The session that often decides custody.
Here’s how to walk in prepared.
Child Custody Recommending Counseling (CCRC) is mandatory in Riverside County before any contested custody hearing. The counselor’s recommendation carries enormous weight with judges — often determining the outcome. This guide covers what CCRC is, how to prepare, what happens during the session, mistakes that hurt your case, and how to respond if the recommendation goes against you.
CCRC (Child Custody Recommending Counseling) is California’s mandatory mediation/assessment process before any contested custody or visitation hearing (FC §3170). Riverside County operates as a “recommending” county, meaning the CCRC counselor does not just mediate — if parents cannot agree, the counselor writes a formal recommendation to the judge regarding custody and visitation. Judges follow this recommendation in an estimated 70–85% of cases, making CCRC arguably the single most important event in a contested custody case. Success requires thorough preparation: knowing your proposed schedule, staying child-focused (not spouse-focused), remaining calm and cooperative, bringing relevant documentation, and understanding that the counselor is evaluating your demeanor, credibility, and co-parenting ability — not just your words. Attorneys cannot attend the session, but attorney preparation before CCRC and attorney advocacy after an unfavorable recommendation are both critical. If you disagree with the recommendation, you have the right to object and request a contested hearing, but overcoming a CCRC recommendation requires strong evidence and skilled advocacy.
CCRC is the process by which California courts assess contested custody and visitation disputes before they reach a judge. Mandated by Family Code §3170, it requires both parents to meet with a court-employed counselor — typically a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) or marriage and family therapist (LMFT) — to attempt resolution. In Riverside County, the system operates as a “recommending” model: if parents cannot agree, the counselor writes a recommendation that the judge receives before the custody hearing.
California Family Code §3170 requires mediation/counseling before any contested custody or visitation hearing. You cannot skip it. Failure to attend can result in sanctions or adverse custody findings.
California counties are either “recommending” or “non-recommending.” Riverside County is a recommending county — the counselor does not just mediate, they evaluate and recommend. This distinction dramatically raises the stakes.
A typical CCRC session lasts 1–2 hours. The counselor meets with both parents (sometimes jointly, sometimes separately), and may speak with the children depending on their age and the issues involved.
CCRC counselors are court-employed licensed therapists or social workers (LCSW, LMFT, or psychologist). They are trained in child development, family dynamics, domestic violence assessment, and custody evaluation methodology.
If parents cannot agree, the counselor submits a written recommendation to the court addressing custody (legal and physical), visitation schedules, and sometimes conditions (therapy, substance testing, supervised visitation). This document goes directly to the judge.
Studies and practitioner experience consistently show judges follow CCRC recommendations in 70–85% of cases. The counselor met both parents face-to-face — the judge often has only paperwork. This makes CCRC the de facto custody decision in most cases.
“In our experience, CCRC is often where custody cases are won or lost. The 1–2 hours you spend with the counselor can have more impact than months of litigation.”
The parents who succeed in CCRC are the ones who walk in with a clear, child-focused custody proposal, relevant documentation organized and ready, and the emotional composure to present themselves as a reasonable, cooperative co-parent. The parents who fail are the ones who show up angry, disorganized, focused on attacking the other parent, or unable to articulate what schedule they actually want.
Walk in with a specific, realistic custody schedule — not vague ideas. Know exactly which days, which weekends, which holidays, and how transitions will work. Consider both parents’ work schedules, the child’s school location, extracurricular activities, and the distance between homes. A concrete proposal shows the counselor you’ve thought this through.
The counselor wants to hear why your proposed schedule serves your child’s best interest. They do not want to hear a catalog of your spouse’s failures as a partner. Frame everything in terms of the child: their routine, their school, their emotional needs, their relationship with each parent. “This schedule gives our son stability during the school week” beats “My ex is irresponsible.”
Bring relevant documentation — but don’t overwhelm the counselor with a banker’s box. Useful documents include: school records showing involvement, medical appointment records, communication logs showing co-parenting efforts, photos with the child, and records of extracurricular activities. If domestic violence or substance abuse is an issue, bring police reports, DVRO orders, or treatment records.
The counselor is assessing your demeanor and emotional stability throughout the session. Crying, yelling, interrupting, eye-rolling, or becoming visibly agitated signals potential problems with co-parenting. Practice discussing your spouse and the custody issues calmly and factually. If a topic triggers strong emotions, rehearse your response beforehand. Your attorney should conduct a mock session with you.
Courts favor parents who encourage the child’s relationship with both parents (FC §3040). The counselor is looking for signs that you will cooperate, communicate, and put the child first — even when it’s difficult. Saying “I want my child to have a strong relationship with both of us” is powerful. Gatekeeping, badmouthing, or refusing to communicate signals high conflict.
