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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Pinto
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01-25-08
HB
SHORT TITLE Navajo Nation Child Support Payment Tracking
SM 12
ANALYST Padilla
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Memorial 12 expresses the support of the New Mexico Senate for federal changes to
improve the Navajo Nation’s ability to collect and track child support payments. The New
Mexico Congressional Delegation is encouraged to take appropriate steps on behalf of the
Navajo Nation to increase its effectiveness in child support collection and enforcement. Copies
of this Memorial shall be transmitted to all members of the State’s Congressional Delegation and
to the President of the Navajo Nation, the Speaker of the House of the Navajo Nation, and the
Secretary of Human Services.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Memorial declares as follows:
The Navajo Nation is the largest Native American Tribe within the boundaries of the
United States ad is larger than ten of the 50 states. Almost half of the total Navajo
population is comprised of children under the age of 18. Sixty-one percent of Navajo
grandparents are responsible for grandchildren under the age of eighteen.
Over half of the population of the Navajo Nation lives below the poverty level, and over
40 percent of persons on the Navajo Nation are unemployed.
Collecting child support for children whose parents are able to pay child support may be
critical in the health and education of a good portion of Navajo children.
The federal government granted the Navajo Nation and 39 other tribes the ability to
collect child support, establish paternity and enforce child and medical support
obligations, but did not grant the Navajo Nation access to information essential for
investigation and enforcement.
The federal government has suggested that states charge the Navajo Nation for access of
important personnel files of potential payers of child support.
The Navajo Nation has suggested five changes the United States Congress can make to
improve the ability to collect child support for Navajo Nation members.
The Navajo Nation has collected almost three million dollars ($3,000,000) in past-due
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Senate Memorial 12 – Page
2
child support and received more than 10,000 acknowledgements of paternity for Navajo
children.
The Navajo Nation Department of Child Support Enforcement has collected a total of
seven million two hundred forty-eight thousand two hundred thirty-seven dollars
($7,248,237) in child support during fiscal year 2007.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Memorial states that New Mexico’s Congressional Delegation be urged to take the
following steps to improve child support collection on the Navajo Nation as follows:
A.
Eliminate the federal prohibition on the Navajo Nation’s ability to purchase and develop
its own tribal child support computer system and, therefore remove the need for the
Navajo Nation to pay another government, such as the State of New Mexico, in order to
get case information on Navajo residents living in New Mexico.
B.
Allow the Navajo Nation to access, “locate, and enforcement tools," directly, removing
the need to contract with other governments to provide passport denial or revocation,
multi-state financial institution data matching, the parent locator service, tax offset data
and demonstration grants made available by the federal government.
C.
Encourage the federal government to complete its design of a model tribal child support
system to increase efficiency and effectiveness.
D.
Reduce the percentage of funds required from the Navajo Nation in order to match
federal funds so that the Navajo Nation can receive federal funds to help collect child
support even during time of declining employment.
E.
Provide the Navajo Nation an appeal of the federal determinations of whether a hardship
is severe enough to permit a waiver of strict rules governing required tribal matching
funds, and add a possible waiver into federal language for extreme economic problems
instead of allowing a waiver only for natural disasters, including extreme weather and
calamities such as hurricanes and earthquakes.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The consequences of not enacting this bill will result in lack of support from the Senate for
federal changes to improve the Navajo Nation’s ability to collect and track child support
payments.
JRP/mt