No. SS benefits and public assistance funds are still subject to child support enforcement.
Public assistance recipients assign their rights to child support to the State which, presumably, will attempt to establish/collect support.
The state does not pay child support. However if you require public assistance the state will automatically go after child support, and even if you do not require public assistance you can file for help with the Office of Child Support and often their services are free. The father may not pay voluntarily but a court action will require him to.
He's not a fan.
No, as you forfeit your claim to the state.
No. If the state is supporting the mother and child the mother has no right to free the father from his responsibility to support his own children. The state will pursue him for child support.
Yes, as you sign away any claim on support when you collect state aid.
Most child support is withheld from wages and sent to a State disbursement unit, which forwards it to the obligor and/or the State (as reimbursement for assistance provided).
In general, child support is a percentage of the obligor's net income. Whether or not the other parent/child receives public assistance is not relevant to this calculation. If the amount of support received is less than the public assistance grant, the State will retain the child support as reimbursement. If support exceeds the grant, the grant will be discontinued and the support will be forwarded to the other parent.
Get state support, they will require him to give financial assistance.
DO NOT ever pay child support to the mother or the child. Pay it through the courts or the State Disbursement Unit.
Contact the MO child support agency for your county.
no, you give up the claim to the state.