| Chapter 053 |
| 2024 -- S 2825 Enacted 06/04/2024 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO DOMESTIC RELATIONS -- DIVORCE AND SEPARATION |
Introduced By: Senator F. Lombardi |
| Date Introduced: March 22, 2024 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 15-5-16.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 15-5 entitled "Divorce and |
| Separation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 15-5-16.2. Child support. |
| (a) In a proceeding for divorce, divorce from bed and board, a miscellaneous petition |
| without the filing of divorce proceedings, or child support, the court shall order either or both |
| parents owing a duty of support to a child to pay an amount based upon a formula and guidelines |
| adopted by an administrative order of the family court. If, after calculating support based upon |
| court established formula and guidelines, the court, in its discretion, finds the order would be |
| inequitable to the child or either parent, the court shall make findings of fact and shall order either |
| or both parents owing a duty of support to pay an amount reasonable or necessary for the child’s |
| support after considering all relevant factors including, but not limited to: |
| (1) The financial resources of the child; |
| (2) The financial resources of the custodial parent; |
| (3) The standard of living the child would have enjoyed had the marriage not been |
| dissolved; |
| (4) The physical and emotional condition of the child and his or her educational needs; and |
| (5) The financial resources and needs of the noncustodial parent, provided, that in |
| establishing a child support order, incarceration may not be treated as voluntary unemployment. |
| (b) The court may, if in its discretion it deems it necessary or advisable, order child support |
| and education costs for children attending high school at the time of their eighteenth (18th) birthday |
| and for ninety (90) days after graduation, but in no case beyond their nineteenth (19th) birthday. |
| Notwithstanding the foregoing, the court, in its discretion, may order child support, in the |
| case of a child with a severe physical or mental impairment still living with or under the care of a |
| parent, beyond the child’s emancipation as defined above. The court shall consider the following |
| factors when making its determination: (1) The nature and extent of the disability; (2) The cost of |
| the extraordinary medical expenses; (3) The ability of the child to earn income; (4) The financial |
| resources of the child; (5) The financial resources of the parents; (6) The inability of the primary |
| caregiver of the child to sustain gainful employment on a full-time basis due to the care necessitated |
| by the child. The onset of the disability must have occurred prior to the emancipation event. If a |
| child support order for a child with a severe physical or mental impairment has been terminated, |
| suspended, or expired, the court shall consider the factors in this paragraph and has the discretion |
| to order child support for this child prospectively based upon established child support guidelines. |
| The court may periodically review the case to determine if circumstances warrant the continuation |
| of child support. |
| (c)(1) The court may, if in its discretion it deems it necessary or advisable, appoint an |
| attorney or a guardian ad litem to represent the interest of a minor or dependent child with respect |
| to his or her support, custody, and visitation. |
| (i) In determining whether an appointment should be made, the court shall consider the |
| extent to which a guardian ad litem may assist in providing information concerning the best interest |
| of the child; the age of the child; the wishes of the parents, as well as their financial resources; the |
| nature of the proceeding including the level of contentiousness, allegations of child abuse, or |
| domestic violence and the risk of harm to the child if a guardian is not appointed; or conflicts of |
| interest between the child and parents or siblings; |
| (ii) The guardian ad litem shall be appointed from a list of persons properly credentialed |
| pursuant to administrative orders of the chief judge of the family court; |
| (iii) The court shall enter an order of appointment stating the specific assignment, the |
| optional and mandatory duties of the guardian ad litem, the guardian’s access to the child and |
| confidential information regarding the child, and a provision for payment of the costs and fees of |
| the guardian ad litem; |
| (iv) Communications made to a guardian, including those made by a child, are not |
| privileged and may or may not be disclosed to the parties, the court, or to professionals providing |
| services to the child or the family; |
| (v) The guardian ad litem shall meet with the child, conduct an investigation, and upon |
| request of the court, shall prepare an oral or written report that contains the procedural background |
| of the case, identification of all persons interviewed and other sources of information, a statement |
| of the child’s emotional, medical, educational, and social service needs, the child’s wishes, and |
| other factors relevant to the court’s determination regarding the best interests of the child; |
| (vi) Any written report of the guardian ad litem shall be marked as a full exhibit in the |
| proceedings, subject to cross-examination; |
| (vii) If the guardian ad litem requests confidential healthcare information and consent is |
| withheld, he or she shall apply to the court for leave to obtain such information after compliance |
| with § 5-37.3-6.1; |
