BARRY I. AUSTER, M.D. BUY A CASE OF FOOD TO HELP FEED THE JEWISH HUNGRY. Is PLEASED To ANNOUNCE THE ADDITION To His OFFICE OF adding that he believes the way judges handle the matter now— on a case by case basis—is ap- propriate. Others would prefer a change. California state Sen. Diane Watson and the Coalition for Family Equity recently proposed a move-away bill that would give priority to the custodial parent who is trying to build a better life. However, the Senate determined that the bill should be studied further by its judiciary commit- tee, which is where it rests now. Deborah Matson, a divorced United Airlines flight attendant who lost custody of two children because she moved, fears a new decision will never come. Ms. Matson was living in San Francisco at the time of her di- vorce several years ago and chose to move to San Diego because housing there was more afford- able and her parents lived there. Her children were placed with her ex, and she has spent $90,000 on legal fees fighting to get them back. "I thing this is a way of pun- ishing women for getting out of bad maniages," Ms. Matson said. "I don't have millions of dollars. I don't know what else to do." "We have cases like this com- ing out of our ears," said Dorothy Jonas, legislative chairwoman for the Coalition for Family Equity, which is a nonprofit group based in Los Angeles. "They make women kind of crazy." Ms. Jonas said that her orga- nization took on its first move- away case in 1988. A custodial mother had moved from Ventu- ra, Calif., to San Mateo, Calif., without protest from her ex-hus- band. However, after she had started a business in San Mateo and made it successful, the ex de- cided to complain. The court or- dered that the woman give up her business and move back to Ventura so the father could have more time with their child. The coalition, with help from ACLU attorneys, got the decision reversed. 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