SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
HOUSE BILL NO. 2508
As Amended by Senate Committee of the Whole
Brief
(1)
HB 2508 requires the Department of
Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS), the state's Title IV-D
agency, to establish a central unit for collection and disbursement
of support payments, i.e., the Kansas Payment Center. SRS
is required to collaborate with the Kansas Supreme Court in
establishing the center.
The central unit shall commence
operations with respect to support orders entered in each county as
provided in a schedule adopted by the Kansas Supreme Court. Child
support order includes any order for maintenance in conjunction
with a child support order.
The bill provides that any
provision in any child support order which requires remittance of
support payments to the clerk of the district court or district
court trustee shall be deemed to require remittance of support
payments to the central unit regardless of the date the child
support or income withholding order was entered.
Conforming amendments are made to
the Income Withholding Act, the Kansas Parentage Act, the Kansas
Divorce Code, and the Kansas Code of Civil Procedure.
The bill also amends the Divorce
Code to permit for good cause shown orders of support to be paid
other than to the central unit. A written agreement between the
parties to make direct child support payments shall constitute good
cause. The obligor is required to file a copy of the written
agreement with the court, to keep written evidence of payments
made, and to provide the written evidence to the court at least
annually.
The bill also includes some
technical amendments to the Kansas Income Withholding Act. One
updates the definition of Title IV-D to include amendments enacted
in recent years by the Congress. The other change clarifies that a
copy of the income withholding order, rather than the original
document, is served on the payor and triggers the payor's
obligations under the withholding law.
Background
The Senate Committee of the Whole
struck provisions of HB 2508 and inserted provisions of SB 329 with
some added language regarding direct child support payments under
the Kansas Divorce Code.
SB 329 was
supported by SRS and the Office of Judicial Administration. A
spokesperson for SRS said this legislation codifies the authority
of the Kansas Supreme Court to require that child support payments
be sent to the Kansas Payment Center. In addition, the conferee
pointed out the 2000 omnibus budget bill which authorized by
proviso the Kansas Supreme Court to issue an administrative order
directing child support payments to be made to the central unit
instead of to the district courts.
The federal
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of
1996 (PRWORA) required centralized processing of support payments
as a key element for improving child support laws and procedures.
PRWORA requires the state to establish a centralized unit for
collection and disbursement of support payments in all IV-D cases
and income withholding payments established after October 1997 in
Non-IV-D (non-SRS) cases.
A spokesperson
for the Office of Judicial Administration supported the bill but
requested the three amendments authorized by the Senate Committee
on Ways and Means to clarify intent and to remove unnecessary
language as the payment center is in operation.
The Senate
Committee amended SB 329 by deleting the language about commencing
operations; clarifies that maintenance payments will be handled in
the same manner as support payments; and deletes the court's
obligation to hold in trust undeliverable support payments as these
payments are held by the central unit.
The fiscal
note for SB 329 states that funding for operation of the Kansas
Payment Center is included in the Governor's FY 2002
budget.
As noted
earlier, provisions of HB 2508 were stricken by the Senate
Committee of the Whole.
HB 2508 would
establish the Kansas Payment Center as a central unit for the
collection and dissemination of child support payments. In general,
the bill follows the requirements of the federal Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996.
Specifically, HB 2508 contains the following provisions.
Time
Limits
- HB 2508 amends
the Income Withholding Law to require a response, to written or
electronic requests for information, by a payor, usually an
employer, within 5 days. Current law is 10 days.
- HB 2508 also
adds a requirement of a certified copy of an income withholding
order to be served to the payor. The time limit, currently 14 days,
for the payor to begin deductions is changed to 5 days. The time
frame for paying the amount withheld is changed from the current 7
days to 5 days.
- Penalty.
HB 2508 adds a penalty provision for payors who, without good
cause, fail to pay over the amount withheld and identify each
payment in the same business day. The penalty will be a judgment
against the payor and in favor of the obligee or recipient of the
payment for twice the amount of the cost recovery fee.
Contract
Modifications
Certain
contract modifications between the Department of Social and
Rehabilitation Services (SRS) and the private vendor (collector)
will be allowed as follows.
- Any contract
shall provide that the Kansas Supreme Court, by court rule,
establish the procedure for the creation, maintenance, and
collection of official child support and maintenance records for
use as official court records.
