Posts Tagged ‘san diego mediation’

Saving Money with Mediation - A Testimonial

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Celine C. Callahan, CA 9/24/2011

“Rich Gordon was extremely helpful as he really facilitated my ex-husband and I sort through our separation, preventing some of the stress associated with this very bad situation. It also prevented us to spend a lot more money that we would have if we had taken two separates lawyers. Rick was fair and never showed any preferences, making us agree on reasonable decisions that were pertaining to our situation.  The divorce papers were filed quickly. During this difficult period, Rich were sensitive and passionate as well, which helped me going through his difficult period”

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Couple Lost $100,000 with Traditional Divorce

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

In 2011, a couple came to A Fair Way Mediation Center and said that they had each spent $50,000 by taking the traditional route to divorce.  They never ended up getting a divorce because they couldn’t afford the fees any longer and their own attorney fired them for not paying.  Since then, they have been working with us and when all is said and done, they will spend thousands less.  They will also avoid showing up in court and the overall process for them has been much easier and calmer.

On January 17 we will host a free webinar about divorce and mediation.  It’s the perfect opportunity to ask questions off the clock and see whether mediation is best and what alternatives and opportunities are available.  One of the things we will discuss is why mediation saves money and why it is less stressful.   We meet people all the time who have tried traditional divorce and have just been burned in the end.  In order to further educate the public, our webinar will be very educational, allowing for questions and follow-up communication.

Please sign up today as there are only 100 openings for registrants.  Sign up easily and quickly here: http://bit.ly/v2l5Ds Here is more information:

A Fair Way Mediation Center will be holding a free webinar called “A Fair Way Mediation, The Basics of Divorce, Part 1.”

During the webinar, A Fair Way Mediation Center’s will provide free divorce advice, allow for questions by attendees and all participants will receive a copy of the webinar by email, which will include Mr. Gordon’s email address where additional questions may be posed. The webinar is scheduled for January 17, 2012 at 10:30 a.m. Pacific Standard Time.

Take a look at this video: How Mediation Saves Money

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Glowing Testimonials - A Fair Way Mediation

Friday, November 25th, 2011

Jane S. San Diego, CA  9/27/2011

“Rich was wonderful to work with during a difficult time.  I am thankful that he was able to assist us with talking through things that we could not talk about on our own.  I feel that he really cares about people and is easy to work with.  The savings is nice with mediation but most important is being able to resolve issues and remain friends as we’ve been able to do.  We have Rich to thank for guiding us in the right direction”

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Choosing Your Mediator

Monday, November 21st, 2011

When choosing a Mediator, think of the bond you seek with a doctor or a therapist.  There needs to be trust, expertise on behalf of the professional, and above all, you need to like that person, especially if they are going to get to know you in such a personal way.

Qualifications and expertise need to be accounted for first and then there needs to be an evaluation of interpersonal skills.  You need to determine if this is a person you can bond with. Everyone has their own way in which they expect people to act, how they expect to be treated, what they expect of another person’s morals and values and of course how they expect to do business.

When choosing your Mediator, do your homework and call a couple people.  Talk to them in person or over the phone.  Look for someone that possesses the following: emotional stability and maturity, integrity, neutrality, and sensitivity.

A great Mediator possesses the ability to listen, to clarify issues, to educate his or her clients, to be sensitive, and most of all, to be fair.

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Testimonials “Rich Gordon Provided Excellent Service”

Monday, January 10th, 2011

L S. 10/15/2011

“Rich Gordon provided excellent service for me and my ex.

He met with us and thoroughly explained the process, handled the paperwork efficiently and professionally, and contacted us as needed via phone and email. He helped us as we completed the documents and took care of all the court filings and other requirements as promised, and on time so the process was done by the end of the year.

His fees were fair. The work was done efficiently and as anticipated by both of us.

I highly recommend A Fair Way Mediation Center for couples who want to end their marriage with as little trouble and cost as possible, and need help to work out their property and other issues. Rich did a great job, as promised, on time and at a reasonable price”

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Does Your Mediator Stink?

