Worth a read
Worth a read in light of what C-MESS is proposing, illustrates how C-MUCK
takes absolutely no notice of anybody or any organisations inputs and still
driven by feeding the treasuries coffers, if proof is required please see
the story referred to by the link
http://www.harboroughmail.co.uk/ViewArticle.aspx?SectionID=760&ArticleID=2013529
Where the CSA were demanding almost a mans entire income (he had two kids
and another on the way) and when he didn't pay they JAILED him for 42 days
(which costs the tax payer around a grand a week)
If this is how things are going to go we best prepare for life in a police
state or immigrate, or as sure as hell the New Gestapo will see you and your
children starve in their quest for treasury cash.
Published 28 February 2007
FAMILIES NEED FATHERS RESPONSE TO
'A NEW SYSTEM OF CHILD MAINTENANCE'
White paper
http://www.fnf.org.uk/files/CSAresponse.pdf
1. This is the response by Families Need Fathers to the White Paper 'A
new system of child maintenance', published in December 2006.
2. Families Need Fathers (FNF) exists to promote an aspect of child
welfare: the need of children whose parents live apart to have the full
involvement of both their parents unless, in exceptional cases, this
would be against the child's interest. As is proper for a charity our first
task is social care work. We support parents to get, and to use for the
best, adequate parenting time with their children. We have a raft of
services to help and advise such parents. We are the most important
single source of help for them. The total number of 'contacts' with them
is now some 400,000 pa. We get core funding for this work from the
DFES. They and other funders support particular projects. There
remains a lot of unmet need. Some 2.5 million parents live apart from
some 4 million children.
KEY POINTS
3. We reply to the specific questions posed in the White Paper. But some
much more fundamental questions need to be raised and answered
first, if a satisfactory reform is to occur. We strongly support children
getting financial support from both parents, in proportion to their
income and wealth, but this has to be rooted in encouraging shared
parenting, for the good of the child.
?? Q: Is the White Paper going to encourage a shared parenting
culture, where both parents customarily, except in exceptional
circumstances, have a responsibility and right to share in the
upbringing of their children?
?? A: No. The White Paper is
?? based on a crude division between the 'parent with care', who has
the responsibilities, cares and joys of parenting, and the 'nonresident
parent', who simply helps pay for the child's upbringing.
This does not come close to capturing the real world. It also
conflicts with the philosophy of the Children Act 1989, which
pioneered the concept of parental responsibility and emphasised
that policy should always make the children's interests paramount.
?? Q: Does the White Paper fairly reflect the financial responsibilities of
both parents in the real world?
?? A: No. There are extreme cases where one parent 'cares' and the
other parent pays or does not pay. But in most cases both parents
look after their children for part of the time, and both incur costs,
either 'current' e.g. entertainment or 'capital'; e.g. the need to have
2
accommodation for the children, to buy clothes, pay for
entertainment etc. The White Paper does not even consider this
issue. It does not seem to understand the social realities C-MEC
will have to deal with.
?? Q: Will increased sanctions improve the payment of child
maintenance?
?? A: Usually no. The roots of non-payment are often in the resident
parent's reluctance to allow a fair share in shared parenting,
including involvement in key decisions on the child's welfare,
contact etc. The other parent protests by non-payment of
maintenance. The White Paper fails even to recognise that this
happens, much less proposes a conclusion.
?? Q: Will C-MEC perform better than the CSA?
?? A: Almost certainly no: as indicated above, the C-MEC's
underpinning is as shaky as the CSA in its various forms, and is
likely therefore to fail. This isn't helped by the hint in the White
Paper that most of the staff will be re-employed in C-MEC.
4. We discuss these issues in more detail below, as well as answering the
White Paper's detailed questions.
