If you are not taking the child, yes usually, unless such a trip would interfere with court ordered visitation guidelines. If so, you should obtain written permission from the custodial parent to make such a trip or file for modification to visitation based on the same. And not paying child support is different than failure to pay or being behind in court ordered child support. If the latter is true, depending on the arrears, you may not be granted a passport or your existing one may be revoked.
The answer to your question may have radical variations if you are wanting to travel abroad and take the child.
You really should provide more details in the discussion area before an accurate answer can be given.
Go to child support enforcement.
No.
You will have to go at least once to court to pay your yearly to pay the child's support money.
Yes if a judge ordered you to pay child support you have to pay . Until you go back to court and have it changed .
You will need to go through the district attorney or your State's child support agency to do this.
it depends my dad had to go to court to get rid of child support so if you take it off no he does not if he doesn't then he does have to pay for child support
Child support would generally go to the person raising the child. Mother might even be ordered to pay to father.
Pay your child support instead of going on a cruise.
go to the courthouse and tell them that you want him to stop paying child support, my dad doesnt pay for my brother...
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.
Child support arrears do not go away. If the state supported his child for a period of time then he must pay the arrears.
Unless the court order ordering him to pay child support specifically says otherwise, then yes. He could go to court to seek either to have visitation enforced or child support eliminated or reduced.