B
Boxcarbill
Guest
theother said:Well, unfortunately in our case, the access laws don't work, while the support laws seem to be great at their job. Of course, this could be because my SO is not a deadbeat and pays his support. Even so, my SO had his credit damaged, his license threatened, his passport taken away, and his garnishment increased due to his ex collecting welfare while receiving CS. While CSE garnished his second job wages within two months of his hire, it took forever to clear up his arrearages from the fraud even though his paychecks clearly showed the garnishments during that time period. While he was suffering the fallout of that debacle, he was denied visitation. Of course, nothing happened to his ex. Maybe other people have trouble getting CSE to do their job, because CSE is spending all their time concentrating on my SO.I know that you shouldn't have to choose between having money or having your children, but my SO doesn't have his money OR his children. It's hard to argue that his glass is anything but empty. And his ex, well, her cup runneth over. I wonder if any CP who isn't getting her share of CS would trade places with a NCP who isn't getting any visitation. It shouldn't be all or nothing, you're right. But sometimes, it is.
The Judge is not going to send a door-to-door canvassing of the entire divorce population in their county to see if everyone is paying support and everyone is getting visitation. Unless the party files a Motion to Enforce, nothing is going to happen and that is regardless of whether we are talking about support or visitation.
As for screw ups by the CSE, incompetence works both ways. You are terribly misinformed if you think that CSE is doing a wonderful job of collecting and enforcement of child support. Let me give you some information regard CSE. Six reasons account for 94 percent of closures and 96 percent of closure errors. The six reason are:
* Inability to locate noncustodial parent of alleged father
* Inability to establish paternity
* No enforceable order, and arrearage less than $500.
* Non-TANF client requests closure
* Non-TANF client uncooperative
* Lost contact with non-TANF client.
The ncp does not have a monopoly on CSE screwups. See http://www.oig.hhs.gov/oei for some additional insight.