When states determine the amount of child support a parent must pay they do not necessarily factor in the cost of living. The basis for support is determined primarily of the needs of the child, the income of each parent, the ability for the non-custodial parent to pay and the standard of living the child was accustomed to prior to the divorce or separation.
Not directly. However, the court may take into consideration the total level of income and living environment of the obligated parent when deciding the amount the biological parent should pay.
The environment of an organism is described by biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) factors. As examples, a biotic factor could be a competitor for food, and an abiotic factor could be the amount of sunlight that gets to an organism.
It's a biotic factor because it's a living factor in an ecosystem, which would be a desert. Biotic Factor-living factorsAbiotic Factirs-non-living factors
It's a biotic factor because it's a living factor in an ecosystem, which would be a desert. Biotic Factor-living factorsAbiotic Factirs-non-living factors
A Biotic Factor is a living thing and an Abiotic Factor is a non-living thing.
If the amount of past-due support is at least equal to the tax refund, yes.
a biotic factor is something living
yes it is. a biotic factor is a living thing. a crayfish is a living thing. therefore it is a biotic factor.
a biotic factor is a living organisms in the environment and a abortic factor is a non-living thing in the environment
Oxygen is the most important factor for living things.
Yes, because anything living or that once was living is a biotic factor.
when talking about non living things we are talking about abiotic factors. In the sea there can be numerous things. Two obvious ones would be the amount of sunlight that is in the sea and the water itself is non living. You can also say that the amount of salt in the water is also an abiotic factor.