Child Support Dollars and $Ense: Show Me the Money!
By L.B.B. Davis
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Fiscal year 2010: over $175 million in child support payments could not be distributed to the children for whom they were collected! How big are undistributed collections this year? Is it possible that some of your child support payments ended up there? Where does the money go if not to the children? Show Me the Money!
In Child Support Dollars and $ense Show Me the Money! Author Marty Vaughn addresses ongoing issues faced by many non-custodial parents as they pay support for their children. Issues include but are not limited to: overpayment of support, missing payments, arrears, improper tax refund interceptions and more.
Learn why Millions of dollars in child support payments are classified as undistributed and held by the government each year Some child support payments classified as undistributed may never make it to your child Many non-custodial parents are paying arrears that may not be accurate Case monitoring and payment tracking are essential Author Marty Vaughn also offers Powerful case summaries of other non-custodial parents and how they were resolved Step-by-step instructions for everything from case monitoring and payment tracking to how to address the child support enforcement agency An entire chapter of FYI topics that every non-custodial parent should know Practical advice on how to protect the investment that is your child support payments Ask yourself the following questions.Are you absolutely certain that Your child receives every support payment you make? You have never overpaid your obligation? The amount of arrears the government says you owe is accurate?
When was the last time you checked your personal child support case? Three years ago? Last year? Never? If you are making child support payments you should consider those payments as important as you do deposits made to your bank account.
L.B.B. Davis
L.B.B. Davis lives in Missouri and has always had a vivid imagination. His creative side flourished in the arts. This led to a passion for writing, drawing, and films. He has a Bachelor of Arts in English and is working on completing and expanding his Dragon Prophecies series.
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Child Support Dollars and $Ense - L.B.B. Davis
© 2007, 2013 by Marty Vaughn. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
While I have labored at length to provide the most recent and accurate general information available, there may still be mistakes. Therefore, I make no guarantees as to whether or not information will still be current at the time you read this book. Please use this book as a general guide and not as a definitive source of information relating to your situation.
Published by AuthorHouse 03/25/2013
ISBN: 978-1-4817-1876-9 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4817-1875-2 (e)
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 Show Me the Money!
Chapter 2 Paternity, Child Support and Visitation
Chapter 3 The Importance of Case Monitoring & Payment Tracking
Chapter 4 Addressing Your Local Child Support Enforcement Agency
Chapter 5 Modifications
Chapter 6 Interstate Child Support
Chapter 7 Wage Garnishments & Arrears
Chapter 8 Tax Refund Issues
FYIs for NCPs
Acronyms
Glossary
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my children
and grandchildren.
Introduction
This book is written out of my personal experiences with the child support enforcement agency personally and as an Intermediary Research Agent and Paralegal assisting non-custodial parents just like you.
People often ask how I got started or what the first case I ever investigated was. Oddly enough the first case I ever investigated was my own. I was a divorcee at the time with three children. I had previously received public assistance for about two-and-a-half years before I began receiving child support. My child support payments were by wage garnishment and things went well for about two years. Without warning, the support payments just stopped. My ex insisted that payments were being made, but the child support agency insisted that they were not. Choosing to believe the child support agency, I contacted my ex to give him the business (you know what I mean), but before I could do that he presented me with several recent check stubs that reflected that the payments were still coming out of his check. I contacted the agency with this information and was told that their system did not show any of the payments and that the employer likely made the deductions, but neglected to send them to the agency. That was quite a stretch seeing that my ex and the agency both worked for the same employer… the state government. In the meantime, my ex’s tax refund was intercepted for alleged arrears. At this point I was fed up; I couldn’t afford an attorney and refusing to sit on my hands, I launched my own child support case investigation.
It turned out that my ex had told me the truth about his payments and there was no employer oversight. However, there was an administrative error. The support payments for my case had been applied to the wrong accounts. This meant that other people were receiving my child support payments! Upon further investigation it was found that the amount of time that I had received public assistance had been overstated, and therefore the reimbursement debt to the state had been miscalculated. The agency adjusted my account and credited all the payments. Also my ex was refunded the tax refund that had been improperly intercepted. So, that is my story in a nutshell.
This book comes after many years of providing assistance and seeing a consistent need for every non-custodial parent to become more involved in the business of their child support case.
This book is designed to provide general information on the importance of personally monitoring your child support case, tracking the payments you make to that case, getting organized, staying organized, and more. I have also shared a few stories of cases I have assisted in throughout the years that you may find interesting, to say the least.
It is my hope that by using the strategies I have outlined, you too will be able to effectively manage your situation as it relates to your child support case. This book contains a lot of information from a variety of noted sources that I hope you will find useful.
CHAPTER 1
Show Me the Money!
Each year the child support enforcement administration collects billions of your dollars in child support payments. Unfortunately, millions of those dollars go undistributed for various reasons. In fiscal year 2010 more than $26.6 billion ¹ in child support payments were collected. In that same year net undistributed collections (see Chapter 3) reached over $5.6 million². Of that net undistributed amount, over $381 million held the status of pending distribution
while over $175 million remained unresolved and therefore undistributed.
Unresolved, in this situation, means that those funds could not be distributed to the intended parties—the children! Any unresolved collections that do not find their way to their intended parties can be escheated to the state after as little as 180 days time (in some states). This means that a clerical error in some office somewhere or your own negligence could result in the money you are paying not reaching your child and eventually becoming the property of the state, permanently.
We all understand that even the most principled and thoughtful human beings make mistakes. With all due respect to child support enforcement agencies, they are no exception to this rule. As long as caseworkers continue to deal with high-volume caseloads and system conversion errors, and until the integrity of agency audits and clerical and data entry errors are improved, administrative errors and oversights can and should be expected to occur. Even so, no system (especially a public system such as child support enforcement) should be allowed to benefit from its own errors or inefficiencies. This is fundamentally unfair.
So, if you are making child support payments you would do well to consider those payments as important as you would any deposits being made to your own bank account. After all, you have a vested interest in both.
While the system is imperfect, it is the only one we have. It is vitally important that NCPs pay child support and any advocate of an alternative to that would be horribly misguided in this author’s opinion.
Sitting around raising your fists and forming organizations to point fingers will not change anything. Do your part to hold the system accountable for the child support payments you make.
The only way to make a difference is to become more involved with your child support case and to follow up on the payments you make to your case. There are things that you can do to