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Family Support Act with Unofficial Annotations, 27 FAM. L.Q. 91 | (1993), and John J. Sampson, Uniform Interstate Family Support | Act (1996), Statutory Text, Prefatory Note, and Commissioners | Comments (with More Unofficial Annotations), 32 FAM. L.Q. 385 | (1998). |
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| In accordance with the congressional mandate, by 1998 all U.S. | jurisdictions had enacted UIFSA. Thus, the several states have | had between four and eight years of experience with the | various iterations of the Act. Moreover, there has been an | extraordinary amount of comprehensive training about the Act | by the child support enforcement agencies throughout the | nation and associated agencies and organizations of those | agencies, e.g.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, | Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE); National Child | Support Enforcement Association (NCSEA); Eastern Regional | Interstate Child Support Association (ERICSA); and, Western | Interstate Child Support Enforcement Council (WICSEC). As a | consequence, the provisions of UIFSA are far more familiar to | those who must administer it than ever was true of its | predecessor acts, URESA and RURESA. |
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| In 2000 the child-support community again requested that the | Act be reviewed and amendments suggested as appropriate. In | response to this request, the Conference leadership appointed | a new Drafting Committee (the earlier Committee had been | disbanded). A single meeting in March 2001 led to significant | substantive and procedural amendments that ultimately were | approved by the Conference at its Annual Meeting in August, | 2001. None of the amendments, however, make a fundamental | change in the policies and procedures established in UIFSA | 1996. The widespread acceptance of UIFSA is due primarily to | the fact that representatives of the child support enforcement | community mentioned above participated actively in the | drafting of each version of the Act, including the amendments | of 2001. In sum, although two sets of amendments have been | propounded since the initial 1992 version of UIFSA, its basic | principles have remained constant. |
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| II. BASIC PRINCIPLES OF UIFSA |
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| 1. RECIPROCITY NOT REQUIRED BETWEEN STATES. Reciprocal laws, | the hallmark of RURESA and URESA, are not required under | UIFSA. Although reciprocity became irrelevant in this country | with the universal adoption of UIFSA, reciprocity continues to | be an issue with regard to the recognition and enforcement of | support orders of foreign countries and their political | subdivisions, Sections 102(21), 104, 308. Respect and | tolerance for the laws of other states and nations in order to | facilitate child support |
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