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tribunal of the child's current home State. If that State has | not issued a support order, Subsection (b)(2) looks next to the | order most recently issued. Finally, Subsection (b)(3) provides | that if none of the existing multiple orders are entitled to be | denominated as the controlling order because none of the | preceding priorities apply, the forum tribunal is directed to | issue a new order, given that it has personal jurisdiction over | the obligor and obligee. The new order becomes the controlling | order, establishes the continuing, exclusive jurisdiction of the | tribunal, and fixes the support obligation and its nonmodifiable | aspects, primarily duration of support, see Sections 604 and | 611(c), infra. The rationale for creating a new order to replace | existing multiple orders is that there is no valid reason to | prefer the terms of any one of the multiple orders over another | in the absence of a fact situation described in Subsections | (b)(1) or (b)(2). |
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| As originally promulgated, UIFSA did not come to grips with | whether existing multiple orders issued by different States | might be entitled to full faith and credit without regard to | the determination of the controlling order under the Act. The | drafters took the position that state law, however uniform, | could not interfere with the ultimate interpretation of a | constitutional directive. Fortunately, this question has | almost certainly been mooted by the 1996 amendment to 28 | U.S.C. Section 1738B, Full Faith and Credit for Child Support | Orders. Congress incorporated the multiple order recognition | provisions of Section 207 of UIFSA into FFCCSOA virtually word | for word in the PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY AND WORK OPPORTUNITY | RECONCILIATION ACT OF 1996. Pub. L. 104-193, Aug. 22, 1996, | 110 Stat. 2221. |
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| It is not altogether clear whether the terms of UIFSA apply to | a strictly intrastate case; that is, a situation in which | multiple child support orders have been issued by multiple | tribunals of a single State and all parties and the child | continue to reside in that State. This is not an uncommon | situation, often traceable to the intrastate applicability of | RURESA. A literal reading of the statutory language suggests | the section applies. Further, FFCCSOA does not make a | distinction regarding the tribunals that issued multiple | orders. If multiple orders have been issued by different | tribunals in the home State of the child, most likely the most | recent will be recognized as the controlling order, | notwithstanding the fact that UIFSA Section 207(b)(2)(B) and | FFCCSOA 42 U.S.C. Section 1738B(f)(3) literally do not apply. | At the very least, this section, together with FFCCSOA, | provide a template for resolving such conflicts. |
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| Subsection (c), added in 1996, clarifies that any party or a | support enforcement agency may request a tribunal of the forum | State to identify the controlling order. That party is | directed |
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