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Home·Practice Areas· Collaborative Law

Collaborative Law in Pittsburgh

Collaborative divorce is a structured, voluntary alternative to litigation — chosen by people who want meaningful control over the outcome and prefer to resolve differences without having a judge decide for them. It is not appropriate for every case. When it is, it can produce faster, less expensive, and more durable results.

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Overview

What Collaborative Law Is — and Is Not

Collaborative divorce is a voluntary dispute resolution process in which both parties and their attorneys sign a participation agreement committing to settle the matter without litigation. Each party retains independent collaborative counsel who may not represent them in subsequent litigation if the process breaks down — a provision that aligns everyone's incentives toward resolution.

The collaborative process involves a series of meetings — typically including the parties, their attorneys, and neutral professionals such as a mental health coach and a financial professional — focused on cooperative, transparent problem-solving rather than adversarial proceedings.

Collaborative law is not mediation — each party has their own attorney advocating for their interests throughout. It is not court — the parties control the timeline and the outcome. It is a third path that works well for the right cases and the right people.


The Pennsylvania Collaborative Law Act

A Formal Legal Framework

On June 28, 2018, Pennsylvania enacted the Collaborative Law Act — passed by the Senate 47-2 and the House 193-0 — establishing a formal statutory framework for collaborative proceedings in Pennsylvania. The Act governs the participation agreement, confidentiality of collaborative communications, and the transition to litigation if the process is terminated. This reflects years of advocacy by collaborative practitioners and gives the process formal standing in Pennsylvania law.


Who Collaborative Law Works For

The Right Candidates

Collaborative divorce requires both parties to participate in good faith, make full financial disclosure, and engage constructively. It does not work where there is significant power imbalance, ongoing domestic violence, or one party who is not prepared to participate honestly.

The process tends to work well for parties who value privacy; who want to preserve a cooperative co-parenting relationship; who are prepared to make decisions actively; and who have the capacity to engage in structured problem-solving. Professionals and business owners with moderate to high net worth tend to gravitate toward the collaborative process when it is offered.

"Not every divorce should become a drawn-out fight. Collaborative training adds another layer of perspective for clients seeking practical, solution-oriented outcomes."

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CLASP Network

Collaborative Law in Allegheny County

The Collaborative Law Association of Southwestern Pennsylvania (CLASP) maintains a network of collaboratively trained attorneys and neutral professionals in the Pittsburgh area. CLASP professionals offer free 30-minute introductory meetings to help parties understand the process before committing to it. The firm participates in the collaborative law community in southwestern Pennsylvania and works with CLASP professionals in collaborative matters.


Frequently Asked Questions

Collaborative Law Questions

What happens if the collaborative process breaks down?
If either party terminates the process, both attorneys must withdraw. The parties must retain new litigation counsel. This aligns everyone's incentives toward completing the process — but it also means starting collaborative with the intention of litigating later is impractical and expensive.
Is collaborative divorce faster than traditional litigation?
Generally yes — for cases appropriate for the process where both parties engage in good faith. The timeline is controlled by the parties rather than the court's docket. Cases that might take a year or more in litigation can often be resolved in months through a well-run collaborative process.
Is collaborative divorce less expensive?
Typically yes — but only if the process is completed. A failed collaborative process that then proceeds to litigation will be more expensive than traditional litigation from the start, because the parties paid for the collaborative process and must start over with new counsel.

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Considering Collaborative Divorce?

The collaborative process works best when both parties are genuinely committed. The first call can help you understand whether it makes sense for your situation.

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