COURSES FOR YOU
Our experts all offer a wide variety of online and in person, highly practical courses, educational tools and resources, podcasts, and webinars to support our clients and the wider community.
Details of all current and upcoming courses are outlined below. These programmes will genuinely leave you feeling support and in control and will save you a fortune in the process.
You can also sign up to receive our newsletter for details of further upcoming Courses, Events, Workshops, Podcasts, Host details and webinars which are presented in person and online.
This course has been delivered to our clients for twenty years and has consistently enabled our clients to avoid enormous stress, danger, financial hardship, legal costs and long term family disconnect. We step you through the process with emotional support, practical and easy to follow guidance and education, strategies and coping skills to enable you and your family to not only survive Separation and Divorce, but to rebuild and thrive again. The Course includes a copy of the updated 2024 Ultimate Separation Planner. For further details on the next course, please email us at [email protected]
The Ultimate Divorce Planner is not only like a huge hug it is an educational source, full of important guidance and checklists, strategy and planning guides, communication and diary and evidence gathering support, and self care journal all in one. It contains thousands of dollars worth of legal, financial and psychological support. Order your copy now OR purchase as part of the Ultimate Separation Course. It really will be a game changer for you during this time.
Delivered by some of the leading educators in this field, this course is incredibly valuable, practical and easy to follow. It is all about educating and empowering you to make more informed decisions about your financial situation. It takes you from pre-separation preparation, budgeting and valuations, to pre-settlement negotiation of your financials, and beyond to the post settlement phases of divorce, to provide you with the foundations you need to rebuild your life. This course will genuinely save you thousands long term! Email us to join the waiting list for the next course. [email protected]
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Questions about our online
Counselling or Coaching Services?
Most clients prefer to book directly with with our counsellors. No referral is required to access this counselling service.
During the first session, you can discuss the benefits of seeking a Mental Health Care Plan from your GP should you wish to pursue this path moving forward and you are booking with a registered psychologist. If you require a Mental Health Care Plan (MHCP) you will need to make a long appointment with your GP and they will make an assessment about whether you are eligible.
All of our registered psychologists are registered with Medicare and you will need a referral from a GP if you wish to claim Medicare rebates. Under the Better Access program you can receive a partial rebate for up to 10 individual sessions in a calendar year.
All our psychologists are registered with private health insurance providers in Australia. If you have private health insurance, you may be eligible to claim rebates for psychological sessions. The level of cover and any applicable waiting periods vary between providers and depends on your extras cover policy.
To find out if you are eligible and/or how much funding you are entitled to claim for psychological sessions, please contact your private health insurance.
Where applicable, some of our psychologists also see clients who are self-managed or plan-managed through NDIS at the current rate for NDIS.
Given the nature of our support services, last minute cancellations are costly, and it means that other clients may miss out on receiving the required support. For cancellations within 48 hours of the scheduled appointment there is a $65 part fee payment. For less than 24 hours cancellation notice or a non-show, the full session fee will need to be charged. These fees are refunded however if the session can be filled at the last minute.
We know our clients are time poor. For your convenience, all our counselling or coaching sessions are now available online via Zoom.
You can book your appointment online via this website.
Zoom allows us to connect with you via video and audio. It just requires you to click on a link to join. You can sign up to Zoom to create a FREE account and download the Zoom Client for Meetings. Zoom does require internet connections.
After you book you will be sent a reminder about the booking and emailed a link to connect at the booked time. You are also likely to be sent a client information form to complete prior to your initial consultation to enable our Counsellors and Coaches to be better prepared for your first meeting.
If you are unable to make any of the dates available, please email us to see if we can accommodate an alternate time for you: [email protected]
If you live in Brisbane or the Gold Coast, Queensland, we are available for face to face consultations. Please email us at [email protected] if you would like to arrange an in person appointment.
“If a de facto couple separate, there are very strict requirements to be satisfied before they can make a financial or parenting order in the Family Court after separation.”
A de facto relationship is defined in Australia as a relationship between two individuals, who may be of the same or opposite sex, who have a relationship as a couple, are not legally married or related by family, and live together on a genuine domestic basis.
