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23/02/05
Reservist Soldiers Treated Like
Dirt
Phyllis Schlafly
San
Diego Union Tribune
Most reservists called upon to serve in Iraq
and Afghanistan have paid a big price: a significant reduction of their wages as
they transferred from civilian to military jobs, separation from their loved
ones, and of course the risk of battle wounds or death. Regrettably, on their
return home, those who are divorced fathers could face other grievous penalties:
loss of their children, financial ruin, prosecution as "deadbeat dads"
and even jail.
Child-support orders for reservists are
usually based on their civilian wages. When they are called up to active duty
that burden doesn't decrease. Few can get court modification before they leave,
modifications are seldom granted anyway, and even if a father applied for
modification before deployment the debt continues to grow until the case is
decided much later.
Military fathers cannot get relief when they
return because federal law forbids courts from reducing child-support debt
retroactively. Once the arrearage reaches $5,000, the father becomes a felon
subject to imprisonment and forfeiture of his driver's license, professional
licenses and passport.
Likewise, there is no forgiving of interest
and penalties on child-support debt even though it is sometimes incurred as a
result of human or computer errors. States have a financial incentive to refuse
to reduce obligations because the federal government rewards states with cash
for the "deadbeat dad" dollars they collect.
Laws granting deployed service personnel
protection from legal actions at home date back decades, but they are ignored in
family court. Child kidnapping laws do not protect military personnel on active
duty from having their ex-wives relocate their children.
This injustice to reservists serving in Iraq
and Afghanistan should be remedied by Congress and state legislatures before
more fathers meet the fate of Bobby Sherrill, a father of two from North
Carolina, who worked for Lockheed Martin Corp. in Kuwait before being captured
and held hostage by Iraq for five terrible months. The night Sherrill returned
from the Persian Gulf he was arrested for failing to pay $1,425 in child support
while he was held captive.
In February, a Wilkes-Barre, Pa., judge
sentenced 28 men to jail for failure to pay small amounts of child support, one
as little as $322. One common punishment for falling behind in court-ordered
payments is to seize a man's driver's license. This can cost him his job. Yet he
is still required to make child-support payments and can be thrown in jail if
that proves to be impossible.
Politicians today are engaged in a spirited
debate about giving driver's licenses to illegal immigrants so they can drive to
work. But somehow the law has already decided that a divorced father, who might
have fallen behind in child-support payments, should be punished by forfeiting
his license.
The New York Times recently exposed the
ridiculous case of truck driver Donald Gardner, who was left penniless after a
1997 car accident put him in the hospital for three years. When he tried to
return to work, he found that the state had suspended his driver's license
because he owed $119,846 in child support.
The Times reported that, as of 2003, fathers
allegedly owed $96 billion in child support. However, 70 percent is owed by men
who earn less than $10,000 a year or have no wage earnings at all, so we have a
$3 billion government bureaucracy working to get blood out of a turnip.
The most bizarre part of the system is that
child-support payments are not required to be spent on children and are not
based on any estimates of their needs or expenses. Support orders come from
court-created formulas based on the income of the father, while the mother is
allowed to treat child support like any other entitlement, such as welfare or
alimony.
Although there are no official statistics, it
is estimated that more than 100,000 fathers are jailed per year for failing to
make child-support payments. Another perverse feature of the system is that
child-support payments are in no way related to whether a father is allowed to
see his children or whether his visitation rights are enforced.
Debtors' prisons were common in colonial
times, but they were abolished by the new United States government, one of the
great improvements made on English law. Then the new nation adopted bankruptcy
laws to allow people a fresh start when they are overwhelmed by debt. However,
child-support debts cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
The Bradley Amendment, named for former U.S.
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.Y., takes us back to the cruel days of debtors' prisons.
It requires that a child-support debt cannot be retroactively reduced or
forgiven, and states enforce this law no matter what the change in a father's
income, no matter if he is sent to war or locked up in prison, no matter if he
is unemployed or hospitalized or even dead, no matter if DNA proves he is not
the father, and no matter if he is ever allowed to see his children. Charles
Dickens famously said, "The law is an ass."
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