| (viii) The guardian ad litem shall be given notice of and should appear at all proceedings |
| in family court that affect the interests of the child; |
| (ix) A person serving as a guardian ad litem under this section acts as the court’s agent and |
| is entitled to quasi-judicial immunity for acts performed within the scope of the duties of the |
| guardian ad litem; |
| (x) The chief judge of the family court shall issue, through administrative orders, rules |
| governing the appointment and performance of guardians ad litem in domestic proceedings. |
| (2) After a decree for support has been entered, the court may, from time to time upon the |
| petition of either party, or by the state in accordance with subsection (c)(3) of this section, review |
| and alter its decree relative to the amount of support and the payment of it, and may make any |
| decree relative to it that it might have made in the original suit. The decree may be made retroactive |
| in the court’s discretion only to the date that notice of a petition to modify was given to the adverse |
| party if the court finds that a substantial change in circumstances has occurred; provided, that the |
| court shall set forth in its decision the specific findings of fact that show a substantial change in |
| circumstances and upon which findings of facts the court has decided to make the decree |
| retroactive. In modifying the order, incarceration may not be treated as voluntary unemployment |
| that would prevent the motion from being heard or result in a denial of the motion. The child support |
| order shall continue in full force and effect, by wage withholding, after the youngest child is |
| emancipated, and shall be applied towards any arrearage due and owing, as indicated on the child- |
| support computer system. Upon satisfaction of the arrears due and owing the child-support order |
| shall be automatically suspended and wage withholding terminated without the necessity of |
| returning to family court. |
| (3) When the department of human services, office of child support services, becomes |
| aware of the fact, through an electronic data exchange of information with the department of |
| corrections, or by any other means, that the noncustodial parent is or will be incarcerated for one |
| hundred eighty (180) days or more, the department may automatically file a motion to modify or a |
| motion for relief, to be heard before the court via a video conference hearing or other type of |
| hearing. A specific request for the filing of this motion need not be made in writing or otherwise |
| by the incarcerated, noncustodial parent, but the parent shall be notified of the hearing and provided |
| a meaningful opportunity to respond. The court shall schedule a hearing to determine the |
| noncustodial parent’s ability to pay, taking into consideration the assets and financial resources and |
| any benefits the noncustodial parent may be receiving, the length of the sentence, and shall modify |
| or suspend all child support orders, after setting forth in its decision specific findings of fact that |
| show circumstances upon which the court has decided to modify or suspend all child support orders |
| during the period of incarceration. Upon the obligor’s release, the department of human services, |
| office of child support services, shall file a motion for support, and a hearing shall be scheduled to |
| determine the obligor’s ability to begin paying child support pursuant to the child support |
| guidelines in effect. This section does not apply to those individuals who are serving a sentence for |
| criminal nonsupport in state or federal prison, or who are found to be in civil contempt for failure |
| to pay child support and incarcerated for that reason. Nothing herein prevents or otherwise prohibits |
| the court from denying any such motion if an obligor is serving a sentence for criminal nonsupport |
| in state or federal prison or is otherwise incarcerated after having been found to be in willful civil |
| contempt for failure to pay child support. |
| (d)(1) In a proceeding to enforce a child support order, or a spousal support order for a |
| custodial parent having custody of a minor child, the court or its magistrate may assign to the |
| obligee such tangible personal property of the obligor that will be sufficient to satisfy the child or |
| spousal support arrearage owed. The court or its magistrate, after a hearing, shall establish the |
| amount of the child or spousal support arrearage, and the nature and value of the tangible personal |
| property. To effect the assignment, the court or its magistrate may order the obligor to execute and |
| deliver the documents of title that may be necessary to complete the transfer of title to the property, |
| and may order the obligor to deliver possession of the property to the obligee. Whenever the obligor |
| fails to comply with the order assigning the property, the order of assignment shall be regarded as |
| a judgment vesting title to the property in the obligor as fully and completely as if the obligor had |
| executed and delivered the documents of title. |
| (2) Any order for child support issued by the family court shall contain a provision |
| requiring either or both parents owing a duty of support to a child to obtain health insurance |
| coverage for the child when coverage is available to the parent or parents through their employment |
| without cost or at a reasonable cost. “Reasonable cost” shall be defined in accordance with |
| guidelines adopted by administrative order of the family court in conjunction with the child support |
| guidelines. |
| (3) Any existing child support orders may be modified in accordance with this subsection |
