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Yes, it is a federal crime to willfully fail to pay support if the child and noncustodial parent live in different states. The parent can be charged with a felony if the past-due child support exceeds $5,000, or is more than one year delinquent.
Though there is no strict age guideline under Alaska law, children are not generally mature enough to make reasoned decisions about which parent to live with until they are teenagers. Even then, a judge will look at the reason the teenager is expressing a preference for one parent over another.
The parents cannot agree to waive child support or to have a specific amount that is lower than the calculated amount. The parents can agree on what is reasonable income to use for a parent for the calculation which should be based on their earnings and current and past employment history.
But if your child is still in high school, or in an equivalent vocational school when he or she turns 18, your child support responsibility continues until your child graduates or turns 19 years old ? whichever comes first. Your child support obligation ends if your child dies or is emancipated.
In Alaska in situations where one parent has primary custody, child support is based upon the earnings of the noncustodial parent. If there is shared or divided custody, the child support is based on the income of both parties.
The law says that parents must support their child from the time the child is born until the child turns 18. If you have a child?even if you didn't know about a child that you fathered?you can be required to pay child support from the time of the child's birth.
Rule 90.3 says that the portion of an adjusted annual income over $126,000 will not be used in calculating the child support amount, unless the other parent presents evidence showing the higher income should be used in the calculation. If the cap is used, the AI will be $126,000 for the calculation.
That court rule says that the noncustodial parent of one child should pay 20% of his or her adjusted income to support one child. Adjusted income means earning after deductions for taxes, union dues, retirement deductions and other mandatory deductions.