Main discussion
(i) Positive points
5. Since much of our comments are critical, we should perhaps begin by
listing those aspects of the White Paper which we support:
?? We support the move to ensure that more of the maintenance
paid goes to the children, rather than resulting in a reduction in
benefits that simply helps the Exchequer. This is a major source
of complaint for many of our members. We welcome the
extension of £10 disregard to cases on the original child
maintenance scheme. The White Paper does not mention the
rules which currently mean the 'resident parent' sees their
benefits reduced if the other parent has the child for, say, two
nights a week on a regular basis. These rules need to be
abolished. They are a barrier to shared parenting. They provide
a disincentive to the 'resident parent' to agree shared parenting
and do not account realistically for the costs of either parent
when shared parenting is agreed. We would prefer to see the
liability to pay support reduced by 2/14 for every 1 night in 14
that a child spends with the 'non-resident' parent - this results in
no payment if the child spends equal time with each parent. The
proposal to raise the minimum payment by non-resident parents
on benefit from £5 to £7 is entirely wrong in principle. It sends
3
the signal that money matters more than keeping both parents in
the child's life. The 'non-resident parent' on benefit has
expenses connected with looking after the child too.
?? We strongly support the emphasis on encouraging parents to
make their own arrangements, without involving CSA/C-MEC. It
is excellent to abolish the rule that 'parents with care' on benefit
are automatically treated as claiming from the CSA. We hope
the abolition will apply to all cases, including past ones where
the 'resident' parent has no wish to involve the CSA. Support
services will, as the White Paper mentions, play an important
role. We are concerned by reports that no additional funding is
planned for these. They should be a priority for the coming
Comprehensive Spending Review (financed, perhaps, by
removing access to legal aid in family law cases). The funding
should be distributed in a decentralised way to organisations
that are already active in the areas and doing good work. We do
not support any new national organisation.
?? We support sensible simplification, such as using latest tax year
information (though see below our comments on using gross
income and compromising tax-payer confidentiality); and having
fixed one year awards except in exceptional circumstances.
?? It seems sensible to use wider sources of information to track
down that minority of parents who are seeking to evade their
responsibilities, though it needs to be within a system that does
not penalise those who are doing all they realistically can to help
finance their children's upbringing.
?? We support a requirement to have both parents registered at the
child's birth. It is unfortunate that the Government has brought
this proposal forward in the context of the CSA, but nevertheless
we strongly agree that a child has a right to know their parents.
We are glad to hear that there will be separate consultations on
the detail, but we hope legislation will follow swiftly. In a minority
of cases the mother will, for good reason, not wish to let the
father know her address. Arrangements should be made in such
cases to keep the mother's address private. But this minority of
cases should not be used as an excuse for depriving the child of
knowledge of the father in many other cases where domestic
violence is not an issue but the mother, for her own reasons,
does not wish to disclose the father's name. In any event, both
parents should always be on the birth certificate, for the child's
sake. There must be a mechanism to review and amend the
registration, if a subsequent DNA test shows a different father.
(Arrangements should be ideally made to do such tests before
the baby leaves hospital, on the request of a person claiming to
be the father.) Donor insemination cases need to be handled
separately. We suggest a provision that, if agreed pre-donation,
4
anonymity applies to everyone except the child. If so, we
suggest that a second person, male of female, could be
stipulated as the father in law. We would like similar
arrangements in the last two cases to apply on parental
responsibility.
(ii) The Broad Approach of the White Paper and the need to promote
shared parenting
6. We now turn to the White Paper more generally.
7. The proposed re-jig of Government policy on child maintenance will fail
again. It is based on the same assumptions as before, namely that
when parents separate all (or virtually all) the responsibility for the care
of the children falls to one of their parents. The role of the other is to
finance the care in a 'family life' from which they are largely excluded.
These assumptions are unacceptable to non-resident parents. They
will continue to be so. Such parents will again refuse to comply with its
requirements. The visibility of the failure of C-MEC may be less,
because of the proposed scaling down of its scale of operations. But
the lack of a child support policy rooted in a policy on shared parenting
will continue to cause trouble.
8. There is a positive way forward, based on modern, egalitarian and child
welfare considerations. This is to promote the sharing, between their
parents, of the care of children in divided families. With this would
come a sharing of responsibilities and costs between parents. Both the
sacrifices and the delights of child rearing will be more fairly shared.
The effects of this policy will be felt across the whole of society in the
gradual diminution of the raft of social problems - child poverty, crime,
gender inequality - among children, young people and even adults that
are created or aggravated by insufficient or unbalanced parental
attention during their formative years. C-MEC's role would naturally
reduce as shared parenting culture assumed a greater role.
