|
Recent
Changes in the Payment of Child Support
by
Shannon S. Kreitner
In 1996, the Federal
government passed the Personal Responsibility and Work Reconciliation
Act, requiring each state to create a centralized location to
process all child support payments collected by wage assignment,
or garnishment. Recently, California implemented the State Disbursement
Unit (SDU) to fulfill this requirement. California's Family Code
now requires that all child support payments made via wage assignment,
whether managed privately or by the county, be made through the
unit.
Prior to the creation
of the SDU, when a child support payment was ordered to be made
by wage assignment, the employer was served with an order to withhold
wages of the payor parent and paid them directly to the parent
receiving child support. With the SDU in place, employers are
required to send all payments to the unit, who then distributes
the money to the receiving parent.
This change may result
in a processing delay of one or two days, but the SDU does offer
receiving parents the option of direct deposit of payments or
electronic payment cards, which are similar to ATM cards, and
can be used at ATMs and retail stores. These options will speed
the delivery of payments once processed. The SDU also promotes
its web and telephone account access as valuable for both paying
and receiving parents, as a source for information.
There is potential
that the creation of the SDU can impact the amount of child support
that custodial parents receive. Under the new system, child support
payments will be allocated among all the children of a payor party.
Because employers can withhold no more than one-half of a payor
parent's net pay, where there are multiple cases, the payor parent's
income may not be sufficient to pay all orders. Whereas the old
system paid receiving parents with the oldest support orders first,
the new system allocates the money proportionally among the receiving
parents. The net result is that the parent with the earlier support
order would receive less support, but the parents with the later
support order would receive a share of the withheld wages.
Cases that are filed
and enforced by the county's Child Support Services Department
must be paid via wage assignment. For privately filed and enforced
support orders, the court can order payment through wage assignment
or payment directly from the payor parent. The receiving parent
should carefully consider the benefits to each of these options
in making their request to the court.
For more information,
contact The Reape - Rickett Law Firm, at 661-288-1000, located
at 23929 West Valencia Boulevard, # 404 in Valencia.
|