The Journal, November 2007, page 40
The problems of the Child Support Agency are well known – including the expense and implementation issues associated with its computer system. According to statistics published in September, only 64% of children are currently receiving maintenance where it is due. £3.5 billion is outstanding, of which £1.9 billion is deemed “probably uncollectable”. The Child Maintenance and Other Payments Bill 2007 proposes a new start, replacing the CSA with the new Child Maintenance and Enforcement Commission, or “C-MEC”. Ignoring the fact that the acronym seems more suited to a Star Wars robot than a new public body, are the proposals anything more than a rehash of the old system?
This is one of the main thrusts of the bill. Proposed new powers include:
It is questionable whether these new measures will prove any more useful in securing payment. The current problems stem less from the powers available to the CSA, than from its reluctance and delay in deploying them. However, a highly publicised enforcement campaign has been rolled out in certain cities, with a five-week blitz recently undertaken in Glasgow.
PWC on benefit will be free to make private arrangements, rather than being forced to use C-MEC, repealing ss 6 and 46 of the Child Support Act 1991. At present it is compulsory for a PWC receiving benefits to use the CSA for maintenance arrangements. This proposal could be seen as a cynical attempt to relieve part of the administrative burden which has dogged the CSA since its inception. However, these private arrangements will be a welcome step for parents on low incomes who are nevertheless willing to pay for their children, as the PWC will no longer suffer a corresponding reduction in benefit.
PWC on benefit using C-MEC will keep more of their benefit – but not much more, and not yet. For post-March 2003 assessments, the current system allows PWC on benefit to retain £10 per week of any maintenance paid. This is to be extended to benefit cases still determined under the pre-2003 CSA rules. The 2006 report by Sir David Henshaw, upon which much of the bill is based, recommended allowing PWC on benefit to retain the bulk of any maintenance collected. This has not been followed, although it is proposed that the amount retained increase in 2010 or 2011.
These reforms beg the fundamental question as to who is supposed to be the beneficiary – children, parents with care, or the Treasury? And is a more extensive overhaul required? The bill shies away from some of the more radical proposals in Sir David’s report, and also from proposals by the CSA committee of resolution (the English FLA). In particular:
The bill is currently being considered by Parliament, and if passed as expected, will be in force post-2008. The alternative, of course, would be for the government to acknowledge that the whole system is a failure, and return all child maintenance to the jurisdiction of the courts…
Lucia Clark, solicitor, and Laura Birrell, trainee solicitor, Family Law Team, Morton Fraser LLP
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