MAJOR CHILD SUPPORT PROPOSALS CONSIDERED IN THE 106TH CONGRESS

CRS Report for Congress
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Major Child Support Proposals
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Considered in the 106 Congress
Carmen Solomon-Fears
Specialist in Social Legislation
Domestic Social Policy Division
Summary
During the period FY1978-FY1999, child support payments collected by the Child
Support Enforcement (CSE) agencies increased from $1 billion to $15.8 billion. Even
so, the program still collects only 17% of child support obligations for which it has
responsibility and collects payments for only 37% of its caseload. The Clinton
Administration’s FY2001 budget included several new initiatives intended to collect
more child support from noncustodial parents that can afford to pay, streamline program
distribution rules so that more child support goes to custodial parents, and establishes a
fatherhood grant program to help noncustodial parents to get the support and skills they
need to find and retain employment and to become more involved in the lives of their
children. H.R. 4678, the Child Support Distribution Act of 2000, included many of these
provisions. H.R. 4678, as amended, was passed by the House but not by the Senate.
Although the fatherhood grant program was not passed, the Consolidated Appropriations
Act for FY2001 (P.L. 106-554) provides $500,000 for each of two specified fatherhood
organizations and P.L. 106-553 provides another $3 million for one of the
aforementioned fatherhood organizations. This report describes some of the childth
support provisions that were left pending by the 106 Congress; it will not be updated.
Background
The Child Support Enforcement (CSE) program, Part D of Title IV of the Social
Security Act, was enacted in January 1975 (P.L. 93-647). The CSE program is
administered by the Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE) in the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS), and funded by general revenues. All 50 states, the
District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands operate CSE programs
and are entitled to federal matching funds.
The CSE program provides six services on behalf of both welfare and nonwelfare
children: (1) parent location, (2) paternity establishment, (3) establishment of child
support orders, (4) review and modification of support orders, (5) collection of support


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payments, and (6) distribution of support payments. Moreover, since 1984, CSE agencies
have been required to petition for medical support as part of most child support orders.
During the period FY1978-FY1999, child support payments collected by the CSE
agencies increased from $1 billion to $15.8 billion. Moreover, the program has made
significant improvements in other program components as well, such as the number of
parents located, paternities established, and child support orders established. Advocates
of the CSE program say that this dramatic program performance is aside from the indirect
and intangible benefits of the program, such as increased personal responsibility and
welfare cost-avoidance. Critics of the CSE program contend that even with an
unprecedented array of “big brother” enforcement tools such as licence (professional,
driver’s, recreational) and passport revocation, seizure of banking accounts, retirement
funds, and lottery winnings, and automatic income withholding from pay checks, the
program still collects only one 17% of child support obligations for which it has
responsibility and collects payments for only 37% of its caseload.
Some reasons for the low rate of child support collections are (1) the low rate of
paternity establishment; in FY1998 paternity was established for only 41% of the 3.6
million children without legally identified fathers (legally identifying the father is a
prerequisite for obtaining a child support order) and (2) many fathers cannot afford to pay.
Some Members argue that a significant percentage of noncustodial parents are “dead
broke” rather than “deadbeats,” and have urged the adoption of fatherhood initiatives to
help noncustodial fathers obtain employment and the necessary information and
encouragement to become responsible parents.
Child Support Proposals Considered (not enacted) in the 106th
Congress
The Clinton Administration’s FY2001 budget included several new initiatives
intended to collect more child support from noncustodial parents that can afford to pay,
streamline program distribution rules so that more child support goes to custodial parents,
and help noncustodial parents who are unable to pay child support get the support and
skills they need to find work and retain employment. It also included other CSE
programmatic changes. H.R. 4678, the Child Support Distribution Act of 2000, which
was approved by the House Ways and Means Committee on July 19, 2000 and reported
on July 26, 2000 (H.Rept. 106-793, Part 1), contains some of the provisions that were in
the Clinton Administration’s FY2001 budget proposal. On September 7, 2000, the House
passed H.R. 4678, which requires states to distribute more child support to ex-welfare
families (with federal funding) and permits states to give child support collections to
TANF families without having to repay the federal government its share of the money. In
addition, H.R. 4678 simplifies child support assignment and distribution rules, establishes
a fatherhood grant program, and makes other changes.
