"deadbeat parents"
apparently one of the 4 horsemen of the infocalypse...?!?! whatever can be used as an excuse to take away rights, eh? ------- Forwarded Message Date: Wed, 24 Jun 1998 15:18:11 -0500 To: believer@telepath.com From: believer@telepath.com Subject: IP: Clinton Signs New Deadbeat Parents Penalties into Law Source: USIA Clinton Signs New Deadbeat Parents Penalties into Law U.S. Newswire 24 Jun 9:06 President Clinton Signs New Deadbeat Parents Penalties into Law To: National Desk Contact: White House Press Office, 202-456-2100 WASHINGTON, June 24 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The following was released today by the White House: Today, President Clinton will announce new statistics highlighting the success of Administration child support enforcement efforts and will sign into law tough new penalties for parents who repeatedly refuse to pay child support. At an Oval Office ceremony, the President will announce that a new child support collection system launched nine months ago has already located one million deliquent parents, and the child support enforcement program established a record 1.3 million paternities in 1997. Overall, 68 percent more child support was collected in 1997 than in 1992. The bill he will sign into law, the Deadbeat Parents Punishment Act of 1998, is based on his 1996 proposal for tougher penalties for parents who repeatedly fail to support children living in another state or who flee across state lines to avoid supporting them. Finally, the President will reiterate his position that bankruptcy reform legislation should not make it harder to collect child support and alimony. New Hire Directory Finds One Million Deliquent Parents. Today, the President will announce that the new National Directory of New Hires had located one million deliquent parents since its October 1, 1997 launch. The directory, proposed by the President in 1994, and enacted as part of the 1996 welfare reform law, helps track parents across state lines and withhold their wages by enabling child support officials to match records of delinquent parents with wage records from throughout the nation. Approximately one-third of all child support cases involve parents living in different states. (See attached chart) A Record Number of Paternity Establishments. The President will also announce that the child support enforcement program established a record 1.3 million paternities in 1997, two and a half times the 1992 figure of 510,000. Much of this success is due to the in-hospital voluntary paternity establishment program begun by the Clinton Administration in 1994, which encourages fathers to acknowledge paternity at the time of the child's birth. A Record Increase in Child Support Collections. In 1997, the state and federal child support enforcement program collected a record $13. 4 billion for children, an increase of 68% from 1992, when $8 billion was collected. Not only are collections up, but the number of families that are actually receiving child support has also increased. In 1997, the number of child support cases with collections rose to 4.2 million, an increase of 48% from 2.8 million in 1992. New Felony Penalties for Egregious Failure to Pay Child Support. The President called for these tough new penalties in July 1996 and again in his 1997 State of the Union address. This new law creates two new categories of felonies, with penalties of up to two years in prison, for more egregious child support evaders: Traveling across state or country lines with the intent to evade child support payments will now be considered a felony if the obligation has remained unpaid for a period longer than one year or is greater than $5,000. When the obligation has remained unpaid for a period of longer than two years or is greater than $10,000, willful failure to pay child support to a child residing in another state will be considered a felony. This bill was sponsored in Congress by Representatives Hyde and Hoyer and Senators DeWine and Kohl, and had overwhelming bipartisan support in both houses. Responsible Bankruptcy Reform that Doesn't Hurt Children. Finally, the President will reiterate his position that bankruptcy reform legislation should not make it harder to collect child support and alimony. The Administration will work with Congress to produce a bankruptcy reform bill that asks responsibility of both creditors and debtors, while stemming abuse. In those discussions, the President will continue to make protecting child support and alimony a top priority. The House and Senate bills still raise the concern that additional debts will survive bankruptcy and compete with child support and alimony payments for scarce funds. -0- /U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/ 06/24 09:06 Copyright 1998, U.S. Newswire - ----------------------- NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. - ----------------------- ********************************************** To subscribe or unsubscribe, email: majordomo@majordomo.pobox.com with the message: (un)subscribe ignition-point email@address ********************************************** www.telepath.com/believer ********************************************** ------- End of Forwarded Message
On 25 Jun 98, Vladimir Z. Nuri was found to have commented thusly:
apparently one of the 4 horsemen of the infocalypse...?!?! whatever can be used as an excuse to take away rights, eh?
[news clip regarding new Deadbeat Parents federal law excised] I have a strong feeling that this new law is going to turn around and bite the Great Society II (GSII) advocates in their federal ass. Considering some of the minimum limits regarding child support sums in arrears, it really won't take any time for prominent members, subscribers, and believers in GSII, including Friends of Bill and Friends of Hillary, to find themselves on the other side of a federal arrest warrant. The $5000 limit could be reached in a matter of a few months, it seems, for quite a few of even the "middle-class" child support payers. (Anyone reading this who pays child support willing to divulge how many months it would take for them to reach that limit?) I don't believe that deadbeat parents should evade their responsibility, but this law pretty much is the wrong way to deal with it. Prosecutors of any stripe are not going to bother with making a judgment regarding 'intent', which they probably don't consider their duty anyway. They will have a formulae all worked out in concert with the presiding judge--whose duty should be the 'justice' end of any bum rap, deciding the issue of 'intent'--to nail anyone who violates the letter (and disregard the question of the violation of the spirit) of the law. The poor will necessarily cop a plea and probably do some federal time AND/or find themselves assessed federal fines that will essentially make them indentured servants to the state for years. The rich will work a deal to stay out of prison since the feds don't want to waste time with the delaying tactics of their savvy lawyers. Perhaps at some point, after thousands of well-meaning but misfortunate parents find themselves considered felons in their society because they got behind in the support although there was no clear intent to do so, the law or certain elements of it will be sensibly repealed or reformed to target those whose intent to evade is really indisputable. There are probably as well "minor" provisions and clauses in the law not reported in the news clip, but which certainly make life impossible for the well- meaning to obtain complete rehabilitation; those parts of the code would need attention as well. Mitch Halloran Research (Bio)chemist Duzen Laboratories Group Ankara TURKEY mitch@duzen.com.tr "Tonight, again, the strong and arrogant opponent felt the bitter taste of defeat at your hands" ---Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, addressing the jubilant Iranian soccer team whose very unexpected victory over the US eliminated them from the France 1998 World Cup
participants (2)
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S. M. Halloran
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Vladimir Z. Nuri