He needs to request a modification hearing to address this. With six men for every job, there's no easy answer here. Perhaps you should consider sharing the home to reduce expenses. As a last resort, you file for Welfare.
Go to court house with a certified copy of the child's birth certificate a few weeks or a month before their 21st birthday and they will get the child support stopped.
The child is in his primary care. Mother should be paying him.
In states like Kansas, in order to have the right to challenge a child being put up for adoption, soon after being born, the potential father must begin paying Child Support 18-Weeks into the Pregnancy. But, if the potential father begins paying, and later learns he's not the father of the child, he must continue paying in 20 states, and with limitations in those states that do allow men paying support to later challenge paternity.see links
no, she is no longer a minor shes considered an independent adult ..unless he still owes for pass support...arreage
You should direct this question to your state unemployment office. In some states it matters what the company calls it and how it's paid... if they're literally paying you weekly (as opposed to paying you a lump sum equal to so many weeks pay all at once) then it might affect your unemployment benefits.
The fact that he has a GED and he's about to become a father are irrelevant, because neither of those qualifies a child for emancipation. But, turning 18 does. Why are you still paying child support if he's 18? Does the order state child support continues during college (you didn't say he's in college, but maybe he plans to start this fall)? If not, petition the court to have it terminated.
yes
Looks like right now you can get 26 weeks of unemployment assuming you have enough benefits to collect the full 26 weeks. And if you are eligible you can qualify for an additional 33 weeks of emergency unemployment benefits.
Honestly, I think the dad SHOULD pay child support even though I don't!!!
You can go to the bank and ask for help and maybe they will refer you. The county Welfare Department and they can offer you food stamps and pay your housing or rent.
The maximum percentage allowable is 65 percent. This can only be taken out if the garnishee does not support a second family and owes more than 12 weeks of back child support. If the garnishee does support a second family, the maximum is 55 percent if he owes more than 12 weeks of back child support, and 50 percent if he does not.
That's not something specifically addressed in the laws. It would require a Motion to Modify Child Support, which can be done Pro Se. see links