You haven't mentioned who "told them not to". Automatic payroll deductions for child support are triggered by a court order sent to the employer. In order to stop the deductions from your pay check you need a termination of the original court order to be sent to your employer by the court. If the payroll department continues to deduct the child support payments even after being given notice of the termination you need to get in touch with the human resource department immediately, armed with a copy of the court order that terminated the payroll deduction, and stay on top of the situation.
Look at your child support agreement. Or contact DHR to regain a copy.
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No, it is still owed with interest. The back child support was supposed to be paid while the child was growing up. Check your state laws.
If on SSI, no. If on SSD, there's a separate child benefit check, but you still need to file for a modification in your support. see links below.
Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.
Depends on what the child support agreement says and the laws in your jurisdiction. Most jurisdictions require the support continue until the child graduates from high school. You need to check your particular state. You can inquire at the court that issued the order.
Go to child support enforcement and make an official request that the order be modified. However, in recent months, it has been learned the the state is not counting 8% of weekly child support deductions as paid support due to a computer glitch, so you may find you are in arrears through no fault of your own but are still held accountable.
I am not an attorney or legal specialist. But If you are receiving child support at 20 are you receiving back child support owed from years that the parent skipped while you were a child? If you are receiving back child support then I would think not. If you are still receiving child support on your self at 20 and are pregnant , I would think that it would stop. Being pregnant is an adult action. I am not sure what state you live in but I would check the Divorce decree of your parents .AnswerIf you (or actually, I guess your parent) still receive child support at 20, then I imagine it's because you're still in school. If that's the case, and you remain in school and do not become 'emancipated' (for example through marriage), then I don't think a pregnancy would have any effect on the child support order. Check with a local attorney.
It depends on your state. Normally child support ends upon the age of majority in your state or emancipation. Unless a child is considered emancipated through giving birth, you will probably have to continue paying support. However, there are a few states that end child support at that time. Check your local state laws.
Check your child support to see what it says, but generally speaking if the child is still in high school, it continues until the age of 19 or until graduation, whichever occurs earlier.
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Yes, you will still have to pay child support because you are the mother or father of the child, and that makes you still pay child support.