Your attorney cannot attend the CCRC session, but they should prepare you extensively: reviewing likely questions, running a mock session, identifying the strongest child-focused arguments, discussing what documentation to bring, and coaching you on presentation. An attorney who knows the specific CCRC counselors at the Southwest Justice Center can tailor preparation to that counselor’s style and priorities.
Understanding the structure and flow of a CCRC session removes uncertainty and helps you perform at your best. While each counselor has their own style, the general format is consistent across Riverside County. Knowing what to expect means no surprises — you can focus entirely on presenting your case.
Most parents who receive unfavorable CCRC recommendations made avoidable mistakes. The counselor is a trained professional who has seen thousands of cases. They recognize manipulation, coaching, exaggeration, and hostility immediately. The following are the most common mistakes our clients’ opposing parties make — and that we prepare our clients to avoid.
Spending the session listing everything wrong with your spouse makes you look like the problem. The counselor sees a parent focused on conflict rather than the child. If there are legitimate concerns (DV, substance abuse), state them calmly and factually with supporting evidence — then pivot back to the child.
Demanding sole custody, refusing to negotiate, or insisting on a schedule that clearly doesn’t work for the other parent signals that you’re not a co-parent — you’re a gatekeeper. Counselors want to see willingness to compromise. Come with a preferred plan and a backup plan you can live with.
CCRC counselors are specifically trained to detect parental coaching. When a child uses adult language, legal terminology, or parrots one parent’s exact talking points, the counselor notices. This backfires spectacularly — it shows the counselor that you are putting the child in the middle, which is one of the strongest negatives in a custody evaluation.
The counselor has access to court records, police reports, and both parents’ statements. Inconsistencies are noted and destroy your credibility. If the counselor catches you in one exaggeration, they question everything else you said. Stick to specific, verifiable facts. If you don’t know something, say so honestly.
Not having a proposed schedule, not knowing your child’s school details, teacher’s name, doctor’s name, or daily routine signals disengagement. The counselor may ask specific questions about the child’s life to gauge each parent’s actual involvement. If you don’t know, it shows.
Raising your voice, crying uncontrollably, becoming aggressive, or making threats — even subtle ones — tells the counselor that you cannot regulate your emotions under stress. If you can’t keep it together in a professional setting, the counselor questions how you handle stress at home with the children.
After meeting with both parents (and possibly the children), the CCRC counselor prepares a written recommendation that is served on both parties and their attorneys at least 10 days before the next court hearing. This document is the counselor’s professional opinion on what custody and visitation arrangement best serves the child. It goes directly to the judge who will hear your case.
The recommendation is a formal written document detailing the counselor’s findings, the basis for their recommendation, and the proposed custody/visitation schedule. It may include conditions such as counseling, parenting classes, substance testing, or supervised visitation.
The recommendation must be served on both parties and their attorneys at least 10 days before the custody hearing. CRC Rule 5.220(f). This gives you time to review it with your attorney and prepare a response if the recommendation is unfavorable.
While technically not binding, CCRC recommendations are followed by judges in an estimated 70–85% of cases. The counselor is the only professional who met both parents face-to-face, giving their assessment unique authority in the judge’s eyes.
Your attorney cannot walk into the CCRC session with you. But the work your attorney does before that session — and their advocacy after — can be the difference between a favorable and unfavorable recommendation. In Riverside County, an attorney who knows the individual CCRC counselors, their assessment styles, and their priorities provides preparation that no out-of-area attorney can match.
Your attorney reviews the case file, identifies the strongest child-focused arguments, develops your proposed custody schedule with supporting rationale, selects relevant documentation, and conducts a mock CCRC session to practice your responses and demeanor.
An attorney who regularly practices at the Southwest Justice Center knows the individual CCRC counselors — their assessment priorities, communication styles, and what they look for. This knowledge allows tailored preparation that a generic guide cannot provide.
If the recommendation is unfavorable, your attorney reviews the report, identifies weaknesses, files objections, prepares cross-examination of the counselor, gathers additional evidence, and presents your case at the contested hearing. This is where courtroom skill and local judicial knowledge become critical.
“We prepare our clients for CCRC the way trial lawyers prepare witnesses for cross-examination — because the stakes are just as high.”
The 1–2 hours you spend with the CCRC counselor can shape your child’s custody arrangement for years. Family Law Matters prepares clients for CCRC the way trial lawyers prepare witnesses — because the stakes are just as high. We know the Southwest Justice Center counselors and how to help you present your strongest case.
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