No, but some states are considering including 20% of the income of a new spouse or S/O in calculations to offset the number of motions to modify child support by fathers being laid off their jobs.
see related question
No. You are under no legal obligation to pay his child support.
In the state of Florida, your driver's license can be __________ for failure to pay child support.
No. Just because you no longer want to see your child or have rights to him does not mean the taxpayers should have to pay for him. You made him so you pay for him. Child support is a separate issue.
No, child support is his responsibility only.
No, but through the use of rebuttable presumption, a percentage of your income can be used in the calculations. see link
yes
You might have to pay child support if you were married to the mother when the child was conceived/born, or if you signed an acknowledgment of paternity.
Yes. There is no federal law regarding child support so states honor each other's orders regarding child support. If you fail to make payments, Florida will show you as deliquent on child support. The state where you have moved will honor a request for a judgment against you or garnish your wages to pay the support obligations. You must continue to pay your obligations to the Florida court.
YES, BUT YOU CAN FILE A PETITION FOR MODIFICATION OF YOUR CHILD SUPPORT
the only way you get credit for daycare if you pay support is if the child or children reside with you or you can get your ex wife/husband to agree to it.
No, a person will not be ordered to pay child support on any children that are not his. The only way a person would be ordered to pay child support a child who is not theirs is if they had legally adopted that child.
You don't. Once the child is an adult, child support is moot and the ex is home free.