Your right sleep yes it has been, but usually those orders would be decided on a case by case basis and previous conduct would be a large consideration.
It would also not be unusual for the prohibited steps order to be refused if the other parent was willing to facilitate travel.
Well, no, but if there had been no prior conduct indicative of hostility, and there was a demonstrable and convincing willingness to facilitate travel, then it wouldn't have been a move primarily to thwart contact, which was my point, would it? Hence my saying, "on occasion". Sadly, I think more NRP can't be arsed than are alienated, though the children on the end of either scenario lose out fairly identically in each, miserably enough.
Not that any of it is applicable here, I agree. But it is nonetheless not true that there is no real choice most of the time. A better question is perhaps whether the child is advantaged by the move more than the NRP is disadvantaged, and more controversially, at what point any disadvantage to a child is minor when compared to a potentially massive advantage to the parent. Careers are lifelong and childhood is short, and if good quality weekend contact is completely doable, and a job particular opportunity rare and unlikely to come up again for years, if ever, then it's not an easy choice. I'm aware that my DH's work will almost inevitably take us to London eventually, but for a divorced family, that could be one hell of a problem. And if he did move and I insisted on him doing all the travel, the kids would lose out on time with him, because there's just no way he could collect them from school on a Friday, and then down to London. I could. If I refused to travel, then they would have to start contact time on Saturday, instead. Which would hurt them.
This stuff isn't simple, no.