9. This is a policy for the short and medium term. The policies needed to
achieve it are many. They require 'joined up thinking' across many
social arrangements. They go wider and deeper than the CSA/C-MEC
itself. One of the fundamental requirements of a strategic rethink is to
see child support arrangements as the handmaiden of policy to
promote the best parenting of the children of divided families. Currently
child financial support is seen as something that has to be railroaded
through irrespective of the damage the institutional arrangements do
to the parenting of the children.
10. Such a policy would be effective for child support, as well as for wider
and more important policy aims, and it will win the consent of all but a
small minority of 'non-residential' parents who do not care for their
children at all, a group FNF holds no brief for.
5
(iii) The broad stance of FNF
11. FNF has been a critic of the state's child support policies. We strongly
support the fundamental duty of parents to provide appropriately for the
costs of their children's upbringing. While we understand the objections
of some compelled to pay child support in the absence of appropriate
parenting and contact arrangements, our advice to them is to respect
the law and to use constitutional means to change it. Paying child
support is often to their personal advantage. While 'contact'
arrangements and financial issues are formally separated in law, a
parent who does not pay child support will almost invariably find this
cited in any legal or other discussion over his (or her, if the 'Non
Resident Parent' is female) parenting time. Many 'resident parents'
also harass or deny contact if maintenance is not properly paid. In
cases of obdurate and long term obstruction of contact, the children
nearly always seek out the father eventually (it is most commonly the
father, but it does happen the other way around) Then it is important for
him to be able to tell them that not only did he explore every avenue to
see them, but that he supported them financially.
12. Having said that, it is impossible to persuade a parent who has a court
order that his children should be allowed to spend time with him, which
the courts refuse to see enforced, that he is not a victim of injustice
when he is faced with enforcement proceedings by the CSA. The
majority of parents who come to us with complaints about the CSA fall
into one of two groups. The first are victims of maladministration. This
group has fallen in size but it is still far too big. A dramatic case was
recently reported, for example, where a father was put in a top security
prison, though he claimed he was not in arrears. 1 The second are
making protests, in the only way they feel they can, at the unfairness
and lack of child-centredness of the parenting arrangements imposed
on their children and themselves. It would be much better to have a
child maintenance system linked to a broader shared parenting
framework, in which 'non-resident' parents who want a greater role in
their child's life are not penalised financially.
13. It may be helpful to flesh out these thoughts by some real examples
from FNF files:
?? A father who is still paying child support many years after
divorce, though the youngest child is now 16. She remains on
benefit and enjoys foreign holidays. He looked after two of their
four children for most of their childhood, with the help of his new
partner.
?? A father earning his living as a driver had his license suspended
by the CSA. His son is disabled and he looks after him for about
1 See
http://www.harboroughtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=760&ArticleID=2013529
available on 9 February 2007
6
30% of the time, but the assessment takes no account of this.
The father was rendered homeless for a long period.
?? Another father was told he could not be considered for a driving
job for which he had applied, because in the past his license had
been suspended thanks to CSA action.
?? An ex-wife took a Member's daughter a long way. Seeing his
daughter involved a 600 mile round trip. He applied to the CSA
for a variation to assist with the costs of the travelling. The net
result, based on travel every 2 weeks, was a reduction in the
weekly amount he paid in child support of around one pound
and 70 pence.
?? "The tax benefits and child benefit all go to my son's mother, and
I pay maintenance on top. Yet he lives with me a third of the
time."
?? A couple moved 90 miles to be where the man's children were
so that the one child who was running from home could move in
with them. This meant his other three children wanted to stay
with the couple two to three nights a week as well and one of the
11 year old twins stated they must love their elder brother more
because we had him living with them. They learned of
proceedings in the Family Court for sole residence of the
remaining three children from the CSA. The CSA reviewed the
case and found the man was owed £5.5k by the ex wife in
overpaid maintenance and yet they still put a DEO in place
increasing the amount owed to the man until NACSA got
involved and got it removed swiftly.
?? "My son lives with me 7 days out of 14 and with mum 7 days out
of 14. There is no dispute, except DWP saying priority to mum
and they can only recognise one parent."
?? An ex-wife has re-married a man sufficiently wealthy to own two
houses worth over £500k each. Our member's daughter spends
half her holidays and every other weekend with him. Yet he is
still subject to a CSA Order that puts him in considerable
financial difficulty.
(iv) Will C-MEC produce positive change?
