What About 'Deadbeat Dads'?
Many justify high child support
awards and punitive child support
enforcement because of the alleged
"epidemic" of so-called "deadbeat
dads." It is true that there are
fathers (and mothers) who do not
live up to their responsibilities to
their children. However, the
"deadbeat dad" problem has been
greatly exaggerated. As the
Houston Chronicle column below
explains, most fathers who become
"deadbeat dads" do so at least as
much due to the problems of the
family law and child support system
as their own personal failings. This
is also true for "deadbeat moms"--in
fact, noncustodial mothers are more
likely to default on their child
support payments than noncustodial
fathers are. Families Against
Confiscatory Child Support believes
that the child support system is
badly in need of reform.
When Beating up on 'Deadbeat
Dads' is Unfair
By Jeffery M. Leving and Glenn Sacks
Houston Chronicle, 1/7/07
The television station shows
three general laborers, three
construction laborers, a landscaper,
a salesman and two tradesmen, most
of them Latino men with dour
expressions on their faces. Are they
the featured men in a report about
hard times for blue-collar workers
in the state of Texas? The hopefuls
for a local job training program?
No—they are Texas Attorney General
Greg Abbott’s “Top 10 Most Wanted
Child Support Evaders.”
The 10 men collectively owe
nearly $700,000 in back child
support. Not one appears to have an
education, and the big wage earner
in the group is a plumber. Abbott
says he “singled out” these men
because they “have the ability” to
pay their child support but “refuse
to do so.” One wonders what the
financial condition of those not
“singled out” is.
For the past month Abbott has
been publicizing lists with the
men’s photos and biographical
information. The lists have been
published or reported on in dozens
of Texas media outlets.
Abbott recently proclaimed the
list a success, after he arrested
the landscaper--who owed
$109,747--the salesman, and one of
the construction laborers. The two
highest-ranked evaders still on the
lam are the welder, who owes
$130,796, and one of the general
laborers, who owes $94,107. Few, if
any, are asking the obvious
question—how did men of such humble
means end up owing so much money?
While none on Abbott’s list would
or should qualify for Father of the
Year, the arrearages are likely
created in large part because the
child support system is mulishly
impervious to the economic realities
working people face, such as
layoffs, wage cuts, unemployment,
and work-related injuries. According
to the Urban Institute, less than
one in 20 non-custodial parents who
suffers a substantial drop in income
is able to get courts to reduce his
or her child support payments.
Abbott’s office backhandedly
acknowledges the difficulties men in
these situations face, advising
obligors “it is best to get a
lawyer, if you can afford one, to
handle your attempt to change the
amount of child support you owe.”
Yet how many unemployed blue-collar
workers can afford to hire an
attorney at $200 an hour or more to
represent them in a child support
case?
By federal law, child support
orders cannot be retroactively
modified, no matter how mistaken,
misguided or ridiculous. Even men
who fell behind on their child
support because they had heart
attacks, broken legs or cancer
cannot have their arrearages
eliminated. And much of the
arrearages owed by Abbott’s “Top 10”
accrued before 2002, when Texas
charged obligors 12% interest, one
of the highest interest rates in the
country.
Also, under Texas law, an obligor
who owes only three months of
past-due child support can have his
driver’s license or other
professional licenses suspended,
interfering with his ability make a
living.
To be fair, Abbott’s “Top 10”
list is not unusual. Federal Office
of Child Support Enforcement data
shows that two-thirds of those
behind on child support nationwide
earned poverty-level wages; less
than four percent of the national
child support debt is owed by those
earning $40,000 or more a year.
In the past 18 months, “deadbeat
parents” have been the targets of
similar, highly-publicized law
enforcement actions in Virginia,
Kentucky, and Arizona. Virginia’s
“Most Wanted” list was topped by a
laborer, a carnival hired hand, and
a construction worker, who
collectively somehow owed over a
quarter million dollars in child
support. Kentucky’s list sported
only one obligor with an education,
and the most common designation for
occupation was "laborer." Near the
top of Arizona’s list was a
maintenance man who owed $90,223, an
unemployed man of no known
occupation who owed $54,298, and,
best of all, a roofer who owed
$240,581.
While Abbott’s list no doubt
contains a few bad actors, the
larger problem lies not with
non-custodial parents, but instead
with the child support system.
Arresting low-income parents is
neither fair nor useful. What’s
needed instead is an overhaul of the
system, so that blue-collar workers
aren't turned into criminals because
they’ve failed to pay obligations
which are beyond their reach.
This column first appeared in
the Houston Chronicle
(1/7/07).