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<description>Cheryl Stein is Manhattan divorce lawyer, New York city divorce lawyer, NYC divorce lawyer and New York County divorce lawyer</description>
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<url>https://cherylsteinesq.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/CS-36x36.jpg</url><title>Flattening the Curve Archives | Cheryl Stein, Esq.</title><link>https://cherylsteinesq.com/blog/tag/flattening-the-curve/</link>
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<item><title>Flattening the Curve in Divorce</title><link>https://cherylsteinesq.com/blog/flattening-the-curve-in-divorce/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Cheryl Stein]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2020 20:42:43 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[Collaborative Divorce]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Child Support]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Covid]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Divorce]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Flattening the Curve]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Post-Judgment Maintenance]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">https://cherylsteinesq.com/blog/?p=687</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>When I heard the term “Flattening the Curve” associated with COVID 19, it was eerily familiar, with great resonance.  Divorce is about flattening a different kind of curve. Instead of spreading out medical care, divorce professionals spread out the financial and emotional impact of divorce on a family.  COVID is here; it is looking society [&#8230;]</p><p>The post <a
href="https://cherylsteinesq.com/blog/flattening-the-curve-in-divorce/">Flattening the Curve in Divorce</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://cherylsteinesq.com">Cheryl Stein, Esq.</a>.</p>
]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">When I heard the term “Flattening the Curve” associated with COVID 19, it was eerily familiar, with great resonance. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Divorce is about flattening a different kind of curve. Instead of spreading out medical care, divorce professionals spread out the financial and emotional impact of divorce on a family. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">COVID is here; it is looking society straight in the eye; there is no averting its presence; it’s the stark reality, so too is divorce when it’s impending and underway. It’s about spreading the consequences out over time or mitigating them to make them more manageable so the parties can transition into a new norm.  </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">How does that work in the real world? States have laws that govern divorce and essentially cushion people; they spread out the repercussions and soften the blow so that the transition is manageable — and neither party is left disadvantaged. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">I associated </span><i><span
style="font-weight: 400;">divorce</span></i><span
style="font-weight: 400;"> with </span><i><span
style="font-weight: 400;">flattening the curve</span></i><span
style="font-weight: 400;"> when working with a client recently. It was a husband and wife with a marital home. The husband wanted a divorce and told the wife that he was moving out. Critically, he told her that he would only pay the mortgage for three more months. In that case, we were able to spread the transition over a longer period of time. He was in the wrong to threaten to leave her in the lurch when they had built a life together and assumed mutual responsibilities accordingly.  He was not let off the hook from paying his obligations pursuant to his hasty timeline and we were able to provide the necessary cushion and adequate timeline for the parties’ mutual release of responsibilities to one another. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Another option that encourages flattening the curve of divorce is </span><i><span
style="font-weight: 400;">pendente lite</span></i><span
style="font-weight: 400;"> and post-judgment maintenance and child support. </span><i><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Pendente lite</span></i><span
style="font-weight: 400;"> simply means “during litigation” &#8211; it is to be paid while the case is ongoing, until the divorce is final. Post-judgment maintenance is tiered and paid out pursuant to the length of the marriage. Longer marriages yield longer pay-outs, with a marriage over 20 years, irrefutably dubbed a “long term marriage,” potentially promising a pay-out duration equivalent to half the length of the marriage, pursuant to the statute. Further, ancillary issues such as the ability of the payee to get up to speed on a career track and the parties’ respective ages and health issues are factors considered when determining maintenance amount and duration. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Interim agreements are another option to prevent drastic changes in the parties’ standard of living from happening too soon or harshly. </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Cuomo has said about his relationship with Trump through this pressing Covid19 time that their personal differences and political orientations aside, when you are in a foxhole with someone, it doesn’t matter whether you like him or her, you are mutually single-focused in your aim to get out safely. Divorcing parties often share this sentiment when dealing with the IRS and taxes; even very litigious divorcing parties agree that they are on the same side as each other and “friends” to collaborate, align and save themselves tax dollars. The question is, “Are conflicted and divorcing couples also sharing this sentiment and approach in handling their conflicts, separation, and divorce through this time?” Are they in agreement that they must cooperate for the sake of each other’s well-being and the children’s to get everyone to the other side of this pandemic safely? </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">The answer varies.</span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Some parties say that the pandemic is making everything else &#8211; including their separation and divorces &#8211; seem so trivial. Others, overwhelmed as it is by the drastic and fundamental changes in daily living, feel further crushed by increased hostility and feeling out of control both internally and from their exes.  </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Maybe it can also be a time for us all to reflect on our own flexibility and willingness to negotiate? #quarantinegoals </span></p><p><span
style="font-weight: 400;">Stay safe!</span></p><p><strong>Cheryl Stein, Esq.</strong><br
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<strong>The Law and Mediation Offices of Cheryl Stein</strong><br
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745 Fifth Avenue, Suite 500<br
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New York, NY 10151<br
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Phone: (646) 884-2324<br
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E-mail: <a
href="mailto:cheryl@cherylsteinesq.com">cheryl@cherylstein</a></p><p>The post <a
href="https://cherylsteinesq.com/blog/flattening-the-curve-in-divorce/">Flattening the Curve in Divorce</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://cherylsteinesq.com">Cheryl Stein, Esq.</a>.</p>
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