorce Process. The CNBC article is actually an excellent, comprehensive introduction to collaborative divorce. Having been a practicing collaborative attorney for a dozen years, I take issue with just one point in the article that says collaborative divorce is not good for couples with power imbalances. The collaborative process – in the hands of skilled collaborative attorneys –– mitigates power imbalances. It is the goal of each attorney in the collaborative process to empower his or her client to assert their needs and concerns to the maximum extent in a respectful way. Collaborative can be a fluid process: if … Read More...

Collaborative Divorce and a Special Needs Child

With March being Developmental Disabilities Awareness Month, I am reminded that – for a divorcing couple who has a child with special needs – a collaborative divorce offers the best way for the parents to come to an agreement on addressing the needs of the child. About ten years ago, I worked on a collaborative divorce in which the couple had two children, one of whom had been diagnosed on the autism spectrum. I represented the husband, and another collaborative lawyer, “Michelle,” represented the wife. The parties were having some very heated arguments about parental decision-making and access to the children. The defining moment in the case occurred at a four-way settlement conference when, after a few niceties were exchanged, the wife suddenly lashed out at the husband, exclaiming how upset she was at his criticism of her decision-making with respect to their disabled child, and the various therapies she … Read More...

An Affordable Divorce

As a divorce lawyer with a solo practice, I offer clients personalized service and reasonable fees. Maintaining an office with low overhead expenses translates into a lower hourly rate for my services. I particularly enjoy doing collaborative divorce and mediation. In those cases, I work in partnership with my clients to achieve a settlement that works for both divorcing spouses and their children. I like collaborative and mediation because those processes empower the client and enable us to work together to find creative, “outside the box” solutions. Collaborative and mediation are also much more economical for the client, since those processes eliminate the need for writing voluminous legal papers and spending monumental hours in court. When collaborative or mediation is not possible, and clients are doing a litigated (court-based) divorce, I sometimes team up with an attorney colleague, particularly if my client’s spouse has hired a large law firm. This … Read More...

Beat the System in a Divorce

© Arnold D. Cribari, 2015 If you want to beat the system in a divorce and save a lot of money, a collaborative divorce or mediation is the way to go. You can “cut to the chase;” skip going to court and avoid paying for monumental hours of your lawyer’s time in preparation for court. Get to the heart of a settlement discussion early in the process. Here’s how it works. You and your spouse meet together with both of your attorneys, arrange for necessary financial disclosure and start a four-way conversation about settlement. This obviates the need for unnecessary financial disclosure, legal motions, court appearances – and the thousands of dollars in lawyers’ fees generated by all of that paperwork and courtroom presentations. In the collaborative process, both you and your spouse have your own attorneys. Your collaborative attorney is your ally and will make sure that you are … Read More...

Collaborative Divorce vs Aggressive Divorce

As a divorce attorney – in social situations I am often asked – if I were in need of my own divorce, would I want a collaborative divorce or would I pursue an aggressive divorce? When I probe the questioner I usually find that the question is based on a mistaken assumption. The assumption is that an aggressive approach will enable you to get and keep “more” of what you want out of the divorce. The truth is – unless your goal is to make your lawyer rich – the aggressive approach is probably not in your best interest. An aggressive approach in divorce means “litigation.” Litigation necessitates mountains of paperwork requiring hours and hours of “billable hours” of your attorney’s time. Moreover, in litigation, our adversarial legal system tends to aggravate the situation, increasing the amount of time demanded of your lawyer. The court system looks for the “truth” … Read More...

Choosing a Divorce Lawyer: Why Hire a Settlement Professional?

You probably have more experience dealing with doctors than with divorce lawyers. You may find this analogy helpful. If you had a heart problem, you wouldn’t go to an orthopedist. If your goal is a good divorce settlement, then, why would you go to a trial lawyer? It makes more sense to choose an attorney with skills, training and experience in getting good settlements. In our medical analogy, a divorce trial is comparable to surgery. Surgery is risky, stressful and expensive. You don’t undergo surgery unless it’s absolutely necessary. A collaborative divorce is comparable to the medical approach to a problem. When dealing with an illness, usually the least risky treatment is recommended. Going to court is risky. Over my 30-plus-year care as a divorce lawyer, I have told countless clients, “Get your needs met in a settlement. At trial you roll the dice.” When confronted with a divorce, think … Read More...

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