| Yes. Heres the legal explanation: Effective October 20, 1994, the Full Faith and Credit for Child
Support Orders Act prohibits a state court from modifying another state court's
child-support order unless the support recipient lives in the state that proposes to
modify the order or unless the recipient consents to the modification by that state. The
Act aims to establish national jurisdictional standards for child-support orders and to
control how states will treat orders made in other states.
Each state must enforce child-support orders that any other
state has made in accordance with the section, and no state may modify another's support
order except as specifically provided in the statute.
A child-support order is consistent with the new law if the
court making the order has subject-matter jurisdiction over child support under its state
laws, has personal jurisdiction over the parties, and has given them reasonable notice and
an opportunity to be heard. A state court that has issued a child-support order consistent
with the statute has exclusive continuing jurisdiction over the issue of child support for
as long as the child or a party continues to live in that state, unless another state's
court has modified the order pursuant to the section.
Now that you know you can get child support enforced in
another state, heres what to do:
If you want to enforce your child support order in another
state, you simply contact that Child Support Services Department in the County in which
your former spouse resides, and register your child support order with them. They will, in
turn, enforce the child support order at no cost to you. Enforcement may include wage
assignments, wage garnishments, tax levies, bank account levies, drivers and
professional license suspensions, and criminal prosecution.
Regardless of whether you have a child support order in
place or are seeking an initial child support order, it is in your childs best
interests for you to do a little research: Speak with a family law attorney both in your
state and in your former spouses state to see which states child support laws
provide your child with the best child support orders for you, e.g. amount, duration,
add-ons to the base amount, etc. If the state your former spouse is in has better child
support laws, you may consider having that state take over jurisdiction.
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