Another Victim of the Great Recession:
Child Support Payments
By Danny King
Daily Finance
January 1, 2010
Child support payments in the U.S. fell in 2009 for first time
in more than three decades, and while the official government
report for fiscal 2010 won't be out for months, it's likely that
it, too, saw that downward trend continue. While the states have
increased their ability to collect support on behalf of
custodial parents by garnishing wages or unemployment checks,
those gains have been more than offset by declines caused by
high unemployment and the growing ability of noncustodial
parents to get court-ordered payment reductions.
State and federal governments collected $26.4 billion in
child-support payments for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30,
2009, down 0.7% from a year earlier, according to the Department
of Health and Human Service's Office of Child Support
Enforcement. The decrease was the first since such records began
being kept in 1976. Payments average about $250 a month
nationwide.
The decline reflects the squeeze the economy is putting on both
sides of the child-support equation, in ways that haven't gotten
better. The Labor Department said earlier this month that
November's unemployment rate
rose to 9.8% from 9.6% in October, and the private sector added
just 50,000 jobs, about a third of what analysts had forecast.
Additionally, the underemployment rate, which includes both the
unemployed and those working part-time who are seeking full-time
jobs, held steady at a staggering 17%, while the number of
people out of work for at least six months increased to 6.3
million.
s2Parents Get Smaller Checks
Personal bankruptcies
are on the rise. Over the first nine months of 2010, nonbusiness
bankruptcies hit 1.054 million, 12% more than during the same
period of 2009, and third-quarter filings were up 6.7%,
according to U.S. Bankruptcy Courts statistics.
As a result, more noncustodial parents are faced with the
dilemma of either going through the months-long process of
getting a court order to temporarily reduce their payments until
they find a new job, or having as much as 25% of their
unemployment checks garnished by state regulators. Either way,
custodial parents receive smaller checks each month.
Wage-withholding efforts by states such as California and
Illinois have been stymied as more noncustodial parents find
themselves out of work, or employed in the informal sector,
where income sources are harder for governments to track.
"Obviously, the economic situation has been difficult for
families both paying and receiving child support," says Bill
Otterbeck, deputy director for California Child Support Services
Department. "For many of our families, [child support payments
are] the
difference between being in poverty and rising out of it."
Harder to Avoid State Regulators
Nowhere is the situation clearer than in California. The $2.3
billion it collected in child-support payments for fiscal 2010
represents a 1% drop from a year earlier, and 57.7% of
California's child-support cases were in arrears at some time
during the previous year, up from 56.2% a year earlier,
according to the
state's Health and Human
Services Agency.
Additionally, California's child-support collections through
wage withholding -- which accounts for more than 60% of all
payments -- fell 5.5% from a year earlier, while payments
garnished from unemployment checks surged by 62%, reflecting the
problems of a state where unemployment has remained about 2%
higher than the rest of the country.
"When a noncustodial parent is working, it can be hard to track
down the parent's employer to coordinate wage withholding, but
when that parent loses a job and applies for unemployment
benefits, the state collection agency's job gets much easier,"
notes Matthew I. Fraidin, associate professor at the University
of the District of Columbia's David A. Clarke School of Law.
Granted, child-support payment levels are largely dependent on
the regional economy. For instance, in Texas, where the economic
recovery has generally outpaced the country's, child-support
payments for the three-month period that ended in November
totaled $730.9 million, up 9.5% from a year earlier, according
to Janece Rolfe, spokeswoman for the Texas Attorney General's
Child Support division. Much of that jump can be attributed to
the state having more teeth to dock wages to ensure payments, as
child-support payments directly from wage withholdings were up
16% during the same time period.
"That shows me that in Texas, more people are getting jobs, so
we're collecting more child support," says Rolfe.
Unemployment Increases Late Payments
In the Midwest, though, high unemployment levels continue to put
the squeeze on child-support payments. In Illinois, 88% of
child-support cases were in arrears at some point during the
most recently completed fiscal year, which was actually down
from 91% in fiscal 2008 but was still up from 84% in fiscal
2007, according to Mike Claffey, spokesman with the Illinois
Office of Communication and Information. Claffey pegs the 2008
increase in late payments to the unemployment jump.
Both Otterbeck and
Fraidin say some noncustodial parents can get a respite of
sorts. States such as Oregon and Texas have modified their laws
to make it easier to reduce child-support payments for as long
as six months in the event of a job loss. Still, the process of
getting payments reduced can take months, and the parent still
has to pay a minimum of about $100 a month, jobless or not.
Either way, the recent economic downturn years has forced more
broken families to go to the state in attempt to secure a fair
and realistic child-support payment program, says Otterbeck.
"We're serving many more never-been-on-aid families," he says.
"We have a very focused initiative where, as soon as someone
goes delinquent, we're on the phone with them.
A strong economic upturn, with lots of new jobs, would surely
cut down the number phone calls his department has to make.
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