The child support goes to the one who have custody. If the grandparent still do and the child has just moved out temporarily, they will still get it. If the child is under 18 and has moved they also still get it unless the child is emancipated. If the child is 18 the child support generally end but it depends on the state laws and/or what you have written in the child support agreement.
I'm assuming that you have a teen who has a child and you wish to deny the father access. This is no a choice the grandparent legally has.
Keep the claim active with child support enforcement
Contact Child Support Enforcement every 24 months.
Catch up on your child support payments.
probably
Yes, provided you want to be responsible for the life you brought into this world, or there is a court order in place. Keep in mind, that even if there is no court order in existence, that you might still be responsible for support from the day the child moves.
In my sister's case the child support payments are only defered until he serves his 2-10 years. They will only continue to add up until he has payed the amount in full. This would also depend on what state you are in. We are in MI.
I would get a lawyer and go to child protective services or social services in your area. The main thrust of the social services is to keep the child with family and as a grandparent you fit that.
If you mean "turned it in," you keep pushing the child support office until they give you some definite answers. Keep in mind that the answer might be, "we can't find him," "he's in jail/prison," "he doesn't have any money" or, "he's dead."
No. The parent is still the parent and responsible for the child abandoned or not. The child support payments will just keep adding up until the person is found.
Keep current on your child support payments and make sure the courts are recording payments correctly.
yes