Friday, August 21st, 2009

by:  Lee Rosen

Here’s a simple test to determine if your mediator knows how to mediate. It involves one question. Answer the question, score your test and if your mediator stinks then find a new mediator.

What time did the mediation end?

Note – this test only applies if the mediation started before lunch. If it started after lunch then you’ll have to do some math to compensate for the late start. Also, if you have a complicated case involving a multi-day mediation, the test applies only to the final day of the mediation.

Now, lets socre the test.

Score sheet:

_____ Mediation was over before 5 PM and the case was resoved – you have a great mediator.

_____ Mediation ended between 5 PM and 6 PM – you have a pretty good mediator.

_____ Mediation ended between 6 PM and 7 PM – you’re mediator is questionable.

_____ Mediation ended after 7 PM and the case was resolved – your mediator sucks.

_____ Mediation ended after 7 PM and the case was not resolved – your mediator really, really sucks.

Mediators that finish their cases, resolved or not, after 7 PM are relying on the parties getting hungry and tired – that’s their primary dispute resolution skill. That’s not good enough. Mediators should be trained in conflict resolution. They should be digging deep. They should know that the “issue is not the issue” and be adding value to the lives of the parties and helping them find a new way of dealing with one another.

If the mediator’s toolkit has just one tool (hungry and tired) then they need to go back to mediator class and listen this time. Some mediators will argue that they shouldn’t be judged by how quickly they resolve disputes. I’m not judging them by that standard. If they need more time they should simply continue the mediation on another day when the parties are rested and fed.

Of course, this analysis doesn’t apply every time, in every case, but, if your mediator is consistently wrapping up after dark then it’s time to find a new mediator.

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For more information, please visit A Fair Way Mediation at:  http://www.afairway.com.  There is a free online evaluation form to see if mediation is right for you.  Or please feel free to call us at:  619-702-9174

www.afairway.com

Divorce Mediation: Best Way to Solve Issues

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

We all make blunders occasionally we make these blunders in our significant life partner selection. To deal with such blundered choices to freedom and getting freedom from the tensions of them at the earliest stage is an urgent job that uou must attend to by adopting necessary process. Separation or divorce is one such unpleasant blunder correction process where future needs of children your own financial and mental disasters are major influencing factors of this separation process. Divorce mediation is one safe and less taxing way to handle such tense though delicate situations

Uses of Divorce Mediation

Divorce could prove a very agonizing suffering for you if not handled with cool thought, patience and concern to other human beings getting affected with divorce process. The process could have happened at your starting even then the actions going to follow now are surly emotionally harsh to ride out through. The Divorce mediation managed and supervised by professional divorce mediator service provider will definitely impress upon both the stake holders of divorce procedure to reach a respectable arrangement, without much acrimony that is part and partial of this sordid saga.

Yu must keep in mind that Divorce mediation is not going to protect of salvage your strained marriage. Divorce mediation will make no effort to bring you two persons, who dislike each other now, return to your marriage vows again in togetherness. Divorce mediation limited in objectives conducted by an impartial unbiased third person to assist both of you to forget your acrimonious past and look towards arriving at just payment settlement. The divorce mediators will not adjudicate. Mediator will not decide on your behalf this not his job this is your job. Mediator will catalyze the process and keep proceeding cool and saving them from going out of logical control

The divorce mediation will also be lesser costly than costly and time consuming court process. If you use a divorce lawyer in place of a going for divorce mediation you are going to pay heavy fees of court and attorney. Divorce mediation and trying to reach a settlement is always to your advantage.

In cases where you do not share and accept scenarios they will be modified, represented, and discussed again and again until an acceptable settlement is arrived at that is fitting to the expectations and limits of both persons.

The objective of divorce mediation is to facilitate couples to reach a reasonable settlement with regard to their financials and other assets, in free from acrimony and calm way, if they have children the making co-parenting arrangement for the children.
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For more information, please visit A Fair Way Mediation at:  http://www.afairway.com.  There is a free online evaluation form to see if mediation is right for you.  Or please feel free to call us at:  619-702-9174

www.afairway.com

Couples holding off on divorce during economic downturn

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

by Kara G. Morrison - Jun. 15, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

When Michelle Campbell filed for divorce last year after 13 years of marriage, she underestimated its toll on her finances.