Optional Passthrough and Disregard of Child Support Payments. Under
old law, the first $50 of current monthly child support payments collected on behalf of a
family receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) was given to the family
and disregarded as income to the family so that it did not affect the family’s AFDC
eligibility or benefit status. The 1996 welfare reform law (P.L. 104-193) eliminated the
$50 passthrough payment. Under current law, when child support is collected for families
receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) assistance, the money is



divided between the state and federal governments based on the state’s Medicaid matching
rate. The federal government keeps its share. P.L. 104-193 gave states the choice to
decide how much, if any, of the state share (some, all, none) of child support payments
collected on behalf of TANF families to send to the family. States also decide whether to
treat child support payments as income to the family. About half of the states have chosen
to keep their entire share. The other half pass through a portion of the collection to the
family, usually $50 per month, and disregard that amount in calculating the family’s
monthly TANF benefit.
As noted above, under current law the states bear the entire cost of passing through
and disregarding child support to families on TANF. The Clinton Administration and
several Members of Congress maintain that if child support is passed through to families
while they are on welfare, the family may be able to leave welfare sooner because they can
more accurately assess how much child support they would have to supplement their
earnings. H.R. 4678, as amended and reported on July 27, 2000 by the House Rules
Committee (H.Rept. 106-798), includes provisions that would (1) allow states to pay child
support arrearage payments collected on behalf of families who are no longer on welfare
to the families without paying the federal government its share of the money, and (2) allow
states to pay child support collections to TANF families without being required to pay the
federal government its share of the money, provided the state does not count the child
support income in determining the family’s TANF benefit. For mothers on welfare, the
federal government would share in the cost of amounts passed through and disregarded
to the family up to $400 per month for families with less than two children and up to $600
per month for families with two or more children. The Rules Committee amendment also
would permit states to discontinue child support assignments that were in effect on
September 30, 1997 that were assigned to the state as a condition of TANF receipt.
Preliminary cost estimates by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) indicated that these
provisions would cost $541 million over 5 years.
Simplify Child Support Assignment and Distribution Rules. To qualify
for TANF benefits, TANF applicants and recipients must assign their child support rights
to the state for periods before and during the family’s TANF receipt. P.L. 104-193
required states to pay a higher fraction of child support collections on arrearages to
families that have left welfare by making these payments to families first (before the state
and the federal government are reimbursed for TANF assistance to the family). However,
in cases where the child support arrearage is collected via the federal income tax refund
offset program, the states and federal government keep the support collection. In addition,
the state keeps (and divides with the federal government) child support arrearages that
accrued before the family went on TANF if they are collected while the family is receiving
TANF benefits. Further, the states retains (and shares with the federal government)
arrearages that accrue for child support obligations that were assigned to the state before
October 1997. These factors have resulted in making an already complicated set of rules
for determining who actually gets the child support arrearage payments more complex.
Although much of the complexity of the distribution rules will end when the rules are
completely implemented on October 1, 2000, many policymakers contend that Congress
needs to simplify the distribution system which currently requires the tracking of six
categories of arrearage payments in order to properly pay custodial parents.
H.R. 4678 would limit the child support assignment to the period in which the family
receives TANF benefits. In addition, H.R. 4678 includes a provision that would allow



states to adopt simpler rules for distributing child support collections. Under the proposed
rule, collections received on behalf of families receiving TANF benefits would be retained
by the federal and state governments as reimbursement for TANF assistance (as under
current law) and child support collected on behalf of families who are no longer on TANF
would be paid to the families first. The policy would have an effective date of October 1,
2001. Preliminary CBO estimates indicated that increased collections to families would
amount to $905 million over 5 years. CBO estimates that the net federal cost of the
provision would be about $1 billion over the 5-year period from FY2002-FY2006.
