LD 986
pg. 54
Page 53 of 77 An Act To Enact the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act Amendments of 1996 an... Page 55 of 77
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LR 467
Item 1

 
formality of "service" defeats the whole purpose of direct
income withholding across state lines.

 
In sum, the process contemplated in this article is direct
"notification" of an employer in another State of a
withholding order without the involvement of initiating or
responding tribunals. Therefore, receipt of a copy of a
withholding order by facsimile, regular first class mail,
registered or certified mail, or any other type of direct
notice is sufficient to provide the requisite notice to
trigger direct income withholding in the absence of a contest
by the employee-obligor.

 
The 2001 amendments acknowledge that this process is now
widely used by not only child support enforcement agencies,
but also by private collection agencies or private attorneys
acting on behalf of obligees.

 
Sec. 30. 19-A MRSA §3101-B, as enacted by PL 1997, c. 669, §21, is
amended to read:

 
§3101-B. Employer's compliance with multiple income-
withholding

 
orders

 
If an employer receives multiple 2 or more income-
withholding orders for the same obligor, the employer
satisfies the terms of the multiple orders if the employer
complies with the laws of the state of the obligor's principal
place of employment when establishing the priorities for
withholding and allocating income for multiple 2 or more child
support obligees.

 
Uniform Comment

 
(This is Section 503 of the Uniform Act.)

 
Consistent with the Act's general problem-solving approach,
the employer is directed to deal with multiple income orders
for multiple families in the same manner as required by local
law for orders of the forum State.

 
Sec. 31. 19-A MRSA §3101-F, sub-§1, as enacted by PL 1997, c. 669,
§21, is amended to read:

 
1. Contesting the validity or enforcement of an order. An
obligor may contest the validity or enforcement of an income-
withholding order issued in another state and received
directly by an employer in this State by registering the order
in a tribunal of this State and filing a contest to that order
as
provided in subchapter 6, or otherwise contesting the order in


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