| unless the court makes specific written findings of fact that take into consideration the best interests |
| of the child and conclude that a child support order or medical order would be unjust or |
| inappropriate in a particular case. |
| (4) In addition, the national medical support notice shall be issued with respect to all orders |
| issued, enforced, or modified on or after October 1, 2002, in accordance with chapter 29 of this |
| title15. The notice shall inform the employer of provisions in the child support order, for healthcare |
| coverage for the child, and contain instructions on how to implement this coverage. In lieu of the |
| court ordering the noncustodial parent to obtain or maintain healthcare coverage for the child, the |
| court may order the noncustodial parent to contribute a weekly cash amount towards the medical |
| premium for healthcare coverage paid by the state of Rhode Island and/or the custodial parent. The |
| method to determine a reasonable weekly amount shall be addressed in the family court |
| administrative order pertaining to the child support guidelines. |
| (e) In a proceeding to establish support, the court in its discretion may, after opportunity |
| for a hearing, issue a temporary order for child support payable into the registry of the court and to |
| be held pending entry of judgment. In the event of a final adjudication requiring no payment or |
| payments in an amount less than those payments that have been made pursuant to a temporary order |
| under this section, the defendant shall be entitled to a refund of all or a portion of the amounts paid. |
| (f) In any proceeding to establish support, or in any case in which an obligor owes past- |
| due support, for a child or children receiving public assistance pursuant to chapter 5.1 of title 40, |
| the court or its magistrate, upon a finding that an able-bodied absent parent obligor is unemployed, |
| underemployed, or lacks sufficient income or resources from which to make payment of support |
| equal to the public assistance payment for the child or children, or is unable to pay the arrearages |
| in accordance with a payment plan, may order that parent to perform unpaid community service for |
| at least twenty (20) hours per week through community service placements arranged and supervised |
| by the department of human services or to participate in any work activities that the court deems |
| appropriate. The performance of community service shall not be a basis for retroactive suspension |
| of arrears due and owing. |
| (g)(1) In any proceeding to establish support for a minor child whose adjudicated parent is |
| a minor (minor-parent), the court or its magistrate may order a grandparent of the minor child to |
| reimburse the department of human services in an amount not to exceed the total amount of cash |
| assistance benefits paid to or for the minor child pursuant to chapter 5.1 of title 40 until the minor- |
| parent reaches the age of eighteen (18), less any payment made to the department by the minor |
| parent. |
| (2) The obligation of reimbursement for the minor child shall be the joint and several |
| responsibility of the minor parent and the grandparent(s) until the minor parent reaches the age of |
| eighteen (18); provided, that each joint obligor shall have a right of contribution against each joint |
| obligor, which right shall be enforceable by an action in the family court. |
| (h)(1) All support orders established or modified in the state on or after October 1, 1998, |
| shall be recorded with the Rhode Island family court department of human services child-support- |
| enforcement computer system, which maintains the official registry of support orders entered in |
| accordance with applicable administrative orders issued by the Rhode Island family court. The |
| support order shall be recorded whether or not services are being provided under the IV-D state |
| plan. |
| (2) The obligee to a paternity or child support proceeding shall be required to file with the |
| family court, upon the entry of the order, the appropriate form as provided by family court that |
| includes the full name of the parties, residential and mailing address, telephone number, drivers |
| license number, social security number, and the name, address, and telephone number of the |
| employer. The form shall also include the full order amount and date and amount of arrearages if |
| any, the name of the child(ren), their date of birth, address, social security number, and any other |
| information as required by administrative order. |
| (3) After this, each party is required to file an amended form, whenever any of the |
| information contained on the original form has been changed in any way, within ten (10) days of |
| the change. The information shall be entered in the child-support-enforcement computer system |
| within five (5) business days of receipt of the amended form. |
| (i) In any subsequent child-support-enforcement action between the parties, upon sufficient |
| showing that diligent effort has been made to ascertain the location of such a party, the court may |
| deem state due process requirements for notice and service of process to be met with respect to the |
| party, upon service by first class mail or, where appropriate, by service as specified in the Rhode |
| Island rules of procedure for domestic relations for the family court of Rhode Island, of written |
| notice to the most recent residential or employer address of record. |
| [See § 12-1-15 of the General Laws.] |
| SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC004435 |
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