Review and Adjustment of Child Support Orders. P.L. 104-193 requires
states to have procedures under which they must review a child support order, and adjust
it if appropriate, every 3 years (or more often at state option) if either parent or the state
requests a review in welfare cases or if either parent requests a review in nonwelfare cases.
In other words, the review is mandatory once every 3 years only if one of the specified
parties requests the review.
H.R. 4678 would require states to review and adjust child support orders for TANF
families once every 3 years. In addition, states would be required to review the child
support orders of families leaving TANF. CBO indicates that such a mandatory review
would increase collections to families and also increase the number of children with private
health insurance, thereby reducing the reliance of welfare families on public assistance
programs. CBO estimates that the net federal savings from reviewing support orders of
persons on TANF would amount to $58 million over 5 years (FY2002-FY2006) and that
the net federal cost of reviewing support orders of families that leave TANF would amount
to $50 million over 5 years.
Reduction of Threshold for Passport Denial. P.L. 104-193 also authorized
the Secretary of State to deny, revoke, or restrict passports of debtor parents whose child
support arrearages exceed $5,000. According to HHS, the passport denial program has
collected more than $2.25 million in lump sum child support payments and is currently
denying 30 to 40 passports daily to delinquent noncustodial parents.
H.R. 4678 includes a proposal that would authorize the denial, revocation, or
restriction of passports to noncustodial parents whose child support arrearages exceed
$2,500, rather than $5,000 as under current law. CBO estimates that this proposal would
increase child support collections to families by about $13 million annually and would save
the federal government $9 million over 5 years (FY2002-FY2006).
Reduce Federal Matching Rate for Paternity Establishment. The federal
government currently reimburses each state 66% of the cost of administering its CSE
program. It also refunds states 90% of the laboratory costs of establishing paternity. The
federal government’s funding is “open-ended” in that it pays its percentage of expenditures
by matching the amounts spent by state and local governments with no upper limit or
ceiling.
The FY2001 budget included a proposal that would eliminate the enhanced match
for paternity establishment. Under the proposal, the federal matching rate for paternity
testing would be reduced to 66%, the lower overall child support administrative matching
rate. The Clinton Administration estimates that the savings from this proposal would
amount to $41 million over the 5-year period from FY2001-FY2005.



Demonstrations Involving Establishment and Enforcement of Child
Support Obligations by Public Non-IV-D Agencies. The CSE program is
authorized by title IV-D of the Social Security Act. Federal law requires every state that
operates a TANF program to operate a CSE program. States must operate their CSE
programs in accordance with federal guidelines. Federal funding is available for the CSE
program at a 66% matching rate. Other public agencies in the state such as a county
government or a clerk of the court may perform some child support enforcement functions
without receiving federal funding or having to adhere to the federal child support
enforcement rules. Generally, these other public agencies do not have full access to the
same enforcement tools or information databases that are available to the CSE agency.
H.R. 4678 would authorize the HHS Secretary to approve up to 10 states to
participate in a demonstration program. The demonstrations would determine the extent
to which public child support enforcement entities other than the CSE agency can
contribute effectively to the establishment and enforcement of child support obligations on
behalf of custodial parents who have not been helped by the regular CSE program and
seek aid from an alternative entity. CBO estimates that the net federal cost of the
demonstrations would be $25 million over the 5-year period from FY2002-FY2006.
Use of Information in the New Hires Database. The 1996 welfare reform law
(P.L. 104-193) required all employers in the nation to report basic information on every
newly-hired employee to the state. States were in turn required to collect all this
information in the State Directory of New Hires, to use this information to locate
noncustodial parents who owe child support and to send a wage withholding order to their
employer, and to report (within 3 business days) all information in their Directory of New
Hires to the federal government. Information in the State Directory of New Hires is used
by State Employment Security Agencies (the agency that operates the state unemployment
compensation program) to match against unemployment compensation records to
determine whether people drawing unemployment compensation benefits are actually
working. However, many states have residents who are drawing unemployment benefits
from a previous job in their state but then obtain work in an adjoining state. Because
states have access to the New Hire data only in their own state, and not to the National
Directory of New Hires, states are not able to detect these cases.
