Law Provides for Child Support Establishment and Enforcement in Other States
Q: How does the law handle
paternity and child support issues among various states?
A: The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) provides a way to establish paternity and/or child support obligations and to enforce child support responsibilities across state lines.
A: The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) provides a way to establish paternity and/or child support obligations and to enforce child support responsibilities across state lines.
Q: I moved recently from California to
Ohio. I want to establish paternity to prove that my ex-boyfriend is the father
of my two-year old son so I can start receiving child support. My ex still
lives in California. What should I do?
A: Complete an IV-D application with your local child support
agency to receive services. Services are free and available to everyone.
Your local agency will have you
complete a UIFSA petition. The petition includes a “General Testimony” questionnaire
that asks for information concerning your household makeup and your financial
situation. Completing the General Testimony will make it possible for you to
avoid having to attend hearings in California.
Your local
agency will mail the UIFSA petition to California. California will then attempt
to establish paternity and/or child support. Your local agency will be your
point of contact during the process. If genetic testing is required to
establish paternity, you and your child will be tested where you live in Ohio.
If a child support order is established, then money collected by California
will be forwarded to Ohio Child Support and then disbursed to you.
Q: I completed a UIFSA petition, which
my local agency sent to Florida to establish that my child’s father owes child
support. A hearing has now been set in Florida, and I want to participate via
telephone. How do I go about that?
A: Let your local agency know that you wish to participate via
telephone. Your agency will relay the information to the local child support
office in Florida. The original version of UIFSA did not require courts to
permit telephonic testimony, while later amended versions of UIFSA do require courts to permit telephonic
testimony. It will depend on what version of UIFSA Florida is operating under
as to whether you will be permitted to participate via telephone.
Q: I have a child support order from
Nevada. I just received notice that Ohio is going to “register” the Nevada
order here in my local county. What does that mean?
A: Registration is the process by which a child support order is
filed in the local court where the obligor (the one who owes child support) lives.
Ohio then collects on the order. This usually happens when the obligor to an
order has moved from the state that issued the order. Except in limited
circumstances, Ohio cannot modify the order. However, Ohio can take enforcement
actions such as driver’s license suspension and incarceration. After the registration
process has been completed, you will pay through Ohio, and Ohio Child Support
will forward the payments to Nevada.
Q: My Idaho child support order was just
registered here in Ohio. My child and his mother live in Idaho. I want to
establish parenting time. Can I file for that in my local court?
A: No. UIFSA only deals with paternity and support issues. It does
not allow for courts to establish and/or enforce parenting time orders.
Q: I have a child support order from
Kentucky ordering my ex-wife to pay me child support. She has moved to Illinois,
and I have moved with our children to Ohio. I want to adjust the order because
of a change in my financial circumstances. Can I file a request for this here
in Ohio?
A: Under UIFSA, because neither you nor your ex-wife now live in
Kentucky, the state that issued the support order, then the state of the non-requesting party (meaning
your ex-wife’s current residential state, Illinois) will have jurisdiction to
modify the child support order.
To request a child support
adjustment, you will first need to apply for services with your local agency by
completing an IV-D application. Your
local agency will then have you participate in completing a petition. The petition will include a “General
Testimony” questionnaire, which will ask you for information about your
household makeup and your financial situation. Providing this information will
mean that you can avoid having to attend hearings in Illinois. Your local
agency will request certified copies of your child support order from Kentucky Child
Support along with a pay history. Your local agency will then send the petition
to Illinois asking that state to register and modify the Kentucky order.
This “Law You Can Use” column was provided by the Ohio State
Bar Association (OSBA). It was prepared by Montgomery County CSEA Senior
Staff Attorney Thomas E.A. Howard. The column offers general information
about the law. Seek an attorney’s advice before applying this information
to a legal problem.
Labels: child support, children, paternity
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