Money Matters
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Hello Everyone! I have 2 friends that get child support and last night we had a girls night and this some how became the topic of the night! Both are single parents, one of them uses the money for whatever she needs it for such as a bill, gas, food , clothes, etc.. the other one says that she only uses it for the childs sports or clothing or whatever the child needs, and its not for a bill or gas or groceries. I was silent the entire time because I didn't know what to say! So, do any of you get child support and if so, do you count it as apart of your monthly income? What do you use it for? One kid is 14 and the other is 10
Re: Child Support
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Not an issue here, but I agree with this. I think it's fine to spend it on anything that directly and indirectly benefits the child. The child benefits from food, electricity, water, transportation, and even cable tv. I could maybe even make an argument for at least basic phone service.
However, I don't think it should be used for things that just benefit the parent....a new purse, nail appointments, parent's clothes, etc.
I think this really depends on the individual parent's financials though. I have a friend who didn't work for a long time because 2 of her 3 kids have a lot of health issues and were in the hospital a lot etc. She ended up getting divorced (he had a girlfriend on the side driving a Range Rover that he was paying for while she was hauling their kids around in a 15 year old minivan that they bought used, but I digress) and she used the child support she got from him, and the SSI money she receives for one of the kids, and lived off of that until she ended up remarrying. It wasn't like they were living a glamorous lifestyle off of that child support, she still drove the same minivan, they rented a modest house, and she didn't buy or do anything for herself, pretty much ever.
Now, I also have single mom friends who make a decent income... ie enough to pay rent/mortgage, buy food, etc. They tend to use their child support for just the kids' stuff, like you mention.... sports fees, clothes, etc.
I honestly don't know how she did it on her own without having a total mental breakdown.
Even though money is fungible, I personally think child support should be treated as though it's held in trust. A trust would have some language limiting the use of funds for the "health, maintenance, and support of the child." Practically, that would include basic living necessities like food, shelter, etc. It would also include education expenses and reasonable extracurricular expenses. It would not remodeling the house or taking junior on an around-the-world trip at age 3 before s/he can remember anything.
Mom's purse obsession and home decor changes should be supported by alimony, which is taxable income to her.
The fact that most states do not require child support to be held in trust is outrageous IMO.
I was actually just getting ready to ask why this wasn't required.
I still wish most states required it though. Practically, states figure that courts do their job in determining what child support is going to be, so as long as the noncustodial parent provides that amount the kid will be fine. Then the state doesn't have to constantly be reviewing it on a monthly or expense-by-expense basis. Unfortunately, courts can rarely keep up with the realities of what individual families need.
All of the money that comes into our house (granted we are married with joint finances) goes into one place and goes out of one place. I don't know if the mortgage was paid with "my" paycheck or "his" paycheck.
Even a single parent would have trouble proving that the child support went only to support the child(ren). As long as the kids are fed, dressed, and have a warm/cool safe home that is all that matters. If the child support stretches to pay for dance class or basketball fees, great!
Plus, if child support goes to help pay rent or utilities that does benefit the child along with anyone else living in the house. There are just a lot of blurred lines.
Unfortunately there is chronic misbehavior going both directions, and ultimately the people who get screwed are the kids. It would be great to have some objective oversight.
The thing that makes me ragey about this is people always excuse the courts as being too busy to perform. Yes, they are extremely busy and generally underfunded across the board. But our probate courts manage to review an accounting for every estate for every person who dies. Our bankruptcy courts review an accounting of every person who files for bankruptcy. Why? Because when people die we all know that the assets have to be collected, reviewed, and then some institution needs to provide oversight when the heirs begin lining up. And with bankruptcy, we figure that if somebody is filing then they are in a financial crisis and there needs to be objective oversight of both the assets and the creditors.
Why do we assume that child support should be any different? There needs to be both enforcement of the payment and a periodic accounting for how the money is spent to make sure the kids are protected - yes, even if it's $75/week. Just my opinion though.
**Stepping off my soapbox now**
EDIT: To clarify, I know there is not a perfect answer. It's a bit of a soap box issue for me. I just think there needs to be more oversight and more resources devoted to it.
They are actually married now but the scars and the emptiness will always be there. No matter what my mother spent the $75/week on, she could never fill that void. She did her best to make sure we would survive and I learned that I never would want to be in the situation she was in and I would never want my children to be in the situation I was in.
MM wise- She did put herself through pharmacy school and has been a pharmacist for 23 years now. She bought our first home for the 2 of us when I was 12. We never used food stamps, medicaid, or any other assistance. She always worked and went to school at night. We did live with my grandparents until I was 6, but they did not watch me during the day.. I went to a babysitter down the road.
Also, she did pay for 50% of my undergrad for me. I had a scholarship for the other 50%. So she did her best- even if that $75/week was used to help pay bills like electricity/heat/groceries/rent/etc when I was young.
About a year before the child support payments would have ended, she took him to court to have the child support raised because he had another woman in "their" house. He didn't fight it only because there were literally 12 payments left and the lawyer would have cost more than the payments. She would drop the kid off at the bottom of the driveway and have her pick up the check.
SHe's then go out and spend it on herself according to the daughter.