DES; child support
enforcement
DP |
Committee on Human Services |
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DP |
Committee on Judiciary |
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W/D |
Committee on Appropriations |
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DP |
Caucus and COW |
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DP |
Third Read |
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DP |
As Passed the House |
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As Transmitted to the Governor |
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HB 2095 allows support payments
currently collected by the state to pass through to a child ineligible for TANF
cash assistance. The bill modifies the
administrative review process for support distributions and disbursements and
extends the timeframe for which the clearinghouse has to locate an obligee
before returning payments back to the obligor.
Finally, HB 2095 authorizes DES to amend court orders in prescribed
foster care cases and pass child support payments to the foster care
agency.
Current law requires the support payment clearinghouse or
Clerk of the Court [Clerk] to return support payments to the obligor if after
three months the person to whom the payments are ordered is unable to be
located. HB 2095 extends this period of
time to 120 days and designates the return of the payment and all other
payments to the obligor unless there is agreement of the obligor to pay
assigned arrears and state owed debts.
The proposed legislation modifies the administrative review
procedures and timeframes for an obligee to contest the distribution or
disbursement of support payments as well as final determinations. Further, the bill clarifies DES’ role upon
receiving such requests, authorizes DES to request additional information when
making determinations and establishes specific timeframes for DES responses.
Current law states that when a family goes onto TANF cash
assistance, the family must assign the rights of support over to the
state. Therefore, any child support
payments collected go directly to the state.
The bill provides for DES to pass child support payments through to a
family receiving TANF cash benefits to any child who is currently excluded from
being TANF eligible.
Finally, the bill authorizes DES to amend child support
orders in foster care maintenance payments cases where the rights to support
have been assigned to the state. If the
order covers more than one child, the bill provides for DES to determine the
amount to be distributed to the stated by dividing the court ordered support
amount by the number of children in the order.
Increased Time for Locating
Obligee