Beginning in 2021, New Jersey has changed its laws regarding child support license suspensions. They offer more leeway for delinquent payers and hope to allow more on-time payments in the child’s best interest instead of getting the parent caught in the system.
According to the New Jersey Department of Human Services, a person’s license can be temporarily suspended if they have not made a court-ordered child support payment in six months. This suspension includes the denial of a license to a new applicant if they are delinquent in payment six months or more.
The six-month period at which a license can be suspended represents a change in New Jersey law surrounding license suspension. Before 2021, a person’s license could be immediately suspended if they were delinquent on a child support payment. The New Jersey legislature determined that such a penalty created a cycle of statutory debt – parents who were unable to pay child support were immediately entered into a system in which additional fines would be placed, and perhaps the method of arriving at their work to make up the owed money would be stripped.
In sponsoring the bill, which took effect on January 1, 2021, Representative Shirley K. Turner said,
“For far too many years, New Jersey drivers have been punished with driver’s license suspensions and extra costs when they cannot afford to pay their fines, fees, and surcharges….People who work paycheck to paycheck get caught in a never-ending cycle of accumulating costs and suspensions, and there is no end in sight to satisfying their debt to the Motor Vehicle Commission. I am gratified that New Jersey has finally removed this barrier to employment and financial stability for our residents.”
There are additional restrictions that go into effect after a set period of time or expense, however. In addition to the suspension of a license, the New Jersey state child support enforcement program and the federal enforcement program cooperate to deny a passport application if the parent is overdue payment of at least $2,500 (or if they have had a delinquent payment of that amount on their record before). At this point, the NJ Child Support Program refers these cases to the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement, where such penalties are carried out.
The New Jersey Child Support division of the state’s Department of Human Services specifies that a multitude of licenses can be suspended for failure to pay child support on time. In addition to driver’s license suspensions, the state court or its administrative representative has the authority to suspend professional licenses, occupational licenses, and recreational or sporting licenses.
Are you behind on child support payments, and because of that, your license has been suspended in New Jersey? To navigate this process, it is essential that you have the support of a skilled attorney who can advocate for your interests now and moving forward.
A knowledgeable lawyer is a valuable resource to help you get your license back to continue with your regular activities, protect your professional life, and ensure that you are legally able to drive. Here at Chamlin, Uliano & Walsh, we appreciate that it’s hard to make ends meet. We’d be delighted to be on your team. We are here for clients with child support and license suspension matters in Jackson, Colts Neck, Eatontown, Red Bank, Freehold, and surrounding places across Monmouth County.
Give us a call at 732-440-3950 or toll-free at 888-328-9131 to schedule an initial consultation to go over your case and assess your next steps.
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