14. The solution for child support, as we see it, is to allow the children
and
their 'other parent' to have a sufficient and autonomous relationship
and to give this proper social recognition. Parents share their income,
voluntarily and with pride and pleasure, with children with whom they
share a life. You cannot have children with you without spending
money on them. If the money spent is of direct and visible benefit to
7
them, and this is recognised by all parties, it will naturally flow more
freely.
15. The stance of the CSA - and sadly also of the proposed C-MEC - is,
however, in the opposite corner. It is to take as normal a relationship
between the parents of one carer and one non-residential2 (originally of
course labelled 'absent') and to rely on compulsion to make the latter
finance the former. Once more the solution to the 'problem' of child
support lies outside the CSA/C-MEC itself. It lies in wider social policy,
but C-MEC needs to be part of that wider system. With that policy the
wish of parents, especially male ones, to remain 'providers' for their
children will survive the breakdown of the relationship with the other
parent.
16. We warned Government that the CSA would fail, in each of its
manifestations. We issue the same warning about C-MEC, unless
policy is re-cast radically. A strategy based on exclusion of one parent
from the lives of the children but attempting to compel them to finance
another household/family can expect at the very best only minimal,
resentful compliance. The planned hand-over from the CSA to C-MEC
is so long term and the continuities are so strong that there will be no
'fresh start'. The tragedy - unless our warning is heeded - is that a
more child-centred strategy, based on the rights of children to both
parents, would win consent and co-operation over child support and
have hugely beneficial pay-offs in other respects.
(v) A way forward
17. In the short term, the need is for a clean slate so that the wretched
experience of the CSA can be put aside. This should involve the
complete and final abolition of the CSA and the cessation of its
activities. The state should make up to lone parents the money that
they are owed. There should be an amnesty for nearly all debts. These
would be bold moves, but the cost in pride will be greater than the loss
to the Treasury. Most of the shortfall to lone parents will have been - or
will need to be - made up in various other ways anyway. The
considerable ill-will engendered by the CSA in a socially and politically
2 We recognise that there are some concessions when parenting is shared, but
their marginal
nature rather strengthens the point. For example, if the two parents share
the care and
presumably also the cost of the children equally, and the one labelled as
'carer', possible
trading on the overt sex discrimination in allocating child benefit, has an
equal or higher
income that the one labelled as non-residential, there ought to be no money
due from the
NRP. Or possibly the RP should pay the NRP. Not so, his (normally his)
liability to pay the RP
is only halved. Of course only the parenting costs that fall on the RP are
recognised. While
the matter has not been researched - this indicating a bias - the costs of
involved nonresident
parenting may well be of the same order as resident parenting. The basic
costs -
accommodation and so on - will be much the same. For many NRP's the costs of
travel to
and from contact and of activities when the children are not at school may
largely offset
marginal savings on food and heating when their children are in their
'principal home'. But
such issues have not been considered even worth taking into account. The
benefit system is
also skewed in favour of the RP.
8
important group merits this recognition. Nor is there any reason to
doubt that the money paid will be used for the benefit of the children
that have been short changed.
18. Most of the debts to the CSA would have proven uneconomic to
recover anyway. One of the fundamental original errors of the CSA was
to assume that NRPs generally had substantial resources withheld.
Frequently, however, they were low paid, ill, unemployed or had other
commitments, such as monies paid out for their children informally,
stepchildren or new families. Considerable efforts were necessary to
extract modest sums. Attempts to do so caused genuine problems to
substantial numbers of alleged non-payers.
19. An amnesty for all debts would be too far. They would cause real
grievances among those who have struggled to comply with their
obligations. But the need is to concentrate the remaining recovery
efforts on cases where there is both the capacity to pay and there has
been neglect of the children. The amnesty should go to all those of low
and lower middle incomes, and all those who can show that they have
been responsible parents in terms of actually spending time with their
children or who have been unsuccessful in reasonable efforts to see
their children. Focussing recovery efforts in this way would be both
economic and just. It would win social support.
20. The next stage would be evolving a strategy for shared parenting. This
would take at least several months to complete. More time would be
necessary before legislation is passed and a further period before
implementation. It should be driven by a revival of the Ministerial
Committee for the Family that existed during Jack Straw's time in the
Home Office. This time, however, it should be led by the DFES and be
charged with resources, status, standing and authority appropriate to
the importance of the task. We are talking of possibly the most
important single factor in the lives of nearly half our children. We must
get rid of the mindset that sees the access costs of the 'non-resident
parent' as exceptional and insists on them paying half the child support
costs of the other parent even when parenting is shared equally.
