Definition
\nSamværsplan (visitation plan) is the practical, written plan that turns a legal contact arrangement into reality for a child living in foster care. In other words: it’s the “operating manual” for contact — when it happens, where it happens, who is present, and how the child is prepared and supported.
\n\nSamværsordning vs. Samværsplan
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- Samværsordning = the formal contact arrangement (often decided by the Barneverns- og helsenemnda or the courts). \n
- Samværsplan = the day-to-day implementation plan used by the child welfare service, foster home, and parents. \n
A weak samværsplan can quietly sabotage a contact arrangement through logistics, “rules”, or repeated cancellations — even when the formal decision looks reasonable.
\n\nWhat a strong samværsplan should contain
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- Schedule: dates, times, duration, and holiday exceptions (summer, Christmas, birthdays). \n
- Location: neutral venues when needed; clear rules for travel and pick-up/drop-off. \n
- Supervision: if supervised contact is used, specify purpose, methodology, and how supervision will be reduced over time if risk decreases. \n
- Child preparation: routines before/after contact, emotional support, and documentation of how the child reacts over time. \n
- Communication: phone/video contact, school information, photos, updates, and how parents can participate in the child’s life. \n
- Cancellation rules: how cancellations are decided, how makeup contact is scheduled, and how disputes are documented. \n
- Review points: when the plan is evaluated and what evidence triggers increases or reductions in contact. \n
Human rights baseline (Do Better Norge context)
\nEuropean human rights standards (Article 8 — right to family life) require that interventions remain proportionate and that authorities work toward reunification where possible. In practice, a samværsplan should be designed to maintain and strengthen the parent–child bond, not manage it into disappearance.
\n\nCommon systemic problems
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- Contact clamping: contact is set very low early, then the “weakened bond” is later used to justify permanence. \n
- Logistics as a weapon: transport burdens, short notice, or “neutral venue” rules that make contact fail. \n
- Permanent supervision: supervision becomes the default instead of a time-limited safeguard with clear exit criteria. \n
- One-way documentation: reports record “problem moments” but fail to record bonding, attachment repair, or the child’s own statements. \n
Practical steps for parents
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- Request the samværsplan in writing and ask what evidence supports each restriction. \n
- Ask for measurable goals (e.g., increasing duration, reducing supervision) and specific review dates. \n
- Document cancellations and obstacles (screenshots, emails, timelines) and request “makeup contact” when contact is lost. \n
- If decisions are unclear, ask the child welfare service to point to the relevant legal basis and how the child’s best interests were weighed against family life. \n
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