Emancipation
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Emancipation
How
do I get emancipated?
I'm
thinking of running away
What is
emancipation?
How do I get
emancipated?
To be emancipated means that a minor
(someone under 18 years of age) has legally been given
certain rights which are normally reserved for adults. In
order to be emancipated, a minor must be at least 16 years
of age and the court must find that the best interests of
the minor will be served by emancipation.
To attain emancipated status,
juveniles must be fully self-supporting, have an adequate
place to live and be able to demonstrate sufficient maturity
and sense of responsibility to function on their own without
adult supervision.
Prior to Emancipating a Minor the
Court Must Consider:
Whether the parent of the
minor consents to the emancipation.
Whether the minor has been living
away from the family home and is substantially able to be
self-maintained and self-supported without parental
guidance and supervision.
Whether the minor can demonstrate
that he or she is sufficiently mature and knowledgeable
to manage his or her affairs without parental
assistance.
It is common for the Juvenile Court
Judge to expect the minor to come to court prepared with
a budget, a stable source of income, a stable residence,
and transportation and school issues
addressed.
A Decree of Emancipation Serves
Only to:
Recognize a minor as an adult
for the purposes of contracting and conveying,
establishing residence, suing and being sued, and
recognize the minor as an adult for purposes of criminal
laws of the State of Oregon.
Terminate most parental
responsibilities to the emancipated minor.
A decree of emancipation does not
affect any age qualification for purchasing alcohol or
the requirements for obtaining a marriage license, nor
declare the person to have reached the age of
majority.
Factors to be
Considered:
Below are general guidelines
to use as factors the County Judges have identified in
verifying appropriate standards for emancipation; the
youth shall:
Be employed at least 25 to
30 hours per week at minimum wage or more for at least
3 months and be able to furnish a most recent payroll
document. (Another source of income, such as a social
security trust, may be acceptable.)
Be graduated from high school,
have received a GED, or attending educational or
vocational school full-time.
Have at least one month's salary
in a checking or savings account. (Minimum of
$800).
Be able to provide own medical
insurance or be able to continue under parent's
coverage. Must show documentation from health care
provider proving eligibility and
availability.
If living away from parental
home, be established in a residence for two or three
months. The residence cannot be with the youth's
boyfriend or girlfriend. (Exception: If emancipation
is needed to enter into rental agreement, youth must
furnish documentation so indicating.)
Maturity and responsibility:
Youth must demonstrate the ability to be on his/her
own without adult supervision by the
following:
parental testimony
recommendation from reliable adults
reports from school instructors or employers
development and submission of monthly budget
There shall be no pending law
violations involving the youth.
The Emancipation
Process:
Prior to filing for
emancipation a youth may meet with a juvenile department
counselor who can answer questions, guide the youth
through the process and counsel the youth on the
viability of an emancipation.
Once the youth has decided to go
forward with the emancipation application the youth must
go to the juvenile department in the county where he or
she resides and file an application with the associated
fee. The filing fee is nonrefundable. Once the
application for emancipation has been filed, the juvenile
court will assign a juvenile department counselor who
will answer questions, ask questions in order to gather
relevant information, and prepare a report which
summarizes the significant issues and concludes with a
recommendation to the judge. The court will conduct a
preliminary hearing within ten (10) days of the date of
filing. A final hearing will be held no later than sixty
(60) days after filing.
Parents are notified of any
emancipation proceeding. At the preliminary hearing the
youth is informed of the civil and criminal rights and
liabilities of an emancipated minor and an emancipation
hearing date is scheduled.
At the emancipation hearing the
judge will hear testimony, review materials presented and
ask questions. The minor must be prepared with relevant
documents and answers to questions at the time of the
hearing.
If the minor is emancipated, he or
she is provided a copy of the Decree of Emancipation and
instructed to obtain an Oregon driver's license or an
Oregon identification card through the Oregon Department
of Transportation which makes a notation of the minor's
emancipated status.
Miscellaneous
Information:
Please be aware that an
emancipation, under most circumstances, can not be
reversed.
Emancipated minors are subject to
jurisdiction of the adult courts for criminal
offenses.
It is not unusual for parents to
want to emancipate their child, however, this action must
be initiated by the person being emancipated.
Source: www.co.curry.or.us/Departments/Juvenile/Questions#tabsa1s1172-12
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