- No contract
shall include provisions allowing the private vendor who operates
the payment center to be paid, in whole or in part, on the basis of
an amount per phone call received by the center nor allowing the
vendor to be paid an amount per check issued for checks that were
issued in error by the center.
- Any contract
with a private vendor shall include penalty provisions for
noncompliance with federal regulations relating to the timeliness
of collections and disbursements and shall include minimum monetary
penalties for each erroneous transaction, whether related to
collection or disbursement. Penalties shall be collected as and
when assessed and shall be placed in the SRS Central Unit Penalty
Fund.
- Any contract
with a private vendor shall provide for full access to all data by
the Secretary of SRS designee in the Central Receivables Unit, the
designee of the Office of Judicial Administration, and the
chairperson of the Central Payment Center Oversight Commission.
Further, the contract shall provide that all district court clerks
and court trustees have access to records of the vendors sufficient
to allow them to assist in the process of matching support payments
to the obligees and be provided dedicated telephone line access to
the vendor for the purpose of assisting the vendor in making
accurate and timely disbursements.
- Any contract
with a private vendor, in addition to sufficient customer service
staff during regular business hours, shall require 24-hour access
by obligors and obligees to payment files which show status of
receipts and disbursements, including, but not limited to, date of
receipt by the vendor, date of processing by the vendor, and date
of mailing to the obligee.
- Any contract
with a private vendor shall provide that if the vendor is unable to
match a payment with the obligee within five business days of
receipt of the funds, such unmatched funds shall be transferred to
the Central Receivables Unit of SRS for determination of proper
disbursement.
- Any contract
with a private vendor shall provide that the central unit be known
as the Kansas Payment Center. The name "Kansas Payment Center"
shall be reserved for use by the State of Kansas for the functions
of the central unit and shall not be used by any private entity for
the collection of support funds.
- Any contract
with a private vendor shall provide that the vendor create a
standardized form that shall accompany all payments made to the
central unit. Such form shall contain the information necessary to
assist in the disbursement of such payments.
- Any unmatched
funds transferred to the Central Receivables Unit of SRS which
remain unmatched one year after the transfer and after a good faith
effort has been made to find the obligee shall be deposited with
the State Treasurer in accordance with the Unclaimed Property
Act.
- SRS
Central Unit Penalty Fund. There is
created in the State Treasury the SRS Central Unit Penalty Fund.
Money credited to the Fund shall be used solely for the purpose of
assisting obligees who have incurred expenses due to the fault of
the vendor in handling the support payments.
- All
expenditures from the SRS Central Unit Penalty Fund shall be made
in accordance with appropriations acts upon warrants of the
Director of Accounts and Reports issued pursuant to vouchers
approved by the Secretary or the Secretary's designee.
- Upon receipt
of any such penalty, the Secretary shall remit the entire amount at
least monthly to the State Treasurer, who shall deposit it in the
state treasury and credit it to the SRS Central Unit Penalty
Fund.
- On or before
the 10th of each month, the Director of Accounts and Reports shall
transfer from the State General Fund to the SRS Central Unit
Penalty Fund interest earnings based on: the average daily balance
of moneys in the SRS Central Unit Penalty Fund for the preceding
month; and the net earnings rate of the pooled money investment
portfolio for the preceding month.
Central
Payment Center Oversight Commission. The bill creates the
Central Payment Center Oversight Commission to monitor the various
aspects of the Kansas Payment Center, especially customer
service.
Major portions
of this provision include the following:
- Commission
members will include:
-
- a district
court judge whose jurisdiction includes domestic
relations;
- a court
trustee who works in child support enforcement;
- a district
court clerk;
- a Child
Support Enforcement Specialist I who is employed by
SRS;
- an employer,
with more than 75 employees, who provides income
withholding;
- an employer,
with less than 25 employees, who provides income
withholding;
- a custodial
parent who has a court order to receive child support;
- a noncustodial
parent who is under a support order to pay child
support;
- a
representative appointed by the Governor;
- a
representative of the Office of Judicial
Administration;
- the State
Treasurer or the Treasurer's designee;
- the Central
Receivables Unit manager of SRS or the manager's
designee;
- four members
of the Legislature as ex officio members. Of the four members, one
Representative shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, one Representative shall be appointed by the
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, one Senator shall
be appointed by the President of the Senate, and one Senator shall
be appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate;
- the vendor
operating the central unit for the collection and disbursement of
support payments, pursuant to KSA 23-4,118 and amendments thereto,
or the vendor's designee as an ex officio member; and
- the Director
of the Title IV-D division or the Director's designee as an ex
officio member.
