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The Relationship Between Child Support and Parenting Time
When child support guidelines were initially drafted, it was assumed that in most instances, the lesser-time parent would be the father, the father would see the children infrequently, and the father would have a higher income than the mother. Today, more custodial parents are male than before, the wage gap between mothers and fathers has Read More
Issue(s): Child Support
Author(s): J. Thomas Oldham, Jane Venohr
Keyword(s): child support, Family Law Quarterly, parenting time
A Call to Revisit Promising Practices for Staffing Configurations and Cost-Effective Staffing Levels in Child Support Offices
The bottom line on why the child support community needs to revisit this issue is this: child support administrators and managers need more information about which staffing levels and configurations are the most efficient and effective for achieving the best results. Not only do they need this information for implementation, but also to overcome the Read More
Differences in State Child Support Guidelines Amounts: Guidelines Models, Economic Basis, and Other Issues
Federal regulations require each state to establish one set of child support guidelines that courts and hearing officers should apply as a rebuttal presumption in any judicial or administrative proceeding for the award of child support. Statewide guidelines encourage consistency in child support award amounts among similarly situated parties and provide predictable amounts to parents. Read More
Income Available for Child Support: Fact and Fiction in State Child Support Guidelines
The proposed OCSE rule change that requires the use of “actual income” has the potential to increase the use of income information from automated sources when determining support awards. This should reduce the incidence of income imputation, as well as increase the percentage of child support actually paid. The impact of the proposed change, however, Read More
Child Support Guidelines and Guidelines Reviews: State Differences and Common Issues
Since 1989, federal regulations require each state to provide presumptive guidelines (formulas) for determining the amount of child support awards and to review their guidelines at least once every four years. Most states developed and adopted their initial guidelines in the late 1980s. States developed their guidelines based on similar premises and guidelines models and relied on a limited number Read More
Medical Support in Today’s Child Support Guidelines and The Affordable Care Act
First and foremost, this article does not —and cannot— provide a clear direction for medical child support under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) (only Congress and rule makers can). What this article does is describe how states currently address medical support in their child support guidelines and how these provisions compare to ACA provisions. In Read More
Exploring a Child Support Pass-Through Option for Colorado
Colorado has an opportunity to increase the monthly incomes of Colorado Works families as well as improve their paths to self-sufficiency by changing the State’s child support pass-through and disregard policies. Families eligible for Colorado Works, which is Colorado’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, have below-poverty incomes. When a family applies for Colorado Works, any payment toward the monthly Read More
Issue(s): Child Support
Focus Area(s): Core Program Services, Program Innovations
Author(s): Jane Venohr
Keyword(s): child support
Ninos Sanos: Healthy Children – A Collaborative Project Between OAG (Child Support) and HHSC (Medicaid)
The Niños Sanos demonstration project, which translates to “Healthy Children,” began in September 2007 and continued through August 2011. The project was funded by a Section 1115 demonstration grant through the federal Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE). Through a collaborative effort between the Texas Office of the Attorney General (OAG) Texas Child Support Division and the Texas Medicaid Read More
Issue(s): Child Support, Economic Security & Healthcare
Focus Area(s): Core Program Services, Healthcare, Program Innovations, Public Benefits Programs
Author(s): Jane Venohr, Miko Khan
Parents to Work! Program Outcomes and Economic Impact
Parents to Work, a program to secure jobs for unemployed and underemployed noncustodial parents (NCPs) with open child support cases involved the Arapahoe Division of Child Support Enforcement (CSE), Arapahoe/Douglas Workforce Center (A/D Works), and the Arapahoe District Court/18th Judicial District. Conducted from August 2008 to March 2010, Parents to Work involved: specialized, co-located child Read More
Issue(s): Child Support, Economic Security & Healthcare
Focus Area(s): Family-Centered Interventions, Program Innovations, Workforce Innovations & Asset Building
Author(s): Jane Venohr, Jessica Pearson, Lanae Davis
Web-Based Child Support Customer Services for Parents – Promising Practices Guide
Web-based customer services have had a profound and positive impact on how child support agencies do business and how well clients feel they are treated. The Internet makes services more accessible to parents, contributes to a more transparent system, and informs and educates parents. State child support agencies report up to 10,000 visitors to their website per day Read More