Gentry James
Member
What is SC?
Sorry CS....child support.
What is SC?
Sorry CS....child support.
Look, I have good attorneys. AV rated guys, two good law firms, Harvard dude. All that, but the state and courts are stalling because what has occurred here is very, very, ugly.
AV rated... ratings? Really? That is your argument?
Please do not return the knife to your back...stabbing yourself will not end your pain.
Ohio - I am suing the State of Ohio on a wrongful taking of money case. There are many millions involved and the state submitted a motion to dismiss over jurisdiction. After my attorney replied, the state has had almost 11 months (and counting) to determine if they have jurisdiction or not. Is the court allowed to stall for the state while they cook their books. What legal action can I take to move the case forward? 11 months to determine if you have jurisdiction, seriously?
You have "AV rated attorneys" handling the class action and you think they are stumped - and now you want to take legal action to move this class action suit along, huh?
Seriously, Gentry James, trust that the attorneys know what they are doing. Class action suits take a lot of time (think years not months).
The only possible thing I see that you can do is to attempt to further publicize through media outlets the problems with support collection in Ohio. However, this class action suit has already been covered by the media and, at this point in time, any further attention would probably focus more on the frustration of those caught in the child support system and will not help to move the case through the court system.
Time for a run-on... One would hope that instead of throwing good taxpayers dollars after bad and defending the state on this with stall tactics, that the state's attorney's would chart a different course, admit to the problem, and get to focusing on a fix instead of delay and the continued waste of tax dollars defending this wrongdoing, but hey that would be a brave, trust building, positive, high character move, so I guess we can't expect that.
Go Blue!
Ha. Go Blue! (even after their disappointing loss on Saturday)
I don't entirely disagree with you on the child support systems set up in Ohio and elsewhere. Michigan has, like Ohio, had major problems with their collection and disbursement efforts in the past, mostly in the years when they were going from a county collection system to a statewide system. While Wayne County probably benefited from this change, a lot of the support dollars that were collected from payers and dispersed to payees with no problem at all in a few well-run counties somehow disappeared into the system and, to my knowledge, never located (but I haven't really kept up with the issue).
At any rate, I know that individual payers and payees at that time often found skipping the support system entirely worked better for them - but that was only when the parties could get along well enough to make it work (which, quite frankly, was rare).
Nor I mine.Hoke needs to know that playing for a tie in overtime may not be the best strategy, but I'm not ready to send back the degree.
You can probably find someone in your area interested enough in the story to devote some time to it.We need more in-depth, investigative reporting on this to expose it further. Know anyone?
The only thing that comes to my mind is that what if you lose your job sometime in the next 15 years before your obligation is complete? What if you have a personal financial disaster and can't pay for a while? Then having that credit will save not just you but your children, in the event that you can't keep up at some point in the future. Paying back a credit after your children are adults is a lot easier on the system (and your kids) than having to chase someone down for arrears for years after the kids have aged out. So the policy is understandable. You are trying to make a big change in the law/policy with this lawsuit, you should absolutely NOT expect it to be either quick or easy.
However the time value of money tells us that $1,500 today is worth $4,758 in 15 years. Quite a difference.
DC
## Added -- at a modest 8 percent interest
Nor I mine.
You can probably find someone in your area interested enough in the story to devote some time to it.