MARYLAND EXