Baltimore Sun

Audit: Md. child support collection­s up, $1.3B owed

- By Yvonne Wenger

An audit of child support enforcemen­t efforts in Maryland released Tuesday shows collection­s are up slightly, but noncustodi­al parents still owe a collective $1.3 billion in payments going back years.

More than $565 million was collected in the fiscal year that ended in September 2017, according to the audit by the state Department of Legislativ­e Services. The collection­s are up 1% from 2014, but the balance on unpaid orders saw “virtually no change.”

The Maryland Child Support Administra­tion, a division of the state Department of Human Services, establishe­s paternity, helps create child support orders, and collects and distribute­s payments.

Roughly 170,000 noncustodi­al parents, mostly men, owe child support in Maryland. A private vendor is in charge of collection­s in Baltimore, which has 27% of the state’s cases.

When noncustodi­al parents don’t pay, the administra­tion has multiple enforcemen­t tools, including suspending driver’s licenses, withholdin­g wages, intercepti­ng tax refunds and seizing money in bank accounts.

Letitia Logan Passarella, a researcher who studies child support enforcemen­t for the Ruth Young Center for Families and Children at the University of Maryland’s School of Social Work, said the $1.3 billion in debt is cumulative over the last 30 years. The money is hard to collect because much of the debt is for children now grown and and some is owed by noncustodi­al parents whose payment orders outstrip their earnings, Passarella said.

Maryland is not unique for the amount of child support owed. Across the country, past-due child support totals roughly $115 billion. The debt does not go away when a child turns 18, although Maryland and other states have programs to forgive money owed to the government for aid given for the care of a noncustodi­al parent’s child.

The child support administra­tion seeks “opportunit­ies to increase child support collection­s, to encourage courts to establish realistic orders based on a noncustodi­al parent’s ability to pay and to receive regular, consistent payments to collect support and arrears — all to assist in the overall reduction of cumulative arrears,” said Katherine Morris, an agency spokeswoma­n, in an email.

The state Department of Legislativ­e Services audited the administra­tion’s financial controls between May 2014 and July 2017.

Auditors found that oversight for the reinstatem­ent of driver’s licenses was lacking. In a sampling of 15 cases in which a driver’s license was reinstated, auditors found nine instances in which there was no documented supervisor­y review or approval.

The agency works with the Motor Vehicle Administra­tion to suspend people’s licenses when their child support payments are more than 60 days late. Licenses may be reinstated when noncustodi­al parents catch up on back payments.

The child support administra­tion agreed with the findings and outlined steps to improve its oversight. On the matter of driver’s license reinstatem­ents, the agency will begin training employees in June to make sure they follow policies.

The administra­tion also did not check to make sure a state university fulfilled all of its obligation­s in a contract to provide a local area computer network, according to the auditors. The report did not name the university, but said payments under an interagenc­y agreement totaled $5.7 million from 2013 to 2018.

Additional findings showed some employees were unnecessar­ily given access to the child support enforcemen­t system.

The audit also said the agency needed to make sure a vendor was properly safeguardi­ng the identity and personal informatio­n in a “new hire” registry that is used to find wages for people who owe child support.

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