21. There would need to be some interim child maintenance arrangements.
They would be imperfect. It should not be hard for them to be an
improvement on the present. We would suggest something on the
following lines:
?? The sharing of social benefits for the support of children
between separated parents pro rata the time they spent with the
children3.
?? The exemption from any child maintenance obligations of
parents of low and lower middle income.
3 This could be made less complex than it seems initially; FNF has a paper
on how this would
be done.
9
?? The revival of the former Lone Parent Premium for Income
Support and Tax Credits.
?? Generous disregards of child support for income support,
taxation and tax credits.
?? The exemption from child maintenance obligations of all NRPs
who spent more than a prescribed amount of time with their
children.
?? The remainder should pay a fixed (and possibly fairly high)
proportion of their taxable income per child, perhaps
automatically deducted at source, but scaled down, if they
spend time with their children according to the time spent.
22. This would be a stop gap, pending more careful planning of
arrangements which dovetailed the two requirements - promoting the
best parenting of children and easing the financial hardship of any
remaining households that could be fairly be described as 'one parent'.
23. The interim arrangements, because they would target prosperous
NRPs who are genuinely neglectful of their children, would enjoy
general social support. They would also be modest in scale and
economic to run. The major public expenditure would be on Income
Support and Tax credit. While this has not been costed, we make the
following comments:
1) The recipients would be some of the neediest children;
2) The Welfare to Work programme would obviously continue and one
can anticipate a steady increase not only of the number of lone parents
who earn, but the amount they are able to earn. Should indeed there
be three levels of requirement to be available for work? Available full
time and available part time? Should those in charge of children under
the age of 16 lose their right not to be available for work if they cannot
show that their ex cannot or will not provide child care?
24. There would be enormous savings in the Government's child care
strategy if it did not totally ignore the free and loving care available to
children from their 'other parent'.
25. We turn now to the detailed questions asked in the White Paper. We
pick out the question in blue, for convenience.
(vi) Consultation questions
25. The following questions have been raised in this White Paper.
Chapter 2
.. Question 1 (page 38): Are the key principles and areas for detailed
work that we have identified the right ones? In particular:
10
- How can we best encourage access to support services by parents
with care and non-resident parents?
- How can we best make a register of private maintenance agreements
an attractive prospect to parents?
- How can Jobcentre Plus most effectively encourage parents claiming
benefit to make an informed choice about maintenance?
As we have indicated above, the White Paper does not identify the right key
principles. The proposals need to be re-cast to encourage shared parenting
wherever possible.
So we would add the following detailed questions:
Given the huge variety of child-care arrangements adopted by couples after
separation or divorce, how can the new system ensure that resources for
bringing up the child are fairly allocated between the two parents?
Is the distinction between 'parents with care' and 'non-resident parents'
adequate? For example, how do we treat couples with shared residence
orders?
Can a more coercive approach to some parents, as proposed in the White
Paper, work in the absence of shared parenting legislation?
Turning to the questions mentioned here:
- How can we best encourage access to support services by parents
with care and non-resident parents?
We are glad to see that the Paper acknowledges the contribution of the third
sector. We see no case, as indicated in 2.26, for building support services
alongside existing services. The services provided by Families Need Father
via our helpline and local meetings, are we believe, an excellent example.
Many of our clients are from the CSA target group. In the year to January
2006, the latest period for which we have detailed statistics, we handled
1220
calls, a 120% increase over the previous year. 88% of callers were male, 79%
non-resident parents, though only a small proportion concerned the CSA. In
the year to January 2007 we have received 7019 calls. We have answered
3580 calls (a 193% increase) and talked for nearly 1400 hours. The
constraint
on reaching more people is primarily financial. There is clearly huge
untapped
demand. We and other organisations know this market. Such organisations
as One Parent Families (York), which is working to involve both parents in
their child's upbringing after relationships break down, should be given
additional funding, not supplanted by a new national organisation. Adding a
fresh organisational layer would be wasteful and inefficient.
So DWP needs to map all existing services and allocate funding in relation
to
their ability to reach the target market, probably through a bidding
process.
11
- How can we best make a register of private maintenance agreements
an attractive prospect to parents?
