T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
302.1 | Gee, I love politicians | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | | Thu Nov 03 1988 16:32 | 7 |
| Bill,
This is absurd. Punish the masses for what the few have done.
I agree to have wages attached when there has been trouble with
payment, but to do it to the law abiding average joe is insane.
Mike
|
302.2 | F.A.I.R. was behind it! | CIMNET::LUISI | | Fri Nov 04 1988 09:54 | 13 |
|
Mike,
I'm sure you know by now that I'm a F.A.I.R. proponent so I may
be bias when I say "If it wasn't for F.A.I.R. personally being involved
in this as well as the thousands of FAIR-grams sent to the senators
who were in agreement with the orginal amendment" us current child
support providers might just be having our wages garnished!
I for one. paid my $15 to have them sent. I wonder how many other
DEC folks did as well?
Bill
|
302.3 | | ANT::BUSHEE | Living on Blues Power | Fri Nov 04 1988 13:20 | 17 |
|
Bill,
One item you didn't point out in .0 was that the amount
that would have been garnished from your wages would NOT
be the amount your children would be getting through this
bill. The bill as originally written would have a fixed rate
that the children(based on number of children) would get.
The amount garnished would have been much higher, which
would have been used to support the overhead to keep track
of such a program. The end result would have been that ALL
children of divorce would be on welfare, being paid through
the state and your garnished wages to support the system
plus pay the support granted to the children. With this aspect
of the bill it really shows just how ludicrous it originally
was.
G_B
|
302.4 | No I didn't know that! | CIMNET::LUISI | | Fri Nov 04 1988 14:27 | 21 |
|
Re.-1 Gee. I wasn't aware of that. So; does that mean the poor
folks getting divorsed after Jan 1 1994 will have a child support
agreement ordered by the courts of their respective state and than
a percentage will be added on to it?
Incredible. All children of divorse become wards of the state and
the tax paying father's get taxed on top of their support payments.
I wonder? How will they deal with the self employed? And how
will they deal with those same fathers, like those today, that just
drop out of society and not work for wages? You know; the ones
that abandoned their children from the beginning and just float
around doing odd jobs. And the mother's and children are on welfare.
Do you think that maybe part of that percentage that goes to
administering this system will eventually wind up as a payment?
Hmmmmm.
Bill
|
302.5 | What about the dead-beat women? | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Fri Nov 04 1988 15:16 | 6 |
| And what about all of those delinquent women who drop out of society
and don't make THEIR support payments? Let's be fair and not assume
that only men are either paying or not paying.
Ed..
|
302.6 | they should pay | WMOIS::B_REINKE | Mirabile dictu | Fri Nov 04 1988 17:27 | 7 |
| "Dead-beat women" should be made to pay support just like
dead-beat men....peaps the reason that ththe issue is not
a subject of discussion is that for a wide variety of reasons
they are a smaller segment of society and have thus escaped
notice.
Bonnie
|
302.7 | Yes! Both genders! | CIMNET::LUISI | | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:26 | 20 |
|
I, for one, wasn't excluding women from the non-paying support ranks
with my note. The simple fact is the majority population of
non-custodial parents paying child support are men and therefore,
statistically speaking only, a larger majority of men will be
delinquent.
If we also make the assumption that the majority of people who pay
child support, starting after 1994, are wage earners. People who
recieve a regular paycheck with deductions, etc. etc. It will be
interesting to see if the system treats equally those men AND women
required to pay support.
I personally don't beleive the modifications in this bill were intended
to address the in-equality of this issue. But to make it easier,
and more reliable for custodial parents to be assured of recieving
a regular support payment. By making this statement is is no way
an endorsement on my part. [sound like a auto commercial?]
Bill
|
302.8 | WAGE GARNISHMENTS REAL | CSOADM::MORRIS | | Fri Nov 11 1988 20:19 | 16 |
|
For some of us wage garnishments are a reality now. The State of
Ohio passed a law in Dec.1986 that all future support orders will
be collected throught the Bureau of Child Support with a 2% poundage
placed on the amount of support. In addition the Supreme Court of
the State of Ohio pass child support guidelines based on gross wages,
including any passive income. The tables that are in the guidelines
caused many support orders to increase 100% and in some cases up
to 300%. The guidelines are not law passed by Ohio's law makers
but they might as well be because many of the judges follow them
to the letter. Granted, many child support orders in the passed were
too low but the pendulum has swung too far the other way and has
caused great hardship for alot of non-custodial parents and their
second families. A equal amount of attention should be given to
visitation.
|
302.9 | | MAMIE::MSMITH | Crime Scene-Do Not Enter | Mon Nov 14 1988 13:07 | 4 |
| That 2% tax on top of the payments, sound like an unfair an
unconstitutional tax to me.
Mike
|
302.10 | Mandatory or Court Ordered? | CIMNET::LUISI | | Mon Nov 14 1988 13:21 | 6 |
|
Re: .8 Is the Ohio law "Mandatory" or "Court Ordered". In
otherwords; if the couple splitting up agreed not to garnish would
the courts be obliged to follow the garnishment anyway?
|
302.11 | No Choice | CSOADM::MORRIS | Looking forward to TOSRV | Mon Nov 14 1988 14:46 | 10 |
|
>.10 Yes!! There is no other choice except in a self-employed
situation. I know many non-custodial parents would rather pay direct
to save the 2% but they have no choice. The 2% is suppose to support
the bureaucrtic system of collection and enforcement but it isn't
enough and the Bureau of Child Support must be subsidized by local
county funds.
|
302.12 | Impact statment? | HOTJOB::GROUNDS | CAUTION: Yuppies in road | Mon Nov 14 1988 20:24 | 5 |
| 1. Has anyone tested any of this in Supreme Court (state or US)
2. Any statistical data as to the impact (e.g., men dropping out
of jobs or changing jobs frequently).
|