What, exactly, is your question? As it stands, that can cover a lot of territory and a lot of different information.
State law can vary widely depending, as well as the circumstances of the move and your current custody status. You would need to provide more information for an accurate answer.
The number of days a child must attend school is set by state law. If you are moving, or changing the child from one school to another, you must abide by the state law of the area you are in.
All states recognize one another's child suppport orders. Moving from one state to another will not enable you to shirk the responsibility.
Make sure that the courts and/or your State's child support agency knows your whereabouts. And don't forget to get the permission of the court to move.
Yes.
Yes. An attorney who is moving from one state to another will have to re-take the bar exam in the state they are moving to. This is due to the vast variation in laws from state to state.
No, you cannot move a child out of state if you have joint custody.
YES
You can't 'drop' child support, unless the custodial parent asks you to relinquish parental rights, or files to terminate your rights. Living in another state does not matter, in fact moving to another country might not help either, as many nations have a reciprocal agreement with the US concerning child support payments.
No it will not.
Child support and child custody are handled separately. In most cases delinquent child support payment does not affect the rights of the father. The father can still petition to avoid you moving the child out of state but, doesn't necessarily mean it will be granted. Unless both parents can come to an arrangement/agreement in what's in the best interest of the child.
yes. go to your local Department of Child Support Enforcement & file. Be prepared to provide them with as much info on the father as possible. such as: social security number, most recent address, employer, you get the idea.
I'm not familiar with Canadian law, but moving the child out of state in the US would not terminate support.