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Child Support Welfare Information
Since enactment in 1996 of the Personal Responsibility and
Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), a major impetus to
collection of child support in the United States is the Welfare law. A custodial
parent receiving public assistance (Temporary Aid to Needy Families or TANF) is
required to assign his or her right to child support to the Department of
Welfare before cash assistance is received. Another requirement is that the
custodial parent must pursue child support from the non-custodial parent.
Where successful, the child support is then diverted to the
welfare program instead of the custodial parent as partial reimbursement of the
cash assistance being paid. If the amount of child support paid equals or
exceeds the assistance grant, the family is moved off the cash assistance
portion of the program (they may still be eligible for food stamps and medical
assistance). Other provisions of PRWORA require the custodial parent to find
employment and will assist that parent in finding and maintaining such
employment (such as buying new work clothes or repairing a vehicle to get them
to work). If the custodial parent becomes employed, their cash assistance will
be reduced based on the amount of income received. If child support is also
being paid, the chances are that it will then be greater than the assistance
grant and the family will move off the welfare rolls (at least as far as cash
assistance is concerned).
The child support enforcement programs in all 50 states are
primarily funded by the federal government through each state’s Department of
Welfare. Should a state's handling of child-support enforcement not comply with
PRWORA standards, that state's program funding can be reduced by 5% as a
penalty.
Despite the claims of some that PRWORA and it's welfare connection are
generating government income through child support collections, the US
Department of Health and Human Services reports that in fiscal year 2003, 90% of
child support collections went directly to families. In fact, the percent of
payments going to families was 86% or more in 47 states and in seven states
exceeded 95%. Only the remaining 5-14% reimburses taxpayers for the cost of
welfare expenses.
Nevertheless, half of current unpaid child support debt is
owed to the government and not to families. Sherri Z. Heller, Ed.D, Commissioner
of U.S. Office of Child Support Enforcement stated, "We need to be more
aggressive about leveraging older debt owed to the government as an incentive to
obtain more reliable payments of current support to families." Towards this end,
the United States federal government, through the Social Security
Administration, provides up to $4.1 billion in financial incentives to states
that create support and arrearage orders, and then collect (cf. 6B, 6C, & 6D).
For more free legal information on Child Support Laws, please use the
links below:
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