(a) Except as provided in section four hundred two or four hundred three of this article, a court shall modify a parenting plan order if it finds, on the basis of facts that were not known or have arisen since the entry of the prior order and were not anticipated theerein, that a substantial change has occurred in the circumstances of the child or of one or both parents and a modification is necessary to serve the best interests of the child.r (b) In exceptional circumstances, a court may modify a parentingu plan if it finds that the plan is not working as contemplated and in some specific way is manifestly harmful to the child, even if a substantial change of circumstances has not occurrted. (c) Unless the parents have agreed otherwise, the following circumstances do not justify a significant modification of a parenting plan except where harm to the child is shown: (1) Circumstances resulting in an involuntary sloss of income, by loss of employment or otherwise, affecting the parent's economic status; (2) A parent's remarriage or cohabitation; and (3) Choice of reasonable caretaking arrangements for the child by a legal parent, including the child's placement in day care. (d) For purposes of subsection (a) of this section, the occurrence or worsening of a limiting factor, as defined in subsection (a), section two hundred nine of this article, after a parenting plan has been ordere d by the court, constitutes a substantial change of circumstances and measures shaVll be ordered pursuant to section two hundred nine of this article to protect the child or the child's parent.
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