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July 20, 2010
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DCChild Support News Headlines

 

Children And Families To Support Demonstrations To Improve Each State's Child Support Enforcement Efforts

Georgia, Kentucky, and Texas will receive nearly $1 million each from the Administration for Children and Families to support demonstrations to improve each state's child support enforcement efforts. The projects funded under the authority of Section 1115 of the Social Security Act are aimed at developing and testing new strategies in the community to support healthy marriages and parental relationships.

In a March press release, ACF Assistant Secretary Wade Horn said the projects will "help improve the well-being of children, promote paternity establishment, and help parents provide increased financial and emotional support for their children."

In Georgia, a five-year project will include coalitions of faith-based and community groups, businesses, and the local child support office in developing and implementing curricula and skills-building by community groups, as well as a series of community roundtables to discuss the challenges of a community healthy marriage coalition.

State IV-D Director Robert Riddle sees the project as a "bold initiative in Georgia, where we hope to fully enlist the faith-based community to educate our customers on the value of fully committed relationships in the healthy development of children, emotionally and financially."

Kentucky's Undersecretary for Children and Family Services, Dr. Eugene Foster, says his State's grant will "improve child support enforcement and decrease the number of open child support cases." This project, also, will recruit community and faith-based organizations into a coalition (about 50 to 60 groups), and will include use of an in-hospital paternity program for marriage education.

Foster stresses that the project "should help enhance fathers' and mothers' commitment to each other and to their children."

In Texas, a two-year project will include regular visits to 550 low-income families after the birth of the child, marriage education, and motivation for establishment of paternity and child support orders.

Project coordinator Michael Hayes describes the heart of the project by quoting Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott: "The best child support is when a child is living with both parents in a stable, healthy, married relationship." Hayes says the project builds on studies that point to the ideal timing and place - at or around the time of birth - for accomplishing its goals. Most important, says Hayes, the project offers hopes for lasting relationships.

Elaine Blackman is a Writer in the Division of Consumer Services.

"He's Got a Gift": Fatherhood Leader Teams-Up with Wyoming CSE

Mention Wyoming, and some might see the cowboy astride a horse, surveying his herd's home on the sprawling range. Mention "Father Factor" to folks in the heart of cattle country, Cheyenne, and you may evoke an image of similar magnitude: Damion - a noncustodial dad whose inspirational efforts drive a distinctive partnership that promotes fathers' involvement in their children's lives.

Aldana has spearheaded a collaboration between a fatherhood group and the Wyoming child support enforcement agency - a relationship that's "breaking the barrier between dads and child support," declares Brenda Lyttle, Director of Wyoming's Child Support Enforcement Program.

In his position as Head Start Family and Community Coordinator in Laramie County, Aldana runs Father Factor, a group that's grown from eight young noncustodial dads in 2003 (then-called the Young Fatherhood Initiative under the Wyoming Health Council), to 50 whose experiences and ages vary. Its mission is "to support fathers in any situation," says Aldana, including custodial and noncustodial, as well as single fathers raising children alone. Most learned about the program from the Laramie County Head Start and through word-of-mouth.

Three groups meet for six-week sessions to talk about "coping with the struggles of fatherhood." In addition, three family events each session serve to unify the fathers with others involved in their children's lives. The goal, says Aldana, is that "no matter what the situation, parents work together as a team."

"A lot of the magic is that dads are talking to each other in a free way," says Lyttle. At the same time, Aldana encourages positive communication with their child's mother. One member is a military dad who married the mother of his daughter before he left for Iraq. He thanked Aldana for the education and support he received from his participation in Father Factor that helped him make that decision.

Other members include a grandfather with full custody, a stay-at-home dad referred to child care so he can attend school, and a single dad who is asking how he can get child support.

Aldana is filling a gap, says one member, by offering help to single dads. The 6-foot-plus, nurturing father of a 2-year-old son also may be changing a stereotype, suggests another member: "I'm learning that it's OK to be loving, and not just a tough guy, which is the way I was raised. ... I've been told it takes four generations to turn around abuse in a family; my goal is to be generation number four."

Director Lyttle was first introduced to Father Factor last fall when Aldana invited her to help with the group's initial family event under his direction. Interest there led to participation in a winter workshop, as well as a third event in March co-sponsored with a local church.

Lyttle says she's getting to know some of the dads on a first-name basis, leading to a relationship that "Damion and I have been striving for. I wanted to become their friend first." Now that she has their trust, says Lyttle, "Damion has invited me to speak with them about paternity establishment and the rights and responsibilities that go along with paternity," and later about the importance of paying child support.

Lyttle believes that Aldana is the reason the Cheyenne group is so successful, insisting "he's got a gift" that's drawn more and more people. "He's very masculine and smart and full of inner character and strength; I think the other dads see that in him."

Aldana returns the compliment: "I told Brenda she inspires me because I see her energy," noting the events at which she helped kids in a bike race or brought materials to let them make crafts. "This is what community work is about-hands on."

Looking ahead, Aldana hopes to keep in touch with the dads after their sessions end. He envisions a center in the future where dads can enjoy mutual support, while the kids enjoy an activity room; a place where professionals can train the dads "so they can be successful in the community. ... If we can't be role models, then we're not good for kids."

And he expects that Father Factor members will one day become its facilitators-not such a stretch of the imagination for one who is breaking barriers

Our DC child support lawyers know and understand your worries and fears. Let them help you to take control. Contact one of our DC child support lawyers today for a free evaluation of your case.

 

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
Florida Statute requires guidelines to be used in establishing new child support obligations or modifying child support in a Florida court.
All states are required to have statutory guidelines but they vary greatly among states. The Floridae guidelines must take into consideration all income and earnings of both parents and the children's health care needs. The court may deviate from the guidelines if there is a written finding in the court record that the guidelines in the particular case would be inappropriate.

 


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Breaking The Barrier Between Dads And Child Support
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Child Support Terms

 


Today's Terms

Medical Support

Definition:
Legal provision for insurance coverage, or a cash medical payment

Custody

Definition:
Legal determination which establishes with whom a child should live

Federal Parent Locator Service (FPLS)

Definition:
A service operated by the Office of Child Support Agency in the U.S Department of Health and Human Services to assist the States in locating responsible persons for the purpose of obtaining child support payments; also used in cases of parental kidnapping

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Topics Related to Child Support:

  • Divorce
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  • Paternity
  • Parental Rights
  • Income Withholding

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