“Clinton also recognizes that many states’ child support guidelines are excessive, noting:
“‘Child support payments can represent half of [low-income] men’s income, and can provide a strong incentive to work in the underground economy.’
“Clinton’s proposals are a good start, but much more needs to be done to address the problems low-income fathers face.”
My new co-authored column, Hillary Clinton’s Youth Opportunity Agenda Will Help Low-Income Fathers (Black Press USA Network, 1/25/08), discusses some small but significant proposals from Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to resolve the child support problems faced by many low-income African-American fathers. The proposals are based on the Urban League’s 2006 report on the state of black America, which concluded that the child support system and its abuses are a major problem for African-American men.
The column, co-authored with Mike McCormick, Executive Director of the American Coalition for Fathers and Children, is below. Clinton’s child support reform proposals are discussed here and here, along with her misguided position in favor of restoring federal child support enforcement budget cuts.
Hillary Clinton’s Youth Opportunity Agenda Will Help Low-Income Fathers
By Mike McCormick and Glenn Sacks
It is rare for a major politician to propose well-informed measures about fathers and fatherhood during an election campaign. While Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is not normally a beloved figure in the fatherhood movement, her new Youth Opportunity Agenda reflects a commendable understanding of the problems faced by African-American fathers.
The Urban League’s 2006 report on the state of black America concluded that the child support system and its abuses are a major problem for African-American men. The report found that the system represents a large, hidden “tax” on the already meager earnings of many black men. This tax drives some out of their children’s lives, and either underground or into crime.
Half of uneducated African American men ages 25-34 are non-custodial fathers. The child support they struggle to pay usually does not go to their children, but instead goes to the state to reimburse the cost of public assistance, including welfare, for the mother and children. This is demoralizing for low-income men struggling to make a difference in their kids’ lives. Some of these fathers even live with their children and their children’s mothers, yet their wages are still garnisheed to pay child support to the state.
Research shows that allowing the child support to go directly to the custodial parent promotes fathers’ bonds with their kids. Federal incentive funds mold the states’ child support policies. Clinton pledges to “work with states and counties to ensure that they have support and incentives to pass on every dollar of child support” directly to the men’s children.
Many minority noncustodial fathers have spent time in prison, often for nonviolent drug offenses. Under the current system, these men rack up thousands of dollars in child support arrearages while they are incarcerated. Interest accrues rapidly, and upon release many ex-offenders struggle under a staggering debt they could never hope to pay off. Some even return to jail for nonpayment.
To address this problem, Clinton says she will “encourage states to take more realistic, cooperative approaches to managing arrears, so that fathers leaving prison are not immediately saddled with unrealistic payment obligations.”
Clinton also recognizes that many states’ child support guidelines are excessive, noting:
“Child support payments can represent half of [low-income] men’s income, and can provide a strong incentive to work in the underground economy.”
According to the Urban League, low-income men in arrears on child support sometimes keep as little as a third of their paychecks.
Clinton’s proposals are a good start, but much more needs to be done to address the problems low-income fathers face. Economist Harry Holzer, a co-author of the Urban League report, recommends forgiving the arrearages that low-income fathers owe to the government. While this proposal may not be politically popular, it makes very good policy.
Low-income fathers’ arrearages mount in large part because the child support system is impervious to the economic realities low-income fathers face, such as layoffs, wage cuts, chronic unemployment, and work-related injuries. Low-income fathers have very little access to affordable legal help, and an unemployed construction worker usually doesn’t have the money to get professional legal assistance to help him get a child support modification. According to an Urban Institute study, less than one in 20 non-custodial parents who suffer substantial income drops are able to get courts to reduce their child support payments.
California’s Compromise of Arrears Program provides an example of the type of pragmatic approach these men need. According to a California Judicial Council report, 80% of California child support debtors earn poverty level wages, and over a quarter of the arrears total is interest. Under COAP, these obligors can settle their paper debts to the state for realistic amounts.
Sacramento legislative advocate Michael Robinson of the California Alliance for Families and Children, which worked on the legislation, explains:
“Rather than engaging in the ‘we’ll crack down on deadbeats’ chest-thumping so often employed by politicians, COAP is a common sense, everybody wins solution. Instead of hounding and jailing low income dads, the COAP program allows these dads to provide their children real support, both emotional and financial.”
The federal government should use its incentive funds to influence states to institute similar and more extensive programs. The costs of current policies far outweigh the value of the child support collected. Allowing more low-income men to be functional fathers benefits them, their children, and their children’s mothers.
Elections usually are a bad time for family policy, as applause lines about punishing “deadbeat dads” are often substituted for rational, informed thinking about fathers and fatherhood. Several candidates have been bashing so-called “deadbeat dads,” including Barack Obama, John Edwards, and Bill Richardson. Clinton’s proposals are a modest but tangible step forward in addressing the weighty issues low-income dads face.
Glenn Sacks, www.GlennSacks.com
















4 users commented in " New Column: Hillary Clinton Proposes Reforming Child Support System to Help Dads "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a Trackbackgood to see somebody speeking of this issue. not all men on child support are deadbeat. and its not fair to punish ones that do pay their child support.
Any Help can not come soon enough. My Son has been paying child support faithfully, doesn’t
have custody at this time. He is going to court to try and get shared legal & physical
custody. He has to live at home & doesn’t even have enough money left from his paycheck to pay his bills. In the meantime his ex lives
basically rent free, shops frequently for herself and gets things for their daughter at a 2nd hand store. She also calls off work frequently.
Since the child support law has been modified sorry to say their is no difference. It,s just a bunch of bull. They tell you that it’s determind on both incomes but so not true. 50% of my pay is 50% no matter if the mother is a millionair. Who can really afford to live giving 50% of their take home pay. What wealthy white guy out their is determining what it takes to provide for kids. No woman want a guy that has to give 50% of his pay in todays world, and how can a guy ever have a family other than with his kids mother(he cant take care of them). I’ve always believed that the system, as for as child support recovery and the law that supports it is holding african american men down and making african american women lazy and against one another. My mother never recieved any support from my father or my sister’s father. Not that its to praise her for raising her kids,even financially on her own but she just bought her second house and that say’s a lot. The money she made she worked for it so she respect it more. Woman today; a lot of them. recieve child support and will never accomplish what real african american women have before them. I never seen my mother in a nail shop when I was younger. Never the club, no drinks, cigs, or expensive clothes or a fancey car. But know she get what ever she want. I ask her a long time ago why I didnt get any support and she told me she could do it herself.
Men take care of your kids and women stop being lazy. your kids are not a check, they need a father as well.
my son is 34yrs old and well able to support himself they are still making me pay over $153.000 in arrears which is more than 90% interest i am remarried an i divorced my ex 15 yrs ago with nothing asked for in that divorce i have been paying spousal support for more than 20 yrs they say i owe her $97,000 & my wages are garnished for that plus my income tax returns have been taken for the past 20 yrs. i don’t think this is fair to my current wife we struggle all the time to survive i’m 54 yrs old my current wife is now 67 yrs. old & just retired this has caused her not to be able to save for her retirement /also i am not allowed to have a bank account,cedit cards,or drivers license,or passport. when does it end or does it ever. someone please help.
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