Dáil debates

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

8:00 pm

Photo of Alan ShatterAlan Shatter (Dublin South, Fine Gael)

I thank my colleague, Deputy Walsh, for raising this important issue. As he will be aware, the key legislation relating to parental responsibility is the Guardianship of Infants Act 1964, which was amended extensively in 1987 and 1997 to strengthen the position of non-marital fathers with regard to their children. Some of the legislative changes that have been made in this area were required by the European Court of Human Rights. It is worth recalling the details of the substance of those provisions, as they relate to unmarried fathers. I will refer to how those provisions have operated in our courts and mention the actual rights that are conferred on unmarried fathers in our legal system.

In the absence of agreement between the unmarried father and mother of a child, the father may apply to the court to be appointed a guardian of his child under section 6A of the 1964 Act, as amended by the Status of Children Act 1987. The law is protective of the rights of the child to the society of both his or her father and mother. Section 11D of the 1964 Act, which was inserted by the Children Act 1997, obliges the court in proceedings relating to the welfare of a child to consider whether the child's best interests would be served by maintaining personal relations and direct contact with both his or her father and mother on a regular basis. In this context, it is worth noting that the majority of guardianship applications are granted. In 2009, the most recent year for which final figures are available, over 95% of applicant fathers were awarded guardianship, excluding cases which were withdrawn or struck out. My personal experience prior to becoming Minister, as a lawyer dealing professionally with family law matters, was that one of the big difficulties in this area is that many fathers do not take responsibility for their children. Indeed, many of them do not seek to form and cement relationships with their children, or to involve themselves in their children's lives.

If there is agreement between the parents, the law ensures there is no need for them to go to court to have a guardianship order made. Instead, they can make a statutory declaration under section 2(4) of the Guardianship of Infants Act 1964, as inserted by section 4 of the Children Act 1997, appointing the father as a guardian of his child. Section 11 of the 1964 Act provides that the guardian of a child or the unmarried father of a child, irrespective of whether he is a guardian, can apply to the courts for either a custody order or an access order. Any court order that is made must be determined with regard to the welfare of the child as the first and paramount consideration. It is important to recall that in all proceedings under the 1964 Act, as amended, where appropriate and practicable the court must take into account the child's wishes in the matter, having regard to the age and understanding of the child. In practical terms, the older the child, the greater the importance the court attaches to the wishes expressed by the child.

While unmarried fathers do not enjoy the same automatic guardianship rights and responsibilities as married fathers, the mechanisms I have outlined make extensive provision to allow them to obtain that legal status in relation to their children. Based on the statistics I have mentioned, the courts operate the law to the fullest possible extent. The truth is that there is no major obstacle to the biological father of a child being named as guardian of the child in circumstances in which the father has an established relationship with that child. As the Deputy mentioned, a number of recommendations for reform have been made. I have raised this issue while wearing a different hat. As recently as December 2010, the Law Reform Commission published a report on legal aspects of family relationships in which it recommended that joint registration of a child's birth be made compulsory for unmarried parents; and that on registration a father should automatically become a guardian of the child together with the child's mother.

The report also recommends providing a statutory basis for other members of the child's family, including step-parents and other relatives, to establish a legal relationship with the child. These are far-reaching and important proposals to which I am giving careful consideration, and are relevant to both legal and constitutional policy. I believe consultation is required with relevant interests before we progress legislation in this area. It is important for all parties concerned that a necessary balance be maintained in the law in a way which recognises the rights of the parties but which fundamentally protects the welfare of children.

The programme for Government contains a commitment to reform and modernise aspects of family law. In this context, I want to assure my colleague the recommendations in the Law Reform Commission's report are under consideration by me and my Department, as are other crucial reforms in the area of family law. Ultimately, it is my hope to publish a family law Bill. In addressing some of the areas of family law, I expect not to be in a position to publish that Bill until next year.

In dealing with issues of this nature it is important not to deal with them too simplistically, and I am not remotely suggesting that Deputy Walsh would do so. However, there are other areas relating to both parenthood and paternity and guardianship rights which have for too long been ignored in this State and which are of considerable importance, such as the parentage and, indeed, paternity of children born as a result of the new scientific methods of reproduction and the assistance that parents may obtain from those who donate materials which can result ultimately in a child being born. These are issues which have for too long been ignored and in respect of which legislation is required. They affect not merely parents outside marriage but marital parents, and these are issues that I hope to be in a position to address by way of legislation next year.

Comments

John Don
Posted on 11 Jun 2011 7:49 pm (Report this comment)

Alan,

you state "In 2009, the most recent year for which final figures are available, over 95% of applicant fathers were awarded guardianship, excluding cases which were withdrawn or struck out. My personal experience prior to becoming Minister, as a lawyer dealing professionally with family law matters, was that one of the big difficulties in this area is that many fathers do not take responsibility for their children. Indeed, many of them do not seek to form and cement relationships with their children, or to involve themselves in their children�s lives."

You juxtapose the 95% statistical figure of proven responsible fathers with your anecdotal personal experience claiming that "one of the big difficulties in this area" is of fathers not taking responsibility for their children. Amazingly you entirely miss the irony in this.
If it were not on such a serious matter and such a scurrilous attempt to blacken the good name of most fathers it would be laughable..but it's no joke when you are the Minister for Justice and the happiness or misery of thousands of children and families depends upon your every utterance.

It's completely unsurprising therefore to see your use of the LRC report as a roadmap for future family law.

yours sincerely,

John

Cathal Garvey
Posted on 13 Jun 2011 11:42 am (This comment has been reported to moderators)

Minister Shatter states that "While unmarried fathers do not enjoy the same automatic guardianship rights and responsibilities as married fathers, the mechanisms I have outlined make extensive provision to allow them to obtain that legal status in relation to their children".
However, what he does not refer to is the failure of most institutions (schools, hospitals, health care professionals) to respect the right of children to have both guardians act JOINTLY on their behalf as per Section 6.(1) of the Guardianship of Infants Act 1964. http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/1964/en/act/pub/0007/sec0006....
Examples can be seen in recent Equality Tribunal cases http://equalityforfathersinireland.webs.com/equalitytribunal...
Minister Shatter would be better served ensuring that Guardianship, as it currently stands, is enforced before granting such weak rights to unmarried fathers. Indeed, the Law Reform Commission propose to diminish the already weak rights of guardianship that married fathers have.

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