“I went from Nordstrom to Walmart in like 24 hours,” the Scottsdale Realtor said. “I have friends who are not getting divorced because they see what it’s done to me.”

The economy appears to be doing what marriage counselors struggle to do: keep couples together. Spouses are hesitating to divorce because of the high cost of breaking up.

Local divorce attorneys said they’re hearing of more people who feel they can’t afford to leave spouses and move on with their lives. That flies in the face of conventional wisdom, which holds that divorce rates rise with economic stress.

In Arizona, total granted divorces and annulments dropped by 530, or 2.2 percent, last year vs. 2007. In January and February of this year, there were 2,551 granted divorces and annulments in Maricopa County, down 1 percent over the same period in 2008.

However, the county’s latest numbers have just started to show a sharp rise, with granted divorces and annulments rising by 178 - 16.6 percent - in March over that month last year.

“It’s difficult (to divorce), because the housing market is so terrible right now,” Phoenix divorce attorney Daniel Siegel said. “For the average person, the house is their biggest asset. When that is worth significantly less, and in a lot of cases underwater, it makes it a lot harder to figure out what is going to happen with that asset. It certainly makes it more difficult to try to come up with solutions for people.”

Phoenix life coach Vickie Champion knows of at least one marriage saved by the downturn. She said a client “was dead set on leaving” her husband, but after realizing she couldn’t support herself in the current economy, she worked on the marriage.

“Most people who are married don’t communicate,” Champion said. “The easy way out before would be to leave them, but now the easy way out is not to leave them.”

Angela Hallier, a Phoenix family-law attorney, said divorce trends have shifted in the past year. She’s seeing more people who feel they can’t proceed for financial reasons. She also has had couples who live together through their divorce because they can’t sell their homes.

“There are many cases where we are coming up with rules of engagement for the household,” Hallier said. “It’s like roommate rules.”

In these cases, she said, soon-to-be ex-spouses are dividing up square footage, along with belongings and household duties.

“We’ve gone as far as to say who gets what mattress,” Hallier said.

Nationally and locally, divorce rates have been heading downward since the 1980s. Statistics don’t adhere to conventional wisdom about recessions triggering divorces, either. Although national divorce rates (the number of divorces per 1,000 population) climbed during the 1970s recessions, they fell during downturns in the 1980s. Still, Siegel believes in normal economic dips, money problems place a huge stress on marriages.

“I think financial stress is something that, for some reason, is much, much more difficult to get through and to deal with,” he said, adding that this downturn doesn’t seem to follow the typical rules. “During the recession in 2000-2001, we didn’t see this type of impact on the real-estate market. This is certainly a lot different than a normal recession.”

Phoenix family-law attorney William Bishop also expected to see the divorce rate rise slightly when the economy started to contract last year.

Many of his divorce cases are more complex because of couples’ financial circumstances. Bishop said he has had to refer more clients to financial planners, and some have had to go through separate bankruptcy proceedings.

“It’s a lot easier to divide an asset than a debt,” Bishop said. “It really does take more creative thinking to get people separated when you have debt.”

On the flip side, one demographic may not be so hesitant to part ways. Affluent couples are finding it easier to split right now than middle- and lower-income couples.

“If you have a lot of cash on hand, the assets you’re dividing now are (worth) a lot less,” Siegel said. “I don’t want to say it’s a bargain situation, but you can buy the assets for a lot less.”

Hallier also said she has seen an increase in divorce cases among affluent couples where the sole working spouse recently lost significant income.

“It brings to the forefront the dysfunction of the marriage,” Hallier said. “While they had a high and substantial income, it was easier to live with (problems).”

Among her divorcing clients, Hallier said it’s staggering how many have a direct connection to the state’s hardest-hit industry.

