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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
National
Jack Thurlow

How much child maintenance to pay as Government signals changes

Changes to the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) could change the amount separated parents pay for their children. The UK government has announced the introduction of new powers, with digital access to become the norm.

The list of companies required to provide information to the CMS will now be expanded to help the service trace the paying parent, enforce arrears more effectively and help calculate maintenance.

To make it easier for companies to respond quickly and securely the process is also being simplified to allow information to be passed on by secure digital means rather than compulsory in-person visits from CMS inspectors.

The Government is also bringing forward proposals to allow all communications to be digital, which will speed up the service and make sure information is passed on to parents quickly, ChronicleLive reports.

The CMS is set up for parents who have not been able to make a private arrangement about how their child's living costs will be paid.

Following responses from children's charities, parents and interested organisations, the Government has published the details of the new powers in its response to the consultation on the Child Maintenance Service.

Plans for future changes when the legislation timetable allows will:

  • include unearned income in child maintenance calculations
  • extinguish small volumes of very low value debt (£6.99 and under) where the maintenance calculation has ended but there remains an outstanding debt and the value of the debt is substantially less than the cost of collecting it
  • extinguish arrears where child maintenance has been deducted from a parent's earnings and their employer has gone into administration and the outstanding arrears can no longer be recovered

Commenting on the changes, Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) Lords Minister Baroness Stedman-Scott, said: "At the heart of these changes is our commitment to making sure children get the financial support they need to have the best start in life."

Baroness Stedman-Scott added: "We're bringing the service into the modern age, removing barriers that can slow down cases and prevent money reaching children.

"The Child Maintenance Service collected or arranged £1 billion for children over the last 12 months, improving the lives of hundreds of thousands of children across the UK.

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