N.J.S.A. 30:4C-29

Payments for maintenance.

30:4C-29 Payments for maintenance. 29. Subject to the provisions of section 30 of P.L.1951, c.138 (C.30:4C-30), payments for maintenance shall be made by the Division of Child Protection and Permanency. The Division of Child Protection and Permanency is hereby empowered to receive from the State Treasurer and from the county treasurer of each county such sums as shall be appropriated for the purposes of P.L.1951, c.138 (C.30:4C-1 et seq.), and shall cause such sums to be set up in a special account or accounts subject to disbursement by the Division of Child Protection and Permanency. L.1951, c.138, s.29; amended 1962, c.197, s.30; 2012, c.16, s.92. 30:4C-29a Short title. 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Equitable Outcomes in Child Support Collection Act." L.2025, c.5, s.1. 30:4C-29b Findings, declarations. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that: a. Current law requires the State to hold a person who is legally responsible for a child to be financially liable for the full cost of the maintenance of the child while the child is in the care and custody of the Division of Child Protection and Permanency in the Department of Children and Families. b. Such liabilities, if encumbered, may result in liens against property, the imposition of court-ordered fines, fees, costs, or other monetary penalties. c. As of December 2023, there were a total of 3,176 open Department of Children and Families resource family care child support cases, 2,464 of those were arrears-only cases where the case was closed, but the legally responsible person still owed child support. d. The total amount of arrears owed to the Department of Children and Families has grown by over 50 percent between 2017 and 2022, due in part to the cost incurred by the State in pursuing such collections and the difficulties faced by families in satisfying judgments. e. With approximately 90 percent of parents involved with the Division of Child Protection and Permanency considered indigent, it is well established that this policy of child support collection has negative impacts on families and possibly delays reunification of children in out-of-home placements. f. In 2022, the Children's Bureau, an office of the federal Administration for Children and Families, issued a revised policy allowing and encouraging State Title IV-E agencies, such as the State's Department of Children and Families, to define more narrowly where it is appropriate to seek child support from legally responsible persons given the nationwide impacts to vulnerable families and low yields in collection. g. Current law poses a barrier to the State's efforts to advance the revised policy and reduce the negative impact the collection of child support and subsequent arrears has on legally responsible persons. Ending this policy and waiving arrears will support families under the care and custody of the Division of Child Protection and Permanency and help reduce racial inequity and wealth gaps within the State. h. Data and research show that the resources states expend on efforts to collect child support from legally responsible persons, as reimbursement for their children's maintenance costs, exceeds the amount of child support that states collect. i. If the revised policy is implemented, the State is unlikely to incur negative financial impacts by stopping the collection of unpaid, outstanding child support arrearages because of the expense to the State in pursuing collection activities, the resulting low percentage of collections, and the ability to seek federal reimbursement for the cost of maintenance of children in resource family care. j. By reducing the rates of family separation and increasing the number of kinship placements and family reunifications, the enactment of this legislation will allow the State and DCPP to continue to support parents and remove barriers to reunifying families as quickly and safely as possible. L.2025, c.5, s.2.

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This is the verbatim text of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-29, retrieved from the New Jersey Legislature's public statute corpus. Statutes are amended periodically — for the most current version, check the external source link above. Kyzer is not a law firm and this page is not legal advice.

N.J.S.A. 30:4C-29 — Payments for maintenance. | Kyzer