the guardian should file to have the order transferred to them as well as file on the parent currently receiving it to also pay. Or the obligor parent should file for custody.
That should have no effect.
In this case the other parent is no longer the custodial parent. If the child is now staying with another guardian, they are now considered the custodial guardian and child support should be paid to them.
yes
No. The guardian of a minor child cannot "relieve" the parent of their child support obligation. That power is reserved for the courts. If the guardian doesn't need it to help support the child then it should be deposited into a trust with the child as the sole beneficiary at college time.
No, child support is only owed to the custodial parent/guardian. If the grandmother has become the custodial guardian, child support will be owed to her, instead of the mother.
Both parents
As he's on SSD, none at all.
No, as a guardian is not a parent, thus their income is not even a consideration, only that of the parents.
The guardian gets the child support, but the child can receive social security on behalf of the deceased parent until they are 18.
Both parents should, otherwise it's bias.
The person who files for child support must have legal custody. If not the parent they must be a court appointed guardian.The person who files for child support must have legal custody. If not the parent they must be a court appointed guardian.The person who files for child support must have legal custody. If not the parent they must be a court appointed guardian.The person who files for child support must have legal custody. If not the parent they must be a court appointed guardian.
Yes, but you'd have to file an amendment (order modification) to the existing order with a request for support for yourself.