In a highly-publicized move, Jefferson County,
Kentucky Attorney Irv Maze recently published the names and addresses of 1,000
alleged "deadbeat parents" in the Louisville Courier-Journal. The move
has drawn praise nationally, and Maze says the list is helping his office locate
debtors. However, most of the parents on Maze's humiliating list are not those
who won't pay, but instead those who can't pay.
Federal Office of
Child Support Enforcement data shows that two-thirds of those who owe child
support nationwide earned less than $10,000 in the previous year. According to the largest
federally funded study of divorced dads ever conducted, unemployment, not
willful neglect, is the largest cause of failure to pay child support. A
US Government Accounting Office survey of custodial mothers who were not
receiving the support they were owed found that two-thirds of those fathers who
do not pay their child support fail to do so because they are indigent.
These research findings are reflected in
Kentucky's Top 10 Most Wanted Parents list. Of those "deadbeats" currently
listed, only one appears to have any education at all, and the most common
designation for occupation is "laborer." Far from being a list of well-heeled
businessmen, lawyers, and accountants, these men do low wage and often seasonal
work, and owe large sums of money which most could never hope to pay off.
Kentucky's list of low income "deadbeats" is
typical of the child support evaders lists put out by most states. For
example, Virginia's new list is topped by a laborer, a carnival hired hand, and
a construction worker, who collectively somehow "owe" over a quarter million
dollars in child support!
The driving force behind child support
arrearages is not bad parents, but instead rigid child support systems which are
mulishly impervious to the economic realities noncustodial parents face, such as
layoffs, wage cuts, and work-related injuries. According to the Urban
Institute, less than one in 20 non-custodial parents who suffer
substantial income drops are able to get courts to reduce their child support
payments. In such cases, the amounts owed mount quickly, as do interest and
penalties.
Compounding the problem is the fact that the federal Bradley Amendment bars
judges from retroactively forgiving child support arrearages, even when they
determine that the arrearage occurred through no fault of the obligor. Bradley
is so problematic that Congress will be conducting hearings on the amendment
this fall.
In one McCracken County,
Kentucky case, Francis Borgia, a carpet cleaner in Paducah, slit his throat in
the courtroom after being sentenced to two years in jail for being $7,000 behind
on child support. According to newspaper accounts, Borgia had become a
"deadbeat" after he lost a good paying job working in a casino and could not get
a downward modification on his support.
Also victimized by Maze's list are those who
are named in error. For example, according to television station WAVE 3 in
Louisville, Maze mistakenly listed James R. Frazier as a deadbeat who owes
$57,000, and gave out his current home address. Frazier and his wife Bertha
have been erroneously targeted by enforcement officials before, and have spent
years fighting to straighten out the error. The agency had previously
acknowledged its mistake--and then went ahead and published the erroneous
information anyway.
Child support collection agencies are notorious
for their errors and bureaucratic bungling, as even supporters of the lists such
as the Association for Children for Enforcement of Support admit. A study
conducted by ACES revealed that state child support enforcement agencies
nationwide had failed to distribute over $500 million which had been paid by
noncustodial parents.
Beyond mistaken identity, as in the Frazier
case, common agency errors include: mathematical errors; failure to record or
transfer records of payments; billing men for children they did not father;
failing to stop child support when a child reaches the age of emancipation;
accepting custodial parents' false reports of nonpayment; and failure to update
child support orders with later court rulings affecting modifications. Audits
and evaluations have shown that errors comprise a third of all arrearages in
some states and counties.
It is true that jailing those behind on child
support does sometimes result in some of the arrearages being paid. However,
this is usually not because the low income dad they've arrested has decided to
sell his Porsche and his vacation home, but instead because his family and
friends have put up the money to keep him out of jail.
Even when dealing with the small percentage of
fathers who have the money to pay but choose not to, Maze's approach is
at times misguided. According to the Children's Rights Council, a Washington-based
advocacy group, more than five million American children each year have their
access to their noncustodial parents interfered with or blocked by custodial
parents. Family courts are often tragically indifferent to enforcing
noncustodial parents' visitation rights. One can understand why noncustodial
parents who have been driven out of their children's lives feel little
motivation to subsidize the custodial parent's filching of their children.
In contrast to Maze's abusive, overkill
approach, state child support systems need to be made more flexible and
responsive, so that low income parents aren't made into criminals because
they've failed to pay child support obligations which are beyond their reach.
As Borgia, who survived his courtroom suicide attempt, noted:
"My only 'crime' was my failure to make as much
money as the state demanded...I couldn't quite understand why I was treated so
harshly. I'm not a deadbeat dad. I'm a broke dad."
This article first appeared in the
Cincinnati Post and the Kentucky Post
(8/26/05).
Jeffery M. Leving
is one of America's most prominent family law
attorneys. He is the author of the book
Fathers' Rights: Hard-hitting and Fair Advice
for Every Father Involved in a Custody Dispute.
His website iswww.dadsrights.com.
Glenn Sacks is a men's and
fathers' issues columnist and a
nationally-syndicated radio talk show host.
His columns have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers.