Public assistance recipients assign their rights to child support to the State which, presumably, will attempt to establish/collect support.
Virtually any income or asset can be attached to collect child support, except for public assistance/SSI.
No, your pension income is for supporting you and your family.
Yes, as you sign away any claim on support when you collect state aid.
When getting assistance, you sign away the right to claim. They will than collect, including retroactive funds.
Family Responsibility Offices enforce child and domestic support orders. Family Responsibility Offices also collect and distribute support payments for families.
No. Public assistance is paid from public funds. Child support is paid by individual obligors.
If your child is not living with you, you are not eligible to collect child support. The child support should go to whomever is caring for the child.
Your custodial parent can collect unpaid support that accrued under an order. Support sometimes continues after the child becomes an adult if the child is disabled.
Yes, if it was owed to her (i.e., not to another relative or the State as reimbursement for assistance provided). There is no statute of limitations on collecting past-due child support.
yes
Reference to "seventy four percent" is unclear, but it seems unlikely that the child's mother could collect current child support in such a situation. (She can still collect past-due support, if any.)
No, child support can only be taken from the birth parents.