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Originally posted by missed_gear
Furthermore, the GAO once found that 28% of men that do not pay child support are either dead or living with the mother of the children.
It does make one wonder though what percentage of mothers are lying about not receiving child support so that they do not get their AFDC payments reduced among various other 'perks' which can/will be abused.
Originally posted by snowflake_obsidian
If the father is living with the mother then he can't be ordered to pay child support (at least where I am from).
Originally posted by snowflake_obsidian
If you do not co-operate with their efforts in obtaining court ordered child support for you, then they kick you off the system.
The probability of an AFDC caretaker with an OAG case having an established child support award in place during any given quarter of the observation period was 47.7 percent.
Texas Study
Originally posted by missed_gear
If the father is already living with the mother at the time of establishing paternity that may very well be true. There are a number of ways that could ‘work-out’.
But if an award was made by the court before the father moved in with the mother that is a different issue, at least in Texas. If a non-custodial parent is ordered to pay child support the sum must be paid/garnished and only after a request to the court for a reduction has been made will there be any consideration. There are also other stipulations which may apply such as the non-custodial parent carrying the full burden of health insurance on the children etc.
Secondly, the problem with the report ties into what you mention above and my earlier response:
The GAO report (GAO/HRD-92-39FS) questionnaire on page 14 of the afore mentioned report asked the question in this manner:
Has the parent moved back in with you? Yes.
Is there a child support award? Yes
Does he/she pay? No
So the stats are leaning to show that in a sizeable portion of cases there is no true reflection of reality because they are lumped as non-payers (dead-beats) despite their changed situation.
True,
The problem is establishing paternity and location of some parents, no paternity no dad.
And a study in Texas showed:
The probability of an AFDC caretaker with an OAG case having an established child support award in place during any given quarter of the observation period was 47.7 percent.
Texas Study
Often this has also been used to extort from the father. The father enters an informal agreement to ‘pay’ outside of court if paternity is not established for many reasons (court costs, currently married, co-worker etc). Or the mother knows who/where the father is and threatens him with court action if he does not pay her directly and as unreported.
An acquaintance of mine did just this. He had a child he was unaware of and married to another woman later. When the child turned five she showed up at his door. She wanted indirect child support (nothing unreasonable but figured in back payments) paid on the side and she would continue to claim she did not know who the father was etc. He had a paternity test done and in fact it was his child (looks just like him). This went on until the child was eighteen when it was agreed to stop and it stopped. She received a tremendous amount of State and Federal aid.
mg