You have to find someone to transfer the rights to, ie, someone who will adopt the child and then be responsible for him/her.
There is no route to regaining parental rights once they have been legally and voluntarily terminated.
Yes. There are two separate concepts here:If you have a child, you have certain natural rights to see that child and participate in its rearing. These rights can be given up.If you have a child, you have certain natural responsibilities to provide for the child. These responsibilities cannot be given up, though someone else can voluntarily assume them.
A parent cannot simply abandon their child, however in most cases they can voluntarily relinquish parental rights provided that adequate alternative care (such as a relative willing to take the child or someone willing to adopt them) is available.
No, voluntarily relinquishing your parental rights does not excuse you from paying child support.
No, voluntarily relinquishing your parental rights does not excuse you from having to pay child support. However, you may be able to give the child up for adoption, in which case you would be relieved of your child support obligation.
The right to sign away your parental rights is not based on child support. Unless the child is being adopted the child support will still have to be paid whether you voluntarily give up your rights or not.
no.
no
It depends on whether your parental rights are terminated legally and the circumstances. If the child is legally adopted and you give up your parental rights voluntarily your child support obligation will end. The law wants children to be supported by two parents. Giving up custody and visitation rights will not free you from the obligation of child support.
First, without a court order, the mother cannot prohibit the father from seeing the child. If he has not voluntarily given up his rights to the child, and a judge has not created a custody schedule, the father has as much right to see the child as the mother.Second, if the father does voluntarily give up his parenting rights, or a judge does involuntarily remove his parenting rights (or awards full custody to the mother), the father would still owe child support until his child reaches the age of majority and has graduated high school.
Stand regarding what? If you voluntarily terminate your parental rights or they are involuntarily stripped by the court, you no longer have the right to see your child or have any say-so in their lives. However, your child support obligation continues unless the child is being adopted.
Paying child support does not automatically give someone the right to visitation. Assuming the other parent has custody and is not willing to voluntarily allow visitation, you'd have to petition for court-order visitation.