The problem with the maintenance system is that the calculation regs are outdated and unfair. Created for a time when less women worked, but stayed at home. Needs new legislation to reflect modern families.
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Replying to @chamilton_ @mrchrisjohn
Interested in why women working more affects a calculation for maintenance to either partner when they have the children at home to look after?
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Replying to @AnnaRowe123 @mrchrisjohn
Because it doesn't take the mother's income into account. Maintenance should seek to put both parents in a viable position to co-parent, not just take a chunk of the dads income regardless of circunstances.
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Replying to @chamilton_ @mrchrisjohn
1/ You don’t understand the system then. It works either way not just for the father. If the mother ‘doesn’t have the children’ then she still has to pay regardless of income. It’s set on parameters of time the children are looked after by a certain parent not who earns more.
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2/ both parents have equal responsibility regardless of income. To say otherwise is ludicrous. Also, Maintenance Paid covers a fraction of actual cost, it’s bare basics. What would the non contact parent pay for that child were they still in the home as part of the family?
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Replying to @AnnaRowe123 @mrchrisjohn
With repsect i do understand the system and have read the legislation. Justify this. Parents earn the same income, £x. They decide to split but will share the children 60/40. Both parents need at least a two bed home, food, clothes and money for the children. With maintenance and
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Replying to @chamilton_ @mrchrisjohn
1/ With all due respect, tax credits are not maintenance which we were discussing. Currently maintenance favours the father in most cases. What is archaic is that ( in most cases) the farther is allowed to deduct money from his earning to cover the cost of a new partners children
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Even when those children are receiving maintenance from their own father. Until the CSA was changed those children also received a higher percentage of the NRP income than their own child. This is wrong. It was changed after consultation to nearly equal but still benefits...
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The children in new household marginally. If they receive money from their own NRP it should not be an option to claim against own child’s maintenance. Again, responsibility is equal for parents. Income is irrelevant.
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1/ I was asked to consult personally as I had a shit storm of 2 years with that CSA and my children’s father who used every trick/option he think of to reduce his payments on his £120k salary. MP’s finally got involved. He dared to whinge when our case moved to new one...
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And one of the household children came of age and he lost their father’s maintenance and the option to reduce his maintenance before giving to his own. Also the percentages changed. He pays nothing other than maintenance for 2 ch’rn. He was ordered indirect contact only by court
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