HOUSE BILL REPORT
HB 2462



As Passed House:
March 7, 2006

Title: An act relating to establishing work groups to periodically review and update the child support schedule.

Brief Description: Establishing work groups to periodically review and update the child support schedule.

Sponsors: By Representatives Moeller, Wallace and Roberts.

Brief History:

Juvenile Justice & Family Law: 1/18/06, 1/24/06 [DPS];

Appropriations: 1/31/06, 2/3/06 [DP2S(w/o sub CFS)].

Floor Activity:

Passed House: 3/7/06, 98-0.

Brief Summary of Bill
  • Changes the repository of the order summary report from the Administrative Office of the Courts to the Division of Child Support (DCS).
  • Requires the DCS to convene a work group no later than April 1, 2006, to continue the work of the 2005 Child Support Guidelines Work Group.
  • Requires the DCS, beginning in 2010 and every four years thereafter, to convene a work group to conduct a review of the existing child support schedule and guidelines.


HOUSE COMMITTEE ON JUVENILE JUSTICE & FAMILY LAW

Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 7 members: Representatives Dickerson, Chair; Moeller, Vice Chair; McDonald, Ranking Minority Member; McCune, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Crouse, Lovick and Roberts.

Staff: Kara Durbin (786-7133).


HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS

Majority Report: The second substitute bill be substituted therefor and the second substitute bill do pass and do not pass the substitute bill by Committee on Children & Family Services. Signed by 30 members: Representatives Sommers, Chair; Fromhold, Vice Chair; Alexander, Ranking Minority Member; Anderson, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; McDonald, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Armstrong, Bailey, Buri, Chandler, Clements, Cody, Conway, Darneille, Dunshee, Grant, Haigh, Hinkle, Hunter, Kagi, Kenney, Kessler, Linville, McDermott, Miloscia, Pearson, Priest, Schual-Berke, P. Sullivan, Talcott and Walsh.

Staff: Amy Skei (786-7140).

Background:

The Division of Child Support (DCS), which is within the Department of Social and Health Services, is responsible for administering Washington's child support enforcement program. The DCS provides support enforcement services to parents receiving public assistance and to those non-assistance parents who request support enforcement services.

Federal law requires child support obligations to be calculated pursuant to a set of child support guidelines established by the state. The guidelines must result in the calculation of an appropriate amount of support in the majority of cases and must be reviewed at least once every four years to ensure that their application results in appropriate support orders.

Current state law requires that the Legislature review the child support schedule every four years. While the Legislature has considered modifications to the child support guidelines over the years, the last major, substantive change made to the existing child support schedule and related guidelines occurred in 1991.

In 2005, Washington received a letter from the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE) expressing concern that the state's child support guidelines had not been adequately reviewed as required by federal law. Failure to adequately review the child support guidelines could result in disapproval of Washington's child support state plan. Disapproval of the state plan would result in immediate suspension of all federal matching funds paid for DCS's program, as well as jeopardize a portion of the federal block grant for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.

In response to the OCSE letter, in March of 2005 the Governor charged the DCS with putting together a Child Support Guidelines Work Group (CSGWG) to examine a number of issues related to child support, including the adequacy of Washington's child support guidelines. The CSGWG met monthly from April 2005 until December of 2005 and submitted a report to the Legislature in January of 2006. In its report, the CSGWG made the following recommendations to the Legislature:

revise the Order Summary Report to include the necessary data elements for future review of the support schedule;revise the mechanism for reviewing the support schedule under current law by requiring the DCS to convene a work group every four years with a prescribed list of member representation;treat child not before the court using the Whole Family Formula;update the Economic Table using the mid-point between the Rothbarth-Betson and the Engle estimator; andraise the presumptive level for combined net income to be used when calculating the child support obligation.
The Order Summary Report is a form that was created in 1990 by the Administrative Office of the Courts to collect data necessary for reviews of the child support schedule. Any party that seeks to establish or modify a child support order is required by law to file the Order Summary Report with the court clerk.

Summary of Bill:

Order Summary Report:
The format of the Order Summary Report is revised. The report must be included at the top of the first page of the child support worksheets, but it is not to be considered part of the
worksheet. The Order Summary Report must contain all necessary data in order for the
Division of Child Support (DCS) to perform a quadrennial review of the Washington State
Child Support Schedule. On at least a monthly basis, the clerk of the superior court must
transmit all child support worksheets that have been filed with the court to the DCS. The DCS must store and maintain all of the order summary report data and prepare a report at least every four years.

Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee Review (JLARC):
Beginning in 2010, and every four years thereafter, JLARC, or any other entity designated by
the Legislature, must review the following: the data collected in the order summary report;
the recommendations of the prior work group; data related to the cost of child rearing; and
research and data regarding the application of, and deviation from, the child support
guidelines. After conducting a review, JLARC must submit a report to the Legislature no later than July 1, 2010, and every four years thereafter.

Review of Current Child Support Guidelines
By April 1, 2006, the DCS shall convene a work group to review the current laws, administrative rules and practices surrounding child support. The objective of the work group shall be to continue the work of the 2005 CSGWG, and produce findings and recommendations to the Legislature, including recommendations for legislative action, by December 1, 2006.

The CSGWG shall include the following members:

At a minimum, the 2006 work group shall review and make recommendations to the
Legislature on the following issues:

(1)   how the support schedule and guidelines treat children from other relationships, including whether the whole family formula should be applied presumptively;
(2)   whether the economic table for calculating child support should include combined income greater than $5,000;
(3)   whether the economic table should start at 125 percent of the federal poverty guidelines, and move upward in $100 increments;
(4)   whether the economic table should distinguish between children under 12 years of age and over 12 years of age;
(5)   whether child care costs and ordinary medical costs should be included in the economic table, or treated separately;
(6)   whether the estimated cost of child rearing, as reflected in the economic table, should be based on the Rothbarth estimate, the Engle estimator, or some other basis for calculating the cost of child rearing;
(7)   whether the self-support reserve should be tied to the federal poverty level;
(8)   how to treat imputation of income for purposes of calculating the child support obligation, including whether minimum wage should be imputed in the absence of adequate information regarding income;
(9)   how extraordinary medical expenses should be addressed, either through basic child support obligation or independently;
(10)   whether the amount of the presumptive minimum order should be adjusted;
(11)   whether gross or net income should be used for purposes of calculating the child support obligation;
(12)   how to treat overtime income or income from a second job for purposes of calculating the child support obligation;
(13)   whether the non-custodial parent's current child support obligation should be limited to 45 percent of net income; and
(14)   whether the residential schedule should affect the amount of the child support obligation.

Review of Future Child Support Guidelines
Beginning in 2010, and every four years thereafter, the DCS must convene a work group with
similar membership to review the current laws, administrative rules and practices surrounding child support. The work group must report its findings and recommendations to the Legislature by October 1, 2010, and every four years thereafter.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Not requested.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.

Testimony For: (Juvenile Justice & Family Law) : Many of these issues are interrelated and need to be addressed together. Selecting individual issues and making changes would do a disservice to the current system. Having an ongoing mechanism for review is important. The prior work group got close to resolving some of these issues; that effort should continue and result in an omnibus bill for next session. The Order Summary Report, right now, is often not filled out. The substitute bill makes it the top half of the work sheet, which will make it easier to collect the data. We support continuance of the work group, and we like the representation on the work group. We support this bill, but want it to go a step further. We would like more representation from parents on the work group. We would like to see one-quarter of the work group be custodial parents and one-quarter be non-custodial parents. There should be more balance. We would like to see more focus on meeting the needs of the children and examining how the money is being spent. The current guidelines should reflect the cost of maintaining two households, not just the cost of maintaining one household. There are two parents that incur expenses in raising children, not just one parent. There should be more parents on the work group.

Testimony For: (Appropriations) None.

Testimony Against: (Juvenile Justice & Family Law) Federal law does require the state to review the state child support schedule every four years and make adjustments if orders no longer result in adequate awards. A large amount of federal money could be at stake, and amounts to approximately $85 million. A fiscal note is on its way. Because the bill does create a fiscal cost and it is not in the Governor's budget, the Department cannot support this bill. Many sections of the bill are consistent with the work group's recommendations; other sections are not. In particular, the responsibility for the DCS to convene the work group is not consistent with what the work group recommended.

Testimony Against: (Appropriations) None.

Persons Testifying: (Juvenile Justice & Family Law) (In support of substitute bill) Representative Moeller, prime sponsor; Rick Bartholomew, Washington State Bar Association, Family Law Services; Kevin Turner, Washington Civil Rights Council; and Lisa Scott, Taking Action Against Bias in the System.

(Opposed to substitute bill) David Stillman, Director of the Department of Child Services, Department of Social and Health Services.

Persons Testifying: (Appropriations) None.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying: (Juvenile Justice & Family Law) None.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying: (Appropriations) None.