De facto relationships can be extremely varied and there is no set checklist of factors to prove that a couple is living in a de facto relationship, but the following is usually taken into consideration when assessing whether the couple is considered to be in a De facto relationship:
Are the couple living together?
How long have the couple been living together?
Do they have a sexual relationship?
Are they financially independent or do they share bank accounts, own property together, share weekly living expenses like electricity and gas and other utilities and insurance?
Do their family and friends consider them a couple?
Is there a mutual commitment between them?
Do they have any children which they care for and support?
If a de facto couple separate, there are very strict requirements to be satisfied before they can make a financial or parenting order in the Family Court after separation. The Family Court does not apply to de facto relationships unless the court is satisfied that the following applies:
1. The relationship broke down after 1 March 2009 or 1 July 2010 (South Australia) AND
2. They were in a genuine de facto relationship with each other (not legally married) and it has now broken down, AND
3. They have a geographical connection to the participating jurisdiction, AND
4. They must also meet one of the following criteria:
The period for the de facto relationship was for at least 2 years, OR
There is a child in the de facto relationship, OR
The de facto relationship is registered with the Department of Births, Deaths and Marriages under a prescribed law of a particular Australian State or Territory. De facto partners often register to show commitment to one another as well as to make it easier to prove they are in a relationship for financial matters such as tax and superannuation purposes, Centrelink and other government payments. Please note, different registration requirements may apply for each State and Territory of Australia, OR
If in a de facto relationship for less than 2 years, when assessing their property or custodial claims, it is recognised that a significant contribution was being made by one party and the failure to issue an order would result in a serious misjustice to the person applying for the order.
Parties who are separating from a de facto relationship can apply to the Family Court, using the same forms as a married couple, to have their financial and parenting matters determined in the same way as married couples. De facto financial orders must be applied for within two years of the last breakdown of the relationship (ie date of separation). They must apply to the courts to get permission for an extension, if beyond two years.
Before a court can make a parenting order, the parties must show they have made a genuine attempt to resolve the disputes via family dispute resolution, which is a process in which an accredited family dispute practitioner helps people resolve disputes relating to separation or divorce.
Once family dispute resolution has been attempted, a section 601 certificate will usually be issued unless there are unique circumstances such as family violence or child abuse by a party or risk of it.
The specific date of separation becomes important especially for property settlement as well as for child support payments and Centrelink entitlements. It is the day the two individuals stop living together as a couple. If there are disputes over the date, the parties can provide evidence such as receipts for short term leases or accommodation, separation of finances, notification of government social services of the separation, informing family and friends.
If the separated couple continue to live in the same residence for various reasons including financial, children or for convenience, the law will usually require supporting evidence (by sworn written statements referred to as affidavits) that the parties were actually separated whilst living under the same roof. If the date remains in dispute, the court will have to make their own judgment based on all the facts.
If there have been any attempts to reconcile during the separation period, then provided it is for no more than 3 months, the length of the first separation can be then added to the subsequent separation period. However, if the reconciliation is for more than 3 months then the date of separation begins from the end of the last reconciliation.
A Binding Financial Agreement (BFA) is often the most effective way as it considers what each person brings into the relationship, their contribution during the relationship and other conditions such as children of the relationship.
In many states of Australia, it should be noted that separating from your de facto partner will not change your Will and any gift in your Will to your ex-de facto partner would likely still be valid on your death, even if you have separated and divided up your assets. It is highly recommended that you get legal advice about your relevant jurisdiction’s requirements, amending your Will and any future claims that your ex-de facto may still have on your estate, for example if they were being financially maintained by you at the time of your passing or they are the parent of your child, who is still a minor they may still be entitled to a claim even if your will is amended.
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DISCLAIMER: The material contained on this website is for general educational and information purposes only and is not a substitute for professional legal, financial, medical or psychological advice or care. While every care has been taken in the information provided, no legal responsibility or liability is accepted, warranted or implied by the authors or Family Counselling Support Network and any liability is hereby expressly disclaimed. For specific advice please contact us at [email protected]. All information contained on the website remains the intellectual property of Family Counselling Support Network and is for your personal educational use only. The information must not be reproduced or distributed without the express permission of Family Counselling Support Network.
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