Ministerial Responsibility
The current Minister in charge of the Child Maintenance Service is Baroness Stedman-ScottBasis for Calculation
Child maintenance is assessed on a number of factors. A non resident parents annual gross income. The Number of children that live with the non resident parent. The Number of children in a family based arrangement. The Number of Qualifying children on the child maintenance case. Shared Care; the existing number of overnight stays are banded for example between 52 and 103 overnight stays a year will entitle the resident parents to a 1/7 reduction. Special Expenses; for example contact costs. Once this is factored in, payments are calculated based upon a percentage of the non resident parents income.Methods of Payment
"The CMS includes two service types; ‘Direct Pay’ where payments are arranged and agreed between parents, and ‘Collect & Pay’ where payments are collected and paid to the receiving parent. Collect & Pay can be requested by either parent but can only be applied with the agreement of both parents, or if the Secretary of State has deemed the paying parent unlikely to pay. The unlikely to pay check is a decision made by a Caseworker for each individual case using their judgement based on their merits."Collection Fees
You have to pay a fee each time you make or receive a regular child maintenance payment under the "Collect & Pay" Service. The fee is: 20% (which is added to the payment) for paying parents 4% (which is taken off the payment) for receiving parents The compound revenue the CMS generates is therefore 24.8% of the original maintenance amount. In 2019/20, the CMS generated £41.54 million in revenue from fees from Paying Parents and Receiving Parents on the Collect and Pay Scheme.Statistics
Experimental statistics exist in the public domain on the child maintenance arrangements administered by the Child Maintenance Service.Criticism
In November 2020 information came to light from Freedom of Information Act requests, which led to allegations that as many as 1,000 statistically excess deaths, believed to be suicide, are linked to the actions of the Child Maintenance Service each year. The excess deaths are almost exclusively limited to paying parents in arrears to the CMS at the time of death. In June 2020 a group of 4 receiving parents (4 single mothers), initiated a legal action against the CMS to ""challenge the persistent failure" of the Child Maintenance Service." to collect money from receiving parents on their behalf.Press Releases and News
See also
* Child Support Agency *References
External links