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News  Information for Military Service Members & Veterans

Many parents who have a child support case with us are active duty military service members; are being called to active military duty; or are veterans. We are here to assist parents in the military with their child support issues.
9/01/2017
  • Child Support Enforcement Division

Media Contact   for Information for Military Service Members & Veterans

DOR Media, DOR Media Services

Boston — Click on a topic for more information: Income Withholding · Modification · Medical Support · Passport Requests · Authorization for Release of Information ·  What to Remember

The Child Support Enforcement Division (CSE) recognizes that many parents who have a child support case with us are active duty military service members; are being called to active military duty;or are veterans. CSE joins those who thank you for your dedicated service to our country. We want to assist parents with their child support issues as they make the transition from civilian life to full-time military duty or leave active military service.

Attention: Military Reservists & National Guard - Are you being called to duty or planning to enlist?

We want parents to better understand how military duty can or may affect their child support case, specifically regarding Income Withholding; Modification; Medical Support; and Passport Requests.

If you have been called to active duty or planning to enlist, it is important that you:

  • Call us at 617-626-2125 or
  • Email us at csevet@dor.state.ma.us
  • Tell us your military branch and date of activation; and
  • Give us your new address.

Income Withholding
If you pay child support and the payments are withheld directly from your paycheck, please contact us as soon as possible. We can transfer the income withholding from your civilian employer to the Department of Defense (DFAS) so that your child support will be deducted from your military pay. There may be some delay before the income withholding at DFAS goes into effect. To avoid any lapse in payments during this time, you must make payments on your own using our payment coupons until you see the child support deducted from your military pay.

Modification
Military activation may mean a sizeable reduction in monthly income. The change in income may justify a change in the amount of the child support order. Only a court can modify the amount of your child support order; however DOR can help you ask the court for a change to the amount of your child support order. Click here for information about a modification. Remember -- even if your income is reduced due to military activation, you are still responsible for paying the current court order amount on time and in full. DOR will continue to use all available enforcement remedies to collect any past-due support.

Medical Support
If you are ordered to provide health insurance coverage for your children, your call to military duty means your existing insurance coverage will end. However, you may enroll your children in the military health care coverage TRICARE. You must notify us if you will no longer be maintaining your existing health insurance plan, and we can then assist in enrolling your children in the military's TRICARE coverage.

Passport Requests
Your call to active military duty may require you to obtain a valid passport prior to deployment. The State Department will refuse to issue or renew passports to parents who owe $2,500 or more in past-due child support. If you owe $2,500 or more in past-due support, please contact us to discuss payment options so that you can obtain your passport.

Authorization for Release of Information
Our policy prevents us from discussing a child support case with anyone other than you or the other parent in the case without your permission. If you have been called to active military duty and want to designate someone else to speak with us on your behalf, you must provide a completed Authorization for Release of Information to us. Once we have this form on file, we will be able to discuss your case with the individual you designate.

What to Remember About Active Duty and Child Support

  • Let us know you've been called up to active military duty and give us your new address and/or employment status.
  • If your child support is deducted from your paycheck, have your employer e-mail Employer Services csegen@dor.state.ma.us or call us at 800-332-2733 (local callers, 617-660-1234) to report your date of activation.
  • If your income will be much lower while on active duty, contact us and we can help you ask the court to modify your child support order. Until your order is modified, you must continue to pay your current court order amount on time and in full.
  • If your military deployment requires a passport and you owe $2,500 or more in past-due support, contact us immediately to discuss payment options so you can get your passport.
  • If you want a relative, friend, or other person you trust to assist you with your child support case while you are on active duty, be sure to send us a Authorization for Release of Information authorizing us to discuss your case with that person.

Information for Veterans

Currently, we work with veterans who self-identify to our staff or through staff at certain Veteran Advocacy Groups, the Massachusetts Department of Veterans’ Services (DVS), the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), or at other local veterans groups.

Chapter 115 benefits: CSE works with DVS to assist veterans with eligibility for Chapter 115 benefits. Veterans who apply for state-issued Chapter 115 financial assistance may not be eligible if they owe a large amount of past-due child support. CSE will work with the DVS Officers and veterans to negotiate payment agreements where the veteran can get the Chapter 115 benefits if he or she agrees to make payments toward his or her child support obligation and CSE agrees to refrain from using certain enforcement tools (such as driver’s license suspension).  

Compensated Work Therapy (CWT): CSE has a long-running collaboration designed to assist veterans in the VA’s CWT project. The goal of the VA CWT–DOR Veteran’s Program is to encourage veterans who owe past-due child support to voluntarily pay a portion of their non-garnishable veteran’s benefits toward the past-due child support. When veterans make those payments, CSE can exempt from levy the first $2,500 of a bank account, exempt the veteran from the assessment of interest and penalty, and forego suspending or revoking the veteran’s driver’s, professional, trade or recreational license or motor vehicle registration.

Modification
Only a court can modify the amount of a child support order. If your financial circumstances have changed, for example, your income has decreased; CSE can help you ask the court for a reduction. Click here for more information about a modification of your child support order.

Having trouble paying? Even if you are not receiving Chapter 115 benefits or are not in a CWT program, if you are having trouble paying your current child support and/or paying the past-due support you owe, we may be able to help you:

  • Call us at 617-626-2125 or
  • Email us at csevet@dor.state.ma.us ; and
  • Tell us you are a veteran and want help managing your child support debt.

Child Support and Military Service

Additional Resources   for Information for Military Service Members & Veterans

Media Contact   for Information for Military Service Members & Veterans

  • Child Support Enforcement Division 

    We provide services to parents who pay child support and parents and caretakers who receive child support. Child support is a way for parents to share the financial responsibility for their child, even when they do not live together. Either parent or the child’s caretaker can apply for our services to establish paternity (get an order determining a child’s legal father) or to get, enforce, or change a child support order.
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