Yes, if the amount of child support actually received does not exceed the welfare standard for that State/county. (BTW, the State will keep the child support received as reimbursement for assistance provided.)
The key word here is "earned." Welfare benefits are not earned.
Yes, if the amount of support actually received is less than that State's welfare standard. In such a case, the State will retain the support as reimbursement.
Yes, it is possible to receive both welfare benefits and child support in the state of California. Eligibility for welfare benefits is determined by different factors such as income and need. Child support is a separate financial obligation that the noncustodial parent is responsible for providing. These two types of assistance can be received concurrently.
Child support is not paid to the child. It would be payable to the person who currently has legal custody of the child or to the State if the State has custody.
Child support law assumes that one or both parents are absent.
If court ordered? Yes. If she's collecting Welfare? Yessee link
Yes, but child support received must be reported to Social Security (or it's fraud).
Not really. It is based on a percentage of the pay of the parent paying child support and the number of children that are his/hers with the custodial parent.AnswerThe child support you receive for the first child from her father is not affected by your having another child by a different father. The first father is only responsible for supporting his own biological child.
No, the father has to pay child support for both children. Of course the child that decides to live with him will be treated as he/she were when you were both married, but the child you have will still continue to receive child support by law!
yes Child support is awarded when one or both parents are absent. If the child's parents are living together with the child (in their own home or other living arrangement), no child support is due.
Yes, but it has to be court ordered, and must come from both parents.
Each case is treated separately so the first child will no longer receive child support when he/she turns 18 as with the younger child.
Child support is the right of the child. Whether two parents were married or not does not make a difference in both parents being financially responsible for any children that were the result of a relationship.
Never was he on government welfare. He did have to rely on the welfare of his mother's sisters and their husbands after his father and mother both died while he as a child.