“The percent of divorces where one spouse is involved in real estate is huge,” she said.

If there’s any silver lining in current trends, it’s that some couples are getting more creative and exploring more-amicable settlements. Mediation - a process in which spouses agree to work with a mediator and settle out of court - has been on the rise for the past three to five years, said Rich Gordon, principal mediator at A Fair Way Mediation Center in San Diego.

Hallier also said more divorcing couples also are undertaking a “collaborative divorce” where each spouse hires his or her own attorney and agrees to settle out of court. The collaboration helps couples - especially those with children - work through lingering issues, sometimes with help from a therapist, child psychologist or even a CPA when complex finances are difficult to separate.

“It’s sometimes less expensive, and almost always a better emotional process,” Hallier said.

Still, Gordon said, mediation also is slow right now as couples navigate financial woes. Although he has gotten more calls recently, he expects divorces to stall for at least the next year, until the housing market and unemployment rates stabilize.

“Mediation is a lot less economically painful than adversarial lawyering, but it almost doesn’t matter,” Gordon said. “What I am finding is, unlike other slow periods over the course of my career, this one really has people scared, because they’re looking over their shoulder about their jobs and they don’t have a large reservoir of money.”

Campbell, meanwhile, hasn’t regretted her decision to divorce. She would like to be a consultant to other women in her position (she was a stay-at-home mom when she filed for divorce) to let them know they can get through it - as long as they research all the household finances.

“At some point, you have to say, ‘I’m intelligent and I can make more money, but I can’t live in misery,’ ” Campbell said.

It’s still unclear what effect, if any, the recession ultimately will have on the divorce rate. But Phoenix attorney Bishop said one thing is certain.

“Most people, if they want a divorce, they’re going to find a way to get a divorce,” he said.

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For more information, please visit A Fair Way Mediation at:  http://www.afairway.com.  There is a free online evaluation form to see if mediation is right for you.  Or please feel free to call us at:  619-702-9174

www.afairway.com

Mediation: Because Dirty Laundry Belongs in the Wash, Not in Court

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Came across this wonderful article from a New Jersey Divorce Mediator:

In today’s Wall Street Journal, there was an article about the fight over revealing divorce details and the potential damage it could do to the individuals involved and their children.  The author’s point was that it was difficult to tell where the first amendment and the public’s “right to know” ended and the seemingly insatiable interest in gossip we have now-a-days begins.  Just walk by a newsstand or search the Internet for a celebrity’s name and an endless stream of information will appear before your eyes on everything from what they had for dinner last night to the latest rumor about their sexuality.  But if you think it’s just limited to celebrities, think again. It seems these days that there is no such thing as private information given how much data is publicly available on us.  Just do a search on your name in Google and be prepared for what you find.  Do you really want this information out there when it comes to your divorce?

As you may already know, divorce proceedings are open to the public and anyone including your co-workers, neighbors and relatives can sit in the gallery and listen to every sordid detail.  All of this is happening while you pay your attorneys tens of thousands of dollars to come to a settlement you and your ex could have pretty much put together yourself with the help of a New Jersey divorce mediator so what it really comes down to is personal choice.  Do you go the adversarial route and fight this out in public or do you go the mediation route and resolve your differences in private?

There are many benefits of mediation and if you’re like me, privacy is a big one because what happened during my marriage is my business and should remain only my business.   When you use a mediation service, there is no such breech as everything we do is behind closed doors and stays in the confines of our mediation sessions, keeping the details of your settlement completely private as opposed to the alternative which (well read this article and see what I mean) isn’t exactly ideal.  And if you think grandstanding in open court is going to get you a more favorable settlement, think again.  I can’t imagine when you and your soon to be ex are screaming at each other in front of dozens of total strangers, you are going to end up with a good result.  As much as we’d like to think we’re adults, divorce can make us do crazy things and cooler heads don’t always prevail.  But with the help of a divorce mediator in New Jersey you and your spouse will be surprised at just how much progress you can make towards peacefully ending your marriage.  It doesn’t have to be as hard as the movies and television would like you to believe and by making the decision to keep your divorce details to yourself, I promise you, both you and your children will be better off in the long run.

