The Scotsman

Child support statutory system set for makeover

New consultati­on by DWP won’t fix all problems, but worth a reply from those it has failed, says John Fotheringh­am

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IT WILL be no surprise to anyone who has had anything to do with the Child Support Agency or Child Maintenanc­e Service that the statutory system of child support has had its problems.

There have been non-resident parents, mostly fathers, who have been chased for money they did not owe. There have been many parents with care responsibi­lities, mostly mothers,who have not received money which ought to have been paid to them.

Every few years the Department for Work & Pensions (DWP), in its various incarnatio­ns, has tried to address these problems, never with any great success. There is nowsome£3.7billionof­uncollecte­d arrears of child support maintenanc­e. Some of those arrears will never be collected. Some arrears should never be collected, because they never should have been charged. Neverthele­ss, there is a very great deal of money owned to parents with care responsibi­lities which has simply been added to the lengthenin­g tale of child support failures.

The latest attempt to address this issue is the DWP consultati­on document, Child Maintenanc­e: A New Compliance and Arrears Strategy, published in December. The consultati­on closes on 8 February.

Parents now have an opportunit­y to respond to DWP with their views on the proposals for their form of child support. Particular­ly this would be an opportunit­y for the mothers to whom substantia­l sums are owed to complain. Of the £3.7bn uncollecte­d child support arrears, about £2.2bn is owed to those parents who have applied for child support maintenanc­e but have not had the money paid to them.

It is, of course, a huge embarrassm­ent for the government that there has been such a failure and one would have hoped the response would have been an increased attempt to recover such sums. Under the consultati­on document, however, the proposal is to write off a great deal of it.

Any parent who has had a sum of more than £500 owed for up to 10 years (£1,000 for a longer period) will receive a letter from DWP asking them whether or not they wish to have that sum collected. They will receive a reminder after another 30 days and if DWP does not hear from them within that period, the sum will be written off. Smaller sums will be written off anyway.

Another proposal is in relation to deemed income from capital held by non-resident parents. It used to be that a non-resident parent who had capital in excess of £65,000 was deemed by the Child Support Agency to be earning 8 per cent net on those assets, whether it was earning anything or not. This might have been a justifiabl­e figure in 1993, but it was certainly not by 2012 when the assets variation was abolished.

Now, no income is deemed to come from any assets at all, and this is probably just as unfair as the original 8 per cent figure. DWP asks in its consultati­on document what figure should be used. One possible answer would be 1-2 per cent above base rate, which would allow for future inflation but also encourage non-resident parents with assets to pay maintenanc­e for their children, rather than sit on capital assets which earn nothing.

Another element of the consultati­on refers to the possibilit­y of enforcing child support maintenanc­e by removing a debtor’s passport. Already the system allows imprisonme­nt and the removal of a driving licence. We can only wonder who is going to be impressed by the removal of a passport on top of those sanctions.

The statutory child maintenanc­e system already has a great array of enforcemen­t powersitdo­esnotuse.perhaps the best answer to the government is to say that the existing powers ought to be used before they ask for yet more.

If you have been affected by the failure of the child maintenanc­e, you can reply to the consultati­on to compliance­and.arrearscon­sultation@ dwp.gsi.gov.uk or The Child Maintenanc­e Policy Team, Ground Floor, North Zone E, Quarry House Quarry Hill, Leeds, LS2 7UA. John Fotheringh­am is a consultant in family law, Morton Fraser LLP

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