SOLENT FAMILY MEDIATION BROADSTONE
Solent Family mediation Broadstone offers an alternate means of addressing family issues.
Families who are currently involved in big or little conflicts and seek to resolve them might utilise our mediation service
Solent Family mediation Broadstone offers an alternate means of addressing family issues.
Families who are currently involved in big or little conflicts and seek to resolve them might utilise our mediation service
Find out how Solent Family Mediation can help with you resolving disputes with your ex partner.
Solent Family Mediation Broadstone is able to provide assistance with a variety of problems, some of which include disagreements with finances and property, as well as other monetary issues, such as pensions, savings, and investments or child focused disagreements.
Through mediation, all aspects of parental concerns and family issues can be addressed. Couples who are separating or divorcing may require support with contact of children, making parental plans, managing your family home and splitting assets, as well as help with dialogue among parties and arranging grandparents’ access to the children.
Mediation itself is not automatically legally binding. However, if the parties reach an agreement during mediation, they can choose to make it legally binding by drafting a written agreement and having it approved by a court. This written agreement then becomes enforceable, similar to a court order
Undoubtedly the main advantage of mediation is that you will make the decisions. You are the ones who are most familiar with your children and family. You do not have to let a stranger in a court decide how your family will function or how you will raise your children.
Court proceedings are considerably more expensive than mediation and court battles are significantly more stressful than mediation. In comparison, mediation is far quicker than working your way through the very complex phases of any court action.
MIAM is a Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting. It is the initial meeting between a client and also a family mediator, and also the purpose of the meeting is for the mediator to learn what your objectives are and to describe how the mediation procedure works.
How do I know that the Mediation procedure will be fair and that the mediator will be impartial?
Mediators are taught to be impartial and neutral. Their responsibility is not to determine who is right or wrong, but to enable both sides to a mutually beneficial compromise. The version with co-mediation helps us maintain impartiality.