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H269 • 2025

An Act strengthening parenting time plans

An Act strengthening parenting time plans

Children
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Joan Meschino
Last action
2025-10-29
Official status
Accompanied a new draft, see H4656
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

An Act strengthening parenting time plans

An Act strengthening parenting time plans By Representative Meschino of Hull, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.

What This Bill Does

  • An Act strengthening parenting time plans By Representative Meschino of Hull, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.
  • 269) of Joan Meschino relative to parenting time plans for certain foster children.
  • Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2025-10-29 House

    Accompanied a new draft, see H4656

  2. 2025-07-22 Joint

    Hearing rescheduled to 07/22/2025 from 01:00 PM-03:15 PM in A-1 and Virtual Hearing updated to New End Time

  3. 2025-07-11 Joint

    Hearing scheduled for 07/22/2025 from 01:00 PM-05:00 PM in A-1

  4. 2025-02-27 House

    Referred to the committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities

  5. 2025-02-27 Senate

    Senate concurred

Official Summary Text

An Act strengthening parenting time plans
By Representative Meschino of Hull, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 269) of Joan Meschino relative to parenting time plans for certain foster children. Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
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Bill H.269

Chapter 119 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after section 26C the following section:-

Section 26D. (a) Whenever a court transfers temporary custody or responsibility of a child to the department, to a licensed child care agency or to an individual as described in clause (i) of paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of section 26, the court shall order regular and frequent visitation between the parent and child unless the court finds that such visitation would be harmful to the child’s health or safety. The court may review and modify any such order or finding at any time thereafter upon the motion of any party for good cause shown.

(b) An order entered pursuant to subsection (a) shall specify the frequency, duration and other terms of parent-child visitation, including the extent to which the visitation shall be supervised or unsupervised. In setting the terms of the visitation, the court shall consider the child’s age, developmental stage and any other needs of the child.

(c) There shall be a rebuttable presumption that parent-child visitation will be unsupervised. The court may require that all visitation be supervised only upon a finding that unsupervised visitation would endanger the safety or well-being of the child.

(d) (i) Regular and frequent parent-child visitation shall not be less than once every week and shall include at least 2 hours of visitation per week unless the court determines that such visitation would be harmful to the safety or well-being of the child.

(ii) The court may not suspend parent-child visitation for more than 4 weeks or terminate parent-child visitation unless it finds, by clear and convincing evidence, that parent-child visitation would harm the safety or well-being of the child.

(e) The court may issue orders for communication between the parent and child, including telephone calls, video calls, electronic mail, text messaging or regular mail. When issuing such orders, the court shall consider the child’s age, developmental stage and any other needs of the child.

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