A young father’s Facebook post went viral after his kind deed.
Brandon Carpenter uploaded a photo of a long receipt that was so lengthy, it didn’t show the price at the bottom.
Carpenter further explained that “she pays rent and all her bills plus she is paying off a car..so today I went shopping to make sure she had food for the rest of the week.”
The young father wrote, “Some of y’all think I’m only going to provide for my child” and not the mother.
He described that notion as “thinking like a child,” adding that it is “time to grow up and take responsibility in all aspects of life.”
“Just because we aren’t together doesn’t mean I can’t provide for her if she needs it,” Carpenter also said.
$10 Billion in Child Support Goes Uncollected
A U.S. Census report stated that about 43.5 percent of custodial parents get the full amount of support that they’re legally entitled to.But more than 30 percent don’t get anything at all.
In 2017, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE) stated that some $33 billion in child support was paid for more than 15 million children, or about 20 percent.
That means, according to CBS, about $10 billion at the very least in child support is uncollected.
Those payments can cause a problem.
The poverty rate for custodial-mother families, as a result, is about 29 percent, CBS reported.
Also, filing a lawsuit to get missing payments can cause even more problems and is costly.
“As an attorney, I tell clients that sometimes the cost outweighs the benefit,” said Shafer of the legal fees.
“When parents separate, a parent must ask the court to make an order establishing parentage (paternity) and also ask the court to make an order for child support. Child support payments are usually made until children turn 18 (or 19 if they are still in high school full time, living at home, and cannot support themselves),” the website says.
In the state, a parent who falls behind in payments will have to also pay interest on the balance.
Woman Gets $150K in Child Support ... 50 Years Later
A woman from California won about $150,000 in child support her ex-husband—for her 52-year-old daughter.
She said her ex went to Canada rather than paying court-ordered child support in the 1970s.
“I kind of put it on the back burner and just kind of forgot about it over the years,” said Anderson, adding that she supported her daughter while working as an interior designer in Los Angeles.
“I’m not negating the fact I was able to send my daughter to college, Paris. We traveled and had a good time. But the money runs out,” she said.
Anderson said that she is renting part of her home, and she is now running low on funds. That’s when it donned on her to file a lawsuit against her ex-husband for not paying child support.