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Do-it-yourself divorce in Vermont
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State-mandated course enables nearly 70 percent of divorcing
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couples to untie the knot without a lawyer.
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Tuesday, January 21, 2003
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MONTPELIER, Vt. - A majority of Vermonters who divorce do so
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without hiring an attorney.
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Instead, they take a class on how to represent themselves.
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The court-mandated session is for people who have filed for
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divorce and opted not to hire a lawyer. Nearly 70 percent of
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Vermonters are divorced without an attorney, according to
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statistics from the Court Administrator's Office.
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Some are put off by the cost of a hiring a divorce lawyer, which
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starts at about $1,500. Others just want to be in control of the
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process.
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"There's not a lot of low-cost counsel available. If you've got
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limited resources and you think you can do it, and the court does
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help, then maybe this is the one thing that you forego in order to
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pay for something else," said Sally Fox, a former state
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representative who helped write the legislation to establish Family
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Courts and who used to be the state director of Family Court
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operations.
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There are also risks to going it alone.
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Many of the decisions that are made in front of a judge cannot
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be reversed later.
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The state established a Family Court system in 1990. A separate
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court system would bring divorce and child custody cases onto the
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same docket as juvenile cases. The goal was to more quickly resolve
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cases that had to do with children, Fox said.
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"Because it's a place where the needs of children will be
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paramount, we want it to be a place where you can get these cases
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resolved quickly," Fox said.
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Family Court was set up as a user-friendly place and continues
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to add programs to streamline the process.
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Although the court wasn't necessarily established to allow the
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majority of Vermonters to represent themselves in a divorce, that
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has been the effect.
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Tom Garrett, executive director of Legal Services Law Line of
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Vermont, said he worries most about people who have reading
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problems, disabilities or who are so traumatized by the divorce
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itself that they lack judgment in making decisions. Those people
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could benefit from a lawyer if they can afford one, he said.
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"If people are relatively sophisticated, relatively literate and
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have cool judgment so they can express themselves well and listen
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well, they can probably handle this themselves," he said.
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