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Closed petition Reform child maintenance rules for parents who receive and pay maintenance

I request that the rules for calculating child maintenance payments be reformed for parents who both pay and receive child maintenance, so that the relative incomes of paying and receiving parents, and maintenance cases for all for the children involved, can be taken into account side by side

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I am a single working mum who is a paying parent for one child and a receiving parent for my other resident child. For the child I pay maintenance to, relative incomes of the receiving parent are not taken into consideration. For the child I receive maintenance for, because of the non-resident father's circumstances, I do not receive payments.

I believe this is unfair, and that the rules for child maintenance payments should be reformed, so that relative incomes of paying and receiving parents, and maintenance cases for all children involved can be taken into account side by side.

This petition is closed All petitions run for 6 months

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Child Maintenance Service debated by MPs

Two debates were held recently on the Child Maintenance Service in the House of Commons.

  • On Tuesday 17 May, MPs took part in an adjournment debate on ‘Child maintenance arrears’, led by Dr Kieran Mullan MP
  • On Thursday 19 May, MPs took part in a backbench business debate on ‘Reforming the Child Maintenance Service’, led by Marion Fellows MP

Watch the debates, read transcripts of what was said in the debates, and access other relevant material: https://ukparliament.shorthandstories.com/cet-cms-may-2022/index.html?utm_campaign=0522-cet-cmspromo-petitioners&utm_medium=email&utm_source=petcom

What are adjournment debates?

Any backbench MP can apply to hold an adjournment debate on any subject which the Government are responsible for, providing it does not call for a new law (or changes to existing law). MPs from all parties can take part, and a Government minister must respond in the debate.

Adjournment debates take place at the end of each sitting day in the main House of Commons Chamber and usually last for 30 minutes.

They are held on the motion ‘that the House do now adjourn’. In other words, once the adjournment debate has finished, the House will close for the day.

What are backbench business debates?

Backbench business debates give backbenchers (MPs who aren’t ministers or shadow ministers) an opportunity to secure a debate on a topic of their choice, either in the main House of Commons Chamber or Westminster Hall, the second chamber of the House of Commons.

MPs can make a request for a debate to the Backbench Business Committee, who hears and decides which debates to schedule.

Backbench debates can either be general debates (which do not end in a vote) or be on a substantive motion (which calls for an action and can end in a vote). The debate on reforming the Child Maintenance Service was a general debate.

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