We need much more detail to make an informed comment on this. The brief
reference in 2.28 indicates that the register would be on public view, via a
website and helpline. In some circumstances that might be problematical. But
what would be the purpose of such a register? It would improve the
statistics
on the extent to which couples make such agreements, but would it promote
their use? We think there is a risk that it would promote the impression,
already encouraged by some other features of the White Paper, discussed
below, that the State wants more information on individuals to make
enforcement easier. We think data would be better collected by separate
sample surveys carried out regularly, with the encouragement of maintenance
agreements, which we support, done via the decentralised support services
provided in the third sector.
And the C-MEC/CSA system should take account of arrangements made in
the legal system, for example, by recognising the significance of Shared
Residence Orders by exempting anyone with such an order form the CMEC/
CSA system.
- How can Jobcentre Plus (JP) most effectively encourage parents
claiming benefit to make an informed choice about maintenance?
In the first place, by referring such parents to the range of support
services
available. Training should be provided to JP staff to help ensure that they
advise appropriately. Briefing packs for parents, drawn from third sector
materials, could be made available, though they should be kept short and
practical.
Chapter 3
Question 2 (page 51): Paragraph 3.14 sets out what we hope to
achieve through a framework of objectives and principles for the new body:
do
you think these three aims are appropriate?
The three aims do look appropriate, but we do not see how the proposals
more generally will equip C-MEC to meet the second one, 'encouraging and
empowering parents in their role'. On the contrary, the proposals seem
designed to confine parenting responsibility to the 'parent with care' and
confine the other parent to simply paying for the child's upkeep, in whole
or in
part. It is very striking that the four principles enunciated in paragraph
15 of
the Executive Summary do not mention shared parenting. Instead, in a subtle
change of language, they refer to 'encouraging and empowering parents to
make their own financial arrangements wherever possible'. This singleminded
focus on finance will damage children, by discouraging both parents
from playing a full role in their upbringing. We strongly support the
principle of
both parents making appropriate financial contributions to the child's
upbringing, but that is only one of their responsibilities. Loving,
cherishing and
12
taking a part in key decisions are also key responsibilities, which the
Paper's
approach ignores.
Question 3 (page 53): Do the principles for moving forward set out at
paragraph 3.21 provide the right approach?
We would like clarification on the paragraph's reference to 'parents'. Does
it
mean both parents, as it should, or only parents with residence? Similarly,
in
the following paragraph, we hope that the reference to 'clients' means both
parents. They both need to be enlisted into seeing the new regime as
beneficial. If those labelled 'non-resident parents' are simply regarded as
milch-cows, C-MEC will quickly experience the same problems as the CSA.
C-MEC should target parents who play no role in their children's lives, not
the
soft targets that earned the CSA such a bad reputation in its early years.
Subject to those qualifications, the principles look sound, though we have
grave doubts that C-MEC will be able to deliver, as currently proposed.
Chapter 4
Question 4 (page 61): Is our approach of combining a simpler
assessment formula with an exceptions regime the right one?
It has some merit. But it is quite wrong to call the cost to a 'non-resident
parent of contacting a child' an exceptional item. Such costs are at the
heart
of shared parenting. The formula needs to be re-jigged to recognise that
both
parents usually incur costs in bringing up their children after a
relationship has
broken down, and both parents often have income and savings. The system
should not encourage 'resident' parents to stay on benefit throughout the
child's school years.
C-MEC should explain the calculation of child support in clear terms to
every
assessed parent. This explanation should include any calculation made for
arrears.
Question 5 (page 66): Which of the three approaches outlined in
paragraphs 4.25 to 4.27 should be employed to determine child maintenance
liabilities in a case of this kind?
The proposal to use HMRC income tax information looks like a huge breach
of tax-payer confidentiality, which has implications going well beyond this
White Paper. We believe the Chancellor should be involved in a much wider
public debate before a decision is taken. We note that HMRC has not yet
agreed.
But given the proposal to use income tax data, it is difficult to see why
the
Paper proposes to use gross income, not net. The income tax allowances are
designed to reflect an individual's personal financial circumstances. Using
gross data loses all this sophistication. Reducing the percentage rates of
13
income payable for each qualifying child is a very blunt instrument for
achieving fair results.
