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Chase for child support

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Currently there are more than 500,000 child-support cases in Illinois, according to the state. About 81 percent of those cases have payment orders, a more than 3 percent increase since 2010.

McHenry County has about 4,100 ongoing child-support cases. More than 88 percent have payment orders, an 8 percent increase since 2010.

The county state’s attorney’s office currently is handling 39 cases of unpaid child support – unmarried parents seeking child support or a custodial parent trying to secure a payment order, said George Hoffman, an assistant state’s attorney. Prosecutors have closed 10 cases this year, and opened three others, he said.

The Illinois Attorney General’s Regional Office in Rockford handles other county cases involving custodial parents who also receive some form of public aid.

Support orders

The amount of a child-support order depends on the noncustodial parent’s net income and the number of children for whom he or she is responsible. Orders generally include money to help pay for health insurance or day-care, among other things.

Statutory guidelines for child support include 20 percent of the noncustodial parent’s net income for one child, 28 percent for two children, 32 percent for three children and 40 percent for four children.

An order goes directly to the noncustodial parent’s employer and the amount is automatically withheld from each paycheck. If the noncustodial parent does not work, the court uses a standard amount based on the state minimum wage.

Once an order is established, the noncustodial parent is required to remain up-to-date on payments or face penalties, and are encouraged to notify the courts of financial hardships before they can’t make payments.

“We have found over the years that if we try to develop a partnership with the noncustodial [parent] and explain what will happen, they tend to pay from the get-go,” Morrow said. “When they feel they are being treated fairly, they are more likely to pay.”

Paying up

The penalties for not paying child support are steep and vary, depending on the unpaid amount and circumstances of each case.

The process begins with a letter notifying the noncustodial parent of nonpayment and includes an explanation of administrative tools to collect child support. Among the secretary of state’s tools is to suspend a driver’s license and seize federal income tax refunds. Denial of a passport, or the inability to renew one, also are possible.


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