The Collaborative Law Divorce Team.
One of the unique features of Collaborative Law in New York is the Collaborative Law team. All cases start with each party having his or her own attorney who has been trained in the Collaborative Law model of dispute resolution.
The Team Approach
Neutral Experts
Then, neutral experts who are also trained in the Collaborative process are added to help with specific areas of the decisionmaking and settlement process. The concept of having neutral professionals, to provide divorcing couples with all information necessary to resolve their case, is unique to Collaborative Law.
In Litigation
In litigation cases, each party would probably hire competing experts to support their respective positions at trial, causing further damage to the parties' post-divorce relationship and economic well-being. Because they are hired by both parties to provide information (rather than to support one person's position), clients engaged in the Collaborative Law process find the experts' opinions to be more credible and reliable than they would be if they were expected to support one side or the other.
Client Concerns
Clients often express concern that they will spend too much money if so many professionals are involved in their case. Actually, the neutral team members may save money because the least expensive, most competent person in a given field is doing what he or she does best. Clients are not counting on their lawyers for financial services. In addition, the couple's resources are used on one source of information rather than paying two experts to fight in court.

Marc Percy
"Collaborative law allowed for a devastating situation to be handled with dignity. My emotions and needs were part of every conversation with both my lawyer and my spouse's lawyer."
7 Year Marriage; Two Children; 5 month Collaborative Process
Albany, New York
Albany, New York
A Team Approach
Neutral Mental Health Professionals
Mental health professionals perform several roles on the Collaborative team. They act as process facilitators to assure that meetings go smoothly and that the group is making progress toward completing the case; they are consultants who help clients develop and focus on what interests they would like to have satisfied as they move through their Collaborative divorce; they also serve as negotiation facilitators who help clients reach agreements on child-related or other specific issues.
The neutral mental health professional can help parents create a parenting plan for making decisions and spending time with their children after the divorce is completed. Neutral mental health professionals do not perform therapy for either client or the couple. Instead, they help the parties while the remainder of the team works at their optimal level. Divorce is almost always a difficult and emotionally-challenging experience. The parties' feelings range from anger to sadness to frustration to depression to confusion - to name just a few. Having a mental health professional on the team to help the parties deal with those feelings allows everyone to attend to the business decisions that are required to finish a case. Mental health professionals serving as team members are engaged at the beginning of a Collaborative case and generally attend all joint meetings. They often meet with the parties, individually and/or together, at various times during the process between joint meetings. They work toward resolution of specific issues or to intervene if communication becomes difficult.
Neutral Financial Professionals
Having a neutral financial expert as part of the Collaborative team benefits both parties in several ways. Typically, the financial professional helps the parties analyze historical spending and predicts individual household expenses after divorce. The financial professional gathers and verifies information about each party's marital property and any separate property that might exist. A divorcing spouse who has little experience with managing money can look to the financial neutral for education about his or her finances and how the financial future might look, given specific settlement options. If there are complicated tracing or valuation issues, the neutral financial team member may perform the necessary calculations or oversee getting the required information from a third party. A financial professional can help the parties integrate a plan for child and/or spousal support, tax planning, and asset and debt division. Other experts like the ones listed below can be brought into a case to provide specialized information.
Child Specialist
When there are minor children, a neutral child specialist may be asked to help parents learn and implement co-parenting skills and to perform or oversee evaluations and make recommendations about what arrangements would be in a child's best interest; and help parents ease the children's transition from one household to two.
Other Experts
Experts in specific fields Family law cases in New York often include issues involving other areas of law. Bankruptcy lawyers, estate and probate lawyers, and insurance professionals, for example, can provide critical information to divorcing couples. The benefit of the system is that clients receive customized information specific to their case and nothing more.
Appraisers If there is a need for information about the value of real property, businesses or specific items of personal property, neutral appraisers can be hired to give opinions of value.
Therapists are sometimes hired to work with children or one or both of the parties, if there are specific needs to be addressed.
Let's walk this road together
Collaborative Divorce is a dignified, cooperative, and respectful process in which a separating/divorcing couple, with the assistance of their team of professionals, work together to negotiate the best outcome for both participants.
Contact Us for Questions
Collaborative Divorce Association of the Capital District
P.O. Box 38165
Albany, NY 12203
P.O. Box 38165
Albany, NY 12203