H.R. 4678 would authorize state Employment Security Agencies to gain access to
information in the National Directory of New Hires. CBO estimates that the net federal
savings resulting from this provision would amount to $76 million from FY2002-FY2006.
Use of Tax Refund Offset Program to Collect Past-Due Support on
Behalf of Children Who Are No Longer Minors. Under the federal income tax
refund offset program, the Internal Revenue Service, operating on a request from a state
filed through the Secretary of HHS, intercepts tax returns and deducts the amount of
certified child support arrearages. The money is then sent to the state for distribution.
This program is available to TANF recipients in cases in which the noncustodial parent
owes at least $150 in past-due child support and non-welfare recipients in cases in which
the noncustodial parent owes at least $500 in arrearage payments. With respect to TANF
cases, the federal income tax refund offset program can be used to collect arrearages on
behalf of children who are no longer minors. H.R. 4678 would allow the federal income
tax refund offset program to be used to collect arrearages on behalf of non-welfare
children who are no longer minors.



Fathers Work/Families Win. P.L. 106-113, the Consolidated Appropriations Act
for FY2000, amended the welfare-to-work program (which is intended to help “hard-to-
serve” welfare recipients with the transition to work), but did not provide for additional
funding for FY2000. The new amendments, which took effect on January 1, 2000, allow
welfare-to-work funds to be spent on noncustodial parents who are unemployed,
underemployed, or who are having difficulty paying their child support obligations. The
following are some of the activities that may receive welfare-to-work funding: community
service or work experience programs, job creation through wage subsidies on-the-job
training, job readiness, placement, and post-employment services, and job retention and
support services. The welfare-to-work program is administered by DOL. According to
the Clinton Administration, the welfare-to-work program has provided over $350 million
in funding on responsible fatherhood initiatives. (See CRS Report RS20207, Welfare
Reform: Competitive Grants in the Welfare-to-Work Grant Program.)
The proposed “Fathers Work” grant program, which would be administered by the
Department of Labor, is designed to help low-income noncustodial parents who are not
living with their children carry out their financial and emotional responsibilities to their
children. The Clinton Administration estimates that these grants would help about 40,000
low-income noncustodial parents (primarily fathers) work, pay child support, and
reconnect with their children; and would cost $125 million in FY2001.
The proposed “Families Win” grant program, which would be administered by the
Department of Labor, is designed to help “hard-pressed” working families obtain the
supports and skills they need to get a job and succeed in the job and avoid TANF
assistance. These funds are intended to leverage existing resources to help families retain
jobs and upgrade skills, and get connected to critical work supports, such as child care,
child support, health care, food stamps, earned income tax credit, housing, and
transportation. The Clinton Administration estimates that these grants would serve about
40,000 low-income parents, including former welfare recipients, and persons with
disabilities work, pay child support, and reconnect with their children. The Clinton
Administration estimates that the program would cost $130 million in FY2001; of this
amount, $10 million would be for grants to Native American workforce agencies. Neither
the House or Senate FY2001 appropriations bill (H.R. 4577) for the Departments of
Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies include funding
for the Fathers Work/Families Win proposal.
Fatherhood Grant Programs. H.R. 4678 and H.R. 3073 (passed by the House
on November 10, 1999) would establish a program to make grants to public or private
entities for projects designed to promote marriage, promote successful parenting and the
involvement of fathers in the lives of their children, and help fathers improve their
economic status by providing them with job-related services. The program would be
appropriated $140 million over a 4-year period. (For more information on fatherhood
legislation, see CRS Report RS20385.) CBO estimates that the net federal cost of the
fatherhood grants would amount to $161 million over 5 years (FY2002-FY2006).
Although the House and Senate did not reach agreement on H.R. 4678 , a bill that
includes a fatherhood grants program, the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2001
(P.L. 106-554) provides $500,000 for each of two named fatherhood organizations – The
National Fatherhood Initiative and the Institute for Responsible Fatherhood and Family
Revitalization and P.L. 106-553 provides another $3.0 million for the National Fatherhood
Initiative.