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For more information, please visit A Fair Way Mediation at:  http://www.afairway.com.  There is a free online evaluation form to see if mediation is right for you.  Or please feel free to call us at:  619-702-9174

www.afairway.com

Economy prolongs some marriages, ends others

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

By Christine Romans
CNN’s “Your $$$$$” Host

NEW YORK (CNN) — Breaking up is hard to do — perhaps even more so during a recession.

Just ask Sallie Frederick of Darien, Connecticut. She and her husband of 15 years are divorcing, but they both live in the house they can’t sell because of the sour state of the economy.

“My husband lives in the guest room, and he comes home on Wednesday nights early to have dinner with the kids, and the other nights he comes home late to give me my space, so it’s, it’s not perfect,” she told CNN’s “Your $$$$$” program. “It’s been difficult.”

The stress of the country’s economic meltdown is taking its toll on marriages.

And while there is no definitive evidence that says people seek divorce more or less frequently during an economic slump, what is clear is that couples in marital turmoil are feeling extra stress because of the economy.

Some, like the Fredericks, can’t leave their current situation because the financial costs are too great and because it’s too difficult to sell their house.

Others may jump into divorce because of the economic strain or because divorce during hard times could be weirdly profitable.

The Cordell and Cordell law firm, which bills itself as one of the largest divorce firms in the country, has been running radio ads suggesting people whose assets have tanked may want to consider divorce because they’ll lose less money to their partner, said Joseph Cordell, the firm’s principal partner.

Cordell said the advice is meant only for couples who are certain they want to divorce.

“For guys that know they’re going to end up getting divorced, they really need to realize that, oddly enough, it’s when they can least afford it that it can make the most sense,” he said.

Gary Becker, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, said past recessions have led to more couples splitting up “mainly because of the uncertainty and unemployment of both spouses.”

But those separations may not result in legal divorce because of the costs, he said.

Sallie Frederick, whose husband declined to comment for this story, says she began divorce proceedings in October and expects the divorce to be final in about a month.

But their house isn’t likely to sell in this slow market. That means truly splitting up may be months off.

“Right now there are 20 houses in town on the market that are in our price range, and there are no buyers,” she said. “So my broker has pretty much prepared me that the house is going to sit for quite a while.”

Divorce attorney Raoul Felder says couples such as the Fredericks are making the smart financial choice by living together through separation.

“People have to decide how much they hate each other, because if they can still live with each other, and the house or the apartment is big enough, they ought to stay together and wait for a rising market,” Felder says.

Divorce financial planner Gabrielle Clemens says many couples don’t have the $3,000 to $5,000 to hire an attorney for the process.

“If you can’t even retain a lawyer and you have nothing to divide up except for debt, then I think you’re better off to wait,” she said. “I think that’s what a lot of people are doing.”

Cordell said a contested divorce involving child custody could cost up to $30,000.

Divorce attorney Felder says deciding to divorce right now is a “guessing game” about the economy.

On average, he said a divorce takes eight months. Couples have to decide if they think the economy will be any better by the time the divorce is done.

“You have got to do a very careful arithmetic,” Felder says. “The best advice you can give people, if they can stand it: You are swimming against the tide at this point. Tread water a little bit. Wait for the economy to rebound.”

Staying together — even for a few more months — could save thousands of dollars.

“A little misery is worth a lot of money,” says Felder. “So try to stay married if you possibly can.”

That leaves couples who are divorcing and want to live apart, like Sallie Frederick and her husband, in limbo.

Sallie Frederick, who has a business as a life coach, says the difficulty of what a lot of men and women are going through is the uncertainty.

“What is going to happen in a month? What is that picture going to look like? I don’t know,” she said. “I don’t know where am I going to be living. It’s the unknown that I think is frightening.”

A Fair Way Mediation may be contacted directly at www.afairway.com or by calling 619-702-9174.  The offices are located in downtown San Diego, One America Plaza, 600 W. Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101.