How Much Child Support Should I Get from DHHS?
Information for TANF Families
CONTENTS
| Why can DHHS keep some of my child support? |
Whenever you get TANF, you give the State of Maine a temporary claim to your child
support. The State keeps some of the child support it collects, and sends
some of it to you. The amount that you get depends on your other income,
including TANF, and the amount your child's other parent pays each month.
The money the State keeps is used to help pay for the TANF program.
While you are getting TANF, you may get one or both of these child support
payments:
- the $50.00 "pass-through" payment
- the "gap" payment
This worksheet will help you figure out how much of each you should
get.
If you do not get TANF, this information does not apply to you.
Contact
DHHS, Division of Support Enforcement or Pine Tree Legal
if you think DHHS is not sending you all of your child support.
| If my only income is from TANF and child support, how do I figure what
I should get in child support? |
(If you have other income,
skip to the next section.)
If DHHS collects no child support for you during this calendar month, then you will not get a
child support payment this month.
If the State does collect child support during the month, then you
should get:
- the first $50 of any current support collected (called the
"pass-through" payment); and
- a "gap" payment.
The amount of your "gap" payment depends on the size of your
family and how much support money DHHS collected. Find your family size
(the number of people in your household receiving TANF) on this chart. The
number underneath it is your maximum "gap" payment.
|
Family Size |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
| Maximum "gap" payment (with
an adult on TANF grant) |
$100 |
$135 |
$169 |
$205 |
$240 |
$274 |
$309 |
Your "gap" payment should be this amount or the amount DHHS
actually collected last month (in addition to the $50 pass through),
whichever is less.
Example:
You receive TANF for yourself and one child.
You have no other
income. In February, your child's other parent pays $250 in child support.
You should receive $50 ("pass-through") plus $100
("gap") for a total of $150. The State gets to keep the
remaining $100. If the other parent paid less than $150, you should get
all the money that was paid.
| If I have other income besides TANF and child support,
how do I figure my child support? |
If you receive TANF, you should always get the first $50 of current support paid to the State
by the child's other parent in that month. This is the
"pass-through" payment. However, if you have other income, your
"gap" payment may be less than shown on the "maximum gap" chart.
If you get less than the maximum TANF grant for your family size, then
you will not get a "gap" payment. Look at the chart of maximum
TANF grants below. (If you get the $50 "special housing need" supplement, refer to the bottom
row of figures. If you get just the basic TANF grant, without a housing supplement,
refer to the upper row of figures.)
|
Family Size |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
| Maximum TANF amount (with
adult on TANF grant) |
$363 |
$485 |
$611 |
$733 |
$856 |
$981 |
$1,105 |
| **Maximum grant plus the "special housing need" |
$413 |
$535 |
$661 |
$783 |
$906 |
$1,031 |
$1,155 |
**Housholds with extremely high housing cost, in comparison to their income, qualify for a higher
grant ($50 more than the basic grant). This is called a "special housing need."
If you are getting less than the amount shown on the chart
for your family size because you have other income (like earnings), then
you will not get a "gap" payment. This is because your other
income already "fills the gap."
The "gap" is the difference between the maximum TANF payments
and a higher "standard of need" amount.
Example:
You have one child and you work part-time. You do not qualify for the
TANF "special housing need." Because of your
earnings, you got a $300 TANF check in February. This is $63 less than the
maximum grant for a family of two. In February your child's other parent
paid $250 in child support to the State. You will get the $50
pass-through payment. The State will keep the rest of the child support.
According to DHHS rules, your earnings already "filled the gap"
amount.
If you have other income, but you still get the maximum TANF grant, you
should still get a "gap" payment. Here is how to figure out the
amount.
•Step One
You need to know how much other income was counted in figuring your
TANF grant for this month. If you are working, for example, some of you earnings are "disregarded."
That is, a portion of you earnings will not be counted against your TANF grant.
Ask your DHHS worker to tell you the amount of
"countable income" for the current month.
•Step Two
Subtract last month's "countable income" from the Maximum Gap
Payment for your
family shown in the "maximum gap" chart. The answer will be your gap payment for
this month.
Family maximum gap payment
- Countable income
= Your gap payment
|
| What if the state collects more child
support than I get from TANF? |
Sometimes DHHS may collect more in current support than it
pays you in TANF benefits. In these cases, the State should not keep more
current child support than it pays you in TANF.
If this "excess" child support payment continues, you will
become ineligible for TANF. Then you will begin to receive all of the
current child support. However, if it only happens once in a while, you
should continue to get TANF. In months where DHHS collects more
current support than you got in TANF, they should send you any "excess
over" payments.
| What if the paying parent pays late? |
Child support is late if the paying parent does not pay it during the
month that it is due. If a payment is late (or early) so that two payments
fall within the same month, you will only get one $50 pass-through and one
gap payment for that month. You will get nothing for the month when
nothing was paid.
If you can, try to get your child's other parent to make regular
payments every month. Then you will get regular payments, too. If payments
are late and doubled up, you lose "gap" and "pass-through" payments.
If your child's other parent paid on time but DHHS got it late, then you
should still get a payment.
Examples:
- The other parent works and his wages are attached regulary. But his employer sent
the payment in late.
- The other parent is out of state and made the payment on time. The
out of state agency delayed in sending it to Maine DHHS.
In these cases, you should still get your regular payment, but it may
be late.
| What if two different parents are paying child support into DHHS for
my children, do I get double payments? |
No. While you are getting TANF, the most you can expect to get each month is one gap and one pass-through
payment.
| What do I do if I think I got the wrong amount? |
Call the DHHS "Case Review Unit" at 1-800-371-3101 or
287-3110. They are supposed to give you prompt answers to your
questions about your child support.
Sometimes the Unit's telephones are busy. If you can't get through,
go to their
website to get more contact information. You can e-mail or use their online "contact us" form,
send a letter or fax, or use their
24-hour voice response system.
If you are still not satisfied, you can ask for a fair hearing. There is a deadline.
Request a fair hearing within 30 days of the date you think you were underpaid.
Call or write to your TANF worker or send your request to the
address on the check stub. If you miss the 30-day deadline, you may lose
the right to appeal on that payment.
If you need more help,
contact Pine Tree Legal Assistance.
|
Notice
© Pine Tree
Legal Assistance
November 2005
Sometimes the laws
change. We cannot promise that this information is always
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