- The
Legislative Coordinating Council shall appoint the first eight
listed members of the Commission.
- The initial
members of the Commission shall be appointed no later than July 1,
2001. Members shall serve terms of two years, except that the
initial terms of members shall be one year to provide for staggered
terms for Commission members. Vacancies shall be filled in the same
manner as the original appointments and for the remainder of the
unexpired term. Members whose terms have expired shall continue to
serve until their successors have been appointed. Members shall be
eligible for reappointment. The Commission shall select a
chairperson, annually, from its membership. A chairperson may serve
more than one year.
- The Commission
shall meet on call of the chairperson as authorized by the
Legislative Coordinating Council.
- The staff of
the Legislative Research Department, the office of the Revisor of
Statutes, and the Division of Legislative Administrative Services
shall provide such assistance as may be requested by the Commission
and to the extent authorized by the Legislative Coordinating
Council.
- Members of the
Commission attending meetings of the committee or attending a
subcommittee meeting thereof authorized by the Legislative
Coordinating Council shall be paid compensation, travel expenses,
and subsistence expenses or allowances.
- The duties of
the Central Payment Oversight Commission shall include the
following:
- recommend to
SRS, if appropriate, ways to improve or enhance the effectiveness
of the central unit for the collection and disbursement of support
payments;
- recommend
performance indicators for the central unit;
- recommend
legislation which would clarify and improve state law regarding
support for children as it relates to the central unit;
- present an
annual report of its activities and recommendations to the
Legislative Coordinating Council by February 1;
- review the
terms of any contract with a private vendor who is operating the
central unit and provide suggestions and
recommendations;
- consider
whether the issue of a private vendor operating the central unit
should be submitted to the Kansas Performance Review
Board;
- monitor
federal regulations relating to the central unit mandate and
evaluate any and all opportunities for appropriate waivers and
options out of the mandate;
- monitor all
funds in suspense status and make recommendations regarding the
handling of payments in suspense, whether by the state or a private
vendor;
- monitor the
penalty provisions in any private vendor contract and monitor the
status of violations and collection of penalties; and
- conduct public
hearings in order to fulfill the oversight function, as authorized
by the Legislative Coordinating Council.
Sunset
The provisions
regarding the contract modifications and the Oversight Commission
will expire on July 1, 2003.
Court
Trustees
A provision of
the bill prohibits court trustees from charging or collecting a fee
for support payments not paid through the central unit and
disbursed according to KSA 23-4,118.
Bypass
Procedure
Upon written
agreement by the parties and permission by the court, income
withholding payments can be avoided and direct payments to the
obligee can be made. Such a written agreement will constitute good
cause.
House
Committee of the Whole
The House
Committee of the Whole added a new section to HB 2508 to make the
Secretary of SRS responsible for the payment of late fees, bank
fees, and other such fees due to late payment of child support. An
administrative procedure is established for hearing these claims by
an administrative law judge. The Secretary has no right to appeal
decisions by the judge.
Senate
Committee on Judiciary
The Senate
Committee on Judiciary amended HB 2508 by deleting a provision
which provides that a written agreement between the parties to make
direct child support payments shall constitute good cause for not
using the central payment center. Another amendment was
technical.
Senate
Committee of the Whole
The Senate
Committee of the Whole deleted provisions of HB 2508 and inserted
provisions of SB 329.
Those appearing in support of HB
2508 included representatives from SRS, the Office of Judicial
Administration, as well as several citizens who spoke on a related
bill about the negative conditions of the current child support
payment system.
The Chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee also spoke in favor of HB 2508.
The fiscal note on HB 2508
indicates that, without a central payment center, the state could
suffer federal penalties and a loss of $36.8 million in federal
funds in FY 2002.
The provisions regarding the
Oversight Commission were taken from HB 2361. The fiscal note on HB
2361 indicated an increase in state expenditures of $23,580 in FY
2002.
1. *Supplemental
notes are prepared by the Legislative Research Department and do
not express legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal
note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi