In this family law parenting dispute, the applicant sought to vary an earlier consent order governing joint custody and a shared parenting schedule for a school-age child.
After reviewing earlier assessment evidence, updated OCL evidence, and extensive evidence of ongoing parental conflict, the court held that significant positive changes in the applicant's circumstances neutralized the concerns that had previously favoured the respondent as primary parent.
The court found that making the respondent the primary residential parent, or imposing a true week-about shared parenting regime, would create an unnecessary and significant disruption to a child who was thriving in the current arrangement and closely bonded to a younger half-sibling.
The prior consent order was varied to continue joint custody, place the child with the applicant during the school week, give the respondent three of every four weekends, and remove police enforcement, telephone access, and exchange provisions.