yes
Welfare
A birth father is a genetic father of a child, as opposed to an adoptive father or stepfather.
No unless he adopted the child no
Never was he on government welfare. He did have to rely on the welfare of his mother's sisters and their husbands after his father and mother both died while he as a child.
As long as you're not on Welfare, contact child support enforcement.
No, as they do it.
Yes, if the father has more time with the child than the mother, she will owe him child support.
No
No, as that is a separate commission from Welfare.
The welfare payment will be affected only if the court awards maintenance.
Only if he's included in the claim.
The name of the actual father of the child should go on the birth certificate. If you are not legally divorced, then your legal husband would be automatically considered to be the child's father by law. If the child has a different father, he can complete a voluntary acknowledgement of the paternity of a child, in which he signs that he is the child's father and is therefore put on the birth certificate and named as the legal father. The hospital will help with this after the baby is born.