Children & Family Advice Service
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Children & Family Advice Service

Tel: 01946 833 833
Mob: 07900883694


"FAMILY COURT ADVICE promotes fathers' rights and helps fathers regain contact with their children at a fraction of solicitors costs. 

There is a set fee  which covers ALL work connected with the case,  and the only other cost (which we keep to a minimum) is that of travel if the court advisor visits you. 

It is right that families need fathers and justice for fathers in the court system is being achieved through FAMILY COURT ADVICE."

We help divorced or separated fathers who are having difficulty in getting to see their children.    We have done  with many absent parents over the last three years.  Families need fathers but justice for fathers is still a good way off.  FAMILY COURT ADVICE is helping to achieve it.

Access - or contact - for an absent parent need not be the expensive and frightening process that has been a feature of family courts for so long. 


The organisations of Families Need Fathers and Fathers for Justice and similar bodies have been demanding changes in the law to make it easier for fathers to achieve justice and for dads to see their children and have parental rights.  FAMILY COURT ADVICE believes families need fathers and promotes justice for fathers.


With our unique, confidential and thorough approach we have been highly effective in reuniting children in England and Wales with absent fathers no matter where they live. 



If this sounds helpful,  and you are determined to achieve contact without   ruinous legal costs, then do please visit the rest of the website. For a TOTALLY FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION then contact Peter Flynn via the site,  or by a telephone call.

The law,  as it stands,  can severely punish absent fathers:  Family Court Advice helps to combat this.

What are my qualifications for helping you?


Since 1977 I have been a probation officer involved on a part time basis in family court work. In 1991 I was appointed to be a court welfare officer, dealing exclusively with family court matters; I was one of the first court welfare officers involved in the process of in court mediation in England and Wales and practised it at a time when it was unheard of in most areas. Court Welfare changed to CAFCASS and I was part of the transition to the new service. I remained in CAFCASS until I took early retirement in February 2002 and started Family Court Advice. This means that in the last 15 years I have been involved exclusively in the law about children, in continuous court practice, in mediation, in dealing with solicitors, barristers and judges, and above all – a great advantage over solicitors – in dealing with the children themselves, and their wishes and feelings and well being. I have also dealt with both sides to the disputes and have seen the anguish caused to children and parents by such disputes. The basic principle I have always followed is that unless there are proven reasons of personal safety or serious emotional damage, (both extremely rare), both parents should be equal in the eyes of any child.>
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