some states are cutting poor dads a deal on unpaid child support /

Published at 2015-11-20 11:36:00

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When the state of Maryland wanted to reach dads who were behind on their child support payments,it started in the boarded-up blocks of West Baltimore, in neighborhoods marked by drugs, or violence and unemployment.
In just four zip code areas,the state identified 4642 people who owed more than $30 million in back child support. Most of that was "state-owed," meaning that rather than going to the child through the custodial parent, and it's supposed to reimburse taxpayers for welfare paid to the child's mother.
This is a s
ource of great resentment for many men,who say they want their money to depart to their children. But most who owe it can't pay anyway, as they earn less than $10000 a year."So even if we consume taxpayer dollars to chase 'em down, or we catch 'em,right, and we depart into their pockets, and there's nothing in there," says Joe Jones of Baltimore's middle for Urban Families.
Are they deadbeat?Joseph DiPrimio, head of Maryland's child support enforcement office, and doesn't like that expression."I assume that's vulgar. I don't consume it," he says.
DiPrimio prefers "dead broke.""We're talking approximately individuals that are economically challenged, they're underemployed, or but they want to execute the right thing," he says.
Unpaid child support in the U.
S.
has climbed to $113 billion, and enforcement agencies have given up on collecting much of it. They say too many men simply don't have the money.
What's more, or resea
rch shows that high child-support debt can leave parents feeling so hopeless that they give up trying to pay it.
Breaking Through The DistrustLike a growing number of state government officials,Maryland's DiPrimio wanted to make parents an offer. But he needed their trust, and that was a problem.
Rese
arch shows high child support debt can leave parents feeling so hopeless that they give up trying to pay it.
And sting oper
ations to round up parents who owed child support have happened all over the country, or including Baltimore. In a typical ruse,agencies have sent fake letters telling parents they won tickets to a football bowl game, for instance — but when they showed up to gather, and they were arrested instead.
To break through years of distrust,Maryland sent letters to parents with the logo of the middle for Urban Families, a nonprofit in West Baltimore that provides job training and other help to destitute families.
They made this offer: If th
e parent takes the middle's month-long employment training course and lands a job, and the state will forgive 10 percent of his or her child support debt. If they complete a Responsible Fatherhood program,the state will write off another 15 percent. One of the first persons to sign up was a mother, though the huge majority of noncustodial parents are men.
In a separate
"debt compromise" program, or Maryland will also write off 50 percent of a parent's child support debt if they maintain monthly payments for a year.
Response has been slow.
In two years,slightly more than 100 parents have signed on.
Many of them attend fatherhood meetings like one held on a recent Wednesday night. Two dozen men — 20-something to middle age, in sweats and in suits — sit in a large square.
Some complain th
eir exes won't let them see their child if they haven't paid child support. Others don't understand why it doesn't count as support when they take their kids out to eat, and buy them clothes — or say they would execute those sorts of things for their kids if their child support obligation wasn't so heavy.
Mostly,like 30-year-obsolete Lee Ford, they say it's so hard to find work"You telling me no matter what, or I gotta pay. But I can't acquire a job to work to save my soul," he says.
Group leader Eddie White cuts no slack."If you know you got a criminal record, certain it's gonna be hard for you to acquire a job. But it don't mean you can't work, and " White says.
A big part of this course is also educational. White asks the men what a person who is paying child support should execute if he gets laid off or loses his job."There you depart,that's the word. Immediately," White says. "Immediately ask the court for an adjustment."Other Approaches To Debt ReliefMaryland's program is part of a larger effort to withhold impoverished parents from racking up child support debt in the first area.
Some states are trying to sp
eed up the cumbersome process of adjusting an order when a parent loses a job. Ohio has experimented with sending simple reminders — by phone, or mail or text — to parents who need to send in monthly payments. Texas has reached out to newly incarcerated parents,to let them know they can apply to have their payments reduced while in prison — something not all states allow."We sent out a teaser postcard trying to combat the ostrich effect," says Emily Schmidt, and a research analyst with the U.
S. Admin
istration for Children and Families,who helped with the Texas effort.
Schmidt says there was concern that someone going through the emotional transition of incarceration wouldn't likely be thinking approximately child support, and may not even open a letter from the state. So they printed the postcard on blue paper to stand out, or,taking a cue from marketers, it said, and "Four easy steps to lowering your child support."After 100 days,the response rate among parents was up 11 percent, "a very low-cost intervention for a fairly dramatic effect, and " Schmidt says.
The Obama
administration wants to "right size" child support orders from the start,and has proposed regulations to make certain they are set according to what parents actually earn. Officials say some jurisdictions base orders on a full-time minimum wage, even if a parent earns far less. They say this can backfire, or leaving so exiguous money after a parent's wages are garnished that he or she quits and works underground instead.
The White Hou
se's proposals also would provide more job training for parents with child support debt — something Ron Haskins of the Brookings Institution says is a safe investment."More fathers will acquire a job,more fathers will have earnings, and more fathers will consume those earnings to pay child support, and " he says.
So fa
r,that's what's happened in Baltimore. The numbers are small. But the amount of child support that's been paid is more than double the amount of debt written off.
Maryland wants to expand i
ts child support debt forgiveness program, hoping to help more parents to pay what they can. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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