see links below
If the father is not living with the child and has some income other than public assistance, yes.
Yes. see linksAns 2.The father has the option to waive his rights if he wants to, and if he can convince the judge that he is sane, sober and not under coercion as he does so.This has nothing at all to do with child support, which is not his right, but his responsibility. In general the mother can't waive child support either, because support is her child's right, not hers.THAT IS CORRECT.....unless the child's mother has re-married and her husband wants to adopt this child, that would release the biological father from paying child support.
No. Support and visitation are separate issues.
The only way would be to do a personal agreement between the mother & father, ideally having it filed with the court. However, at any time, either parent can utilize Child Support without the other parent's consent. If the Mother spends more time with the child than the Father, she is most likely entitled to child support.
Yes,the dead beat is expected to pay up.
If the child is not yet of age/emancipated, child support could be ordered once paternity is established.
He is the father and not to allow him his child would hurt the child. Take him to family court for the support.
absolutely, with the court's permission
That's up to the judge.see link
Yes, if he wants to get a visitation order established so that his visits with his child will be guaranteed and not at the convenience of the mother. She can request a child support order at the same time.
The parents have to go back to court to file a modification of the custody order. They should also terminate any child support order that obligates the father to pay child support