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1 (February 6, 2002)

handle is hein.crs/crsmthaagmf0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
Order Code 97-408 EPW
Updated February 6, 2002


     Child Support Enforcement:
New Reforms and Potential Issues

               Carmen Solomon-Fears
           Domestic Social Policy Division


Summary


     P.L. 104-193 (the 1996 welfare reform legislation) made maj or changes to the Child
 Support Enforcement (CSE) program. Some of the changes include requiring states to
 increase the percentage of fathers identified, establishing an integrated, automated
 network linking all states to information about the location and assets of parents, and
 requiring states to implement more enforcement techniques to obtain collections from
 debtor parents. Additional legislative changes were made in 1997, 1998, and 1999, but
 not in 2000. This report describes several aspects of the revised CSE program and
 discusses three issues that probably will be reexamined by the 107th Congress - CSE
 financing, parental access by noncustodial parents, and distribution of support payments.
 This report will be updated to reflect new developments and issues.


 Background

    The CSE program, Part D of Title IV of the Social Security Act, was enacted in
January 1975 (P.L. 93-647). The CSE program is administered by the Office of Child
Support Enforcement (OCSE) in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS),
and funded by general revenues. All 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands operate CSE programs and are entitled to federal matching
funds. The following families automatically qualify for CSE services (free of charge):
families receiving (or who formerly received) Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
(TANF) benefits (Title IV-A), foster care payments, or Medicaid coverage. Other families
must apply for CSE services, and states must charge an application fee that cannot exceed
$25. (In addition, President Bush's FY2003 budget would require states to charge a $25
annual fee to these other families if they have never received TANF assistance and child
support is collected on their behalf) Child support collected on behalf of nonwelfare
families goes to the family (usually through the state disbursement unit). Collections on
behalf of families receiving TANF benefits are used to reimburse state and federal
governments for TANF payments made to the family.

    Between FY1978 and FY2000, child support payments collected by CSE agencies
increased from $1 billion in FY1978 to $17.9 billion in FY2000, and the number of


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