It can't be waived in Ohio but you can request $0 a month. Meaning that the non-custodial parent is still in the system with the CSEA and still has to report to them but there is zero payment. It is ultimately up to the CSEA what is to be paid.
no
"waive" ... Yes, with the court's permission. She cannot waive support due the State as reimbursement for assistance provided.
The easiest way is to pay off the child support! Otherwise, you have to go to court and get the judge to waive it.
The parents can agree to waive the unpaid support - the court must approve this after finding it to be in the child's best interest.
Has to be approved by the court and cannot be owed Welfare.
Technically arrears cannot be waived. However, a custodial parent can fill out a form stating that no child support is due.
Yes. see linksAns 2.The father has the option to waive his rights if he wants to, and if he can convince the judge that he is sane, sober and not under coercion as he does so.This has nothing at all to do with child support, which is not his right, but his responsibility. In general the mother can't waive child support either, because support is her child's right, not hers.THAT IS CORRECT.....unless the child's mother has re-married and her husband wants to adopt this child, that would release the biological father from paying child support.
The courts may approve you/your Mom's request to waive past-due support.
If the mother isn't receiving any kind of assistance from the government, she can waive the right to child support from the father, but it wouldn't be in the child's best interest. Child support is the child's right, not the mother's. If the mother were really well off financially, or if she didn't want the father anywhere around the child, she could waive the child's right to support. The father has a responsibility to help take care of the child he helped bring into this world.ClarificationGenerally, in the US, a mother cannot legally waive a child's right to support from their father. A child is legally entitled to be supported by both parents. However, the mother can choose to not involve the court if the parents were never married or if there will be no divorce action filed. However, if the mother doesn't want the money she should put in a college fund for the child.
http://www.ocffr.org/
Child support in Ohio usually continues until the child is 18, and up to the age of 21 if the child is in school. Whether or not you have to pay child support if the child is living with the noncustodial parent depends on the support order that it is in place Typically you can expect that you will have to expect to pay support.
By law, child support belongs to the child. Therefore, parents cannot agree between themselves to waive or reduce child support, either past-due or current. The venue that issued the order must approve any such agreement.