Alaska Delegation of Powers by Parent or Guardian

State:
Alaska
Control #:
AK-PG-700
Format:
PDF
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Description

Delegation of Powers by Parent or Guardian, is an official form from the Alaska Court System, which complies with all applicable laws and statutes. USLF amends and updates the forms as is required by Alaska statutes and law.

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FAQ

A custodial parent is a parent who has either sole physical custody of the child or the parent with whom the child resides for a majority of the time. Both parents can be custodial; courts often give two parents who are both fit parents joint custody of the child.

Parental responsibility is exercised by the child's parents. Guardianship is exercised by someone who is not one of the child's parents. It is up to the person or persons with parental responsibility, or the guardian, to make decisions about the child's care and upbringing and to administer the child's property.

Generally, guardians fulfill the role of a parent for a child who is not their own. However, in situations where a child has significant medical needs or the child has financial assets, the child's parent may obtain a guardianship over the child or the child's estate.

The key difference is the child's parentage: custody describes a parent's care of a child, whereas legal guardianship is granted to someone who is not the child's biological parent. In some situations, a child may be under the guardianship of an individual while remaining in the custody of their parents to a degree.

Related DefinitionsParent or legal guardian means the custodial parent for a person under eighteen (18) years of age or the legal guardian with responsibility for health care decisions for a person of any age.

Parents can be guardians, but a guardianship is often set up because a minor child needs someone else to make legal decisions for them. In a guardianship, parents retain their parental rights and responsibilities.

Guardians and Parental Rights As a guardian, the designated person can authorize medical care, make educational decisions, and care for the day-to-day needs of the child. In the case where a court assigns one, the guardian will have custody of the child. However, parents do not relinquish their parental rights.

Minor children cannot inherit money or assets outright, so a custodian is named or appointed to manage the assets until the child reaches an appropriate age. A guardian, in contrast, is responsible for overseeing the child's day-to-day physical and financial well-being.

You can write a letter naming a guardian for your children and keep it with your important papers or write in your will who you want to be the guardian of your children when you pass away. But if both parents are dead, the court will decide who the guardian is. The court will try to appoint the person you wanted.

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Alaska Delegation of Powers by Parent or Guardian