Of the three methods canvassed, the first is manifestly unfair and
unreasonable. The second and third are much fairer, but the third looks
extremely complicated. We think the second - deducting from the income
used to work out their liability the amount that the 'non-resident parent'
is
paying in a private arrangement or under a court order. - is most
preferable.
We think the proposal only to allow reduced payments if income in the
current
is 25% below the previous tax year is far too draconian. 10% would be a
much better level. People whose income falls by 24.9% could be in severe
financial hardship and this should be taken into account immediately.
There is no commitment in the paper to excluding pension contributions from
the calculation. We would like the Government to make this clear.
Chapter 5
Question 6 (page 77): Are there other approaches to enforcement that
we should consider?
It is, frankly, odd not to ask respondents what they think of the proposed
enforcement methods. They have already been subject to a good deal of
adverse criticism. It is worth commenting briefly:
(i) Confiscating driving licenses and passports and imposing curfews
will often reduce a parent's earning abilities. It is very difficult to see
how this is in the best interests of the child.
(ii) What evidence does the Department have of the likely effectiveness
of the proposed 'naming and shaming' website? How many will
bother to visit it? Will parents listed really see this as a deterrent?
They will certainly not see it in a positive light.
(iii) Removing the need to go to court over a Liability Order is a
curtailment of civil liberties, and makes an interesting contrast with
Government's continued willingness, which we oppose, to provide
legal aid for family court cases.
(iv) Will businesses welcome being enlisted as unpaid enforcers of
maintenance agreements?
(v) Collecting monies directly from financial institutions again seems to
be a way of bypassing the courts.
Paragraph 5.9 raises a very important point. It claims, without providing
any
evidence, that these more coercive methods have produced results in the US,
Australia and New Zealand. Yet half US states have shared parenting
14
legislation, and the Australians passed a landmark Act in 2006. So in these
places coercion is set in a framework where both parents are encouraged to
carry on their duties and responsibilities after separation. The White
Paper, as
noted above, fails completely to do this. We would still like to see the
evidence, but emphasise here that it has to be seen in this light.
Because of the civil liberties aspects and the likelihood of C-MEC errors,
the
increased emphasis on administrative sanctions is wrong. Certainly, only a
court, preferably a District Judge, should be allowed to take away a
passport
or a driving license. It is somewhat reassuring to hear that for human
rights
reasons the Government does not propose these powers for cases involving
someone's livelihood, but these arguments still weigh heavily. And someone
may not need a license now to earn a living, but what happens if
circumstances change?
Question 7 (page 77): Is the shift from a predominantly court-based
enforcement system to an administrative approach the right way to make
enforcement more effective?
Effectiveness, as we have already indicated, is not the only test, though we
recognise that the system needs to act in that minority of cases where
'nonresident'
parents are trying to evade their responsibilities as parents.
Administrative methods may be more rapid-acting, but they carry with them
significant risks of injustice. Maladministration cases and worse are likely
to
increase sharply. And enforcement, we repeat, will be more successful, the
more parents feel that the system overall treats them and their children
fairly.
So resources need to be switched into support services that aim to involve
both parents in bringing up their children.
Question 8 (page 80): Are we right to give more focus to chasing
collectable debt?
The Paper fails to ask for views on factoring debt (also p 80, paragraph
5.43).
This technique is likely to involve heavy handed private debt collection
methods. The paper says that it will only be done with the resident parent's
agreement. The Government, including DWP, is trying currently to address
the financially excluded: those who lack the skills and knowledge to access
sources of personal finance responsibly. The C-MEC clientele is likely to
contain many who are financially excluded. The idea that they will fully
understand the nature of factoring is unlikely, frankly. Moreover factoring
services have to be paid for. Presumably the fees will be netted off
payments
to the child. This is wrong in principle.
On chasing collectable debt, we agree that this is a sensible use of
resources.
Question 9 (page 80): Is our approach in seeking write-off powers in
strictly limited circumstances the right one?
We agree, but see our own more radical approach.
15
(vi) FNF Discussions
26. This response was thoroughly discussed in draft with individual FNF
Members with experience of the CSA, with branches and was agreed by FNF
Trustees.
Families Need Fathers
134 Curtain Road
London
EC2A 3AR
28 February 2007
date: Mon, 11 Jun 2007 23:18:19 +0100
author: Fletcher
|