yes, see links below
If the father was paying you directly, the payments will, of course, cease. If this is the case you must contact the state for assistance. If you were receiving the support payment from the state, then nothing will change and his payments to reimburse the state will become an obligation/lien against him for which he will eventually have to pay the state back.
Yes, Section 8 only counts child support payments as income when they become regular. If you are not receiving the payment than they wont count it as income.
When child support payments are made through any state agency all arrearages must be paid to avoid a possible contempt of court citation even thought he child has reached the age of majority.
Yes, you can apply for U.S. citizenship if you owe child support, but you will need to supply proof either that you are current in your payments or that you are on a payment plan/agreement to make you become current. If your payments are not current, there is a chance that your application may be denied. "Good moral character" is a requirement in order to become a US citizen and if you did not pay your child support, the officer may decide that you do not meet this requirement, however if you are paying your child support on time, there is no reason this should be a problem.
They should pay like anyone else, but not in cash. It should be a money order or other format where you can prove you have paid for the child's support. Then, if you manage to become eligible for citizenship, lack of payments will not hold you back.
yes
In R.I. when a child reaches age 18 and is out of school and child support is automatically deducted from a paycheck, what steps are needed to ensure that payments are no longer deducted?? We have birth certificate and divorce decree in hand..
It depends on the particular agreements in the divorce settlement. Usually it means child support until the child is 18 or if the child is in school, until the child is 21. Alimony is the same, it depends on the divorce settlement. Normally a fixed time period is agreed on - like 3 years - or until the woman remarries. As a side note - if you become behind on your payments, then you still have to make payments, even after those time periods, until you have paid the total amount due.
First off: if you're a minor, you don't get to decide where you live, so the "I live with my boyfriend" part is most likely not going to happen. You will have to live with whomever the court grants custody of you.Normally, if your custodial parent dies, your other parent will become your custodial parent. In that case, yes, the child support payments will stop, because it's pointless for your father to pay child support to himself.If the court grants custody to someone other than your father (most likely a blood relative, and almost certainly not your boyfriend), then they may order your father to make child support payments to them instead.If you marry your boyfriend (depending on your age and whether or not your father is okay with it, in some states this might be possible), then you could live with him, but the child support payments would stop.Your father may optionally elect to keep giving you money even if he's not legally obliged to.
Yes, they will report the late payments to the credit bureaus which will damage your credit score, and if enough payments are missed can commence a foreclosure action on the property.
Generally, late payments over 30 days late are reported to a credit reporting agency. After that, late mortgage payments can become "missed" mortgage payments. And missed payments can affect your credit score in a negative way. However, your exact late payment will depend on how your specific mortgage lender reports payments to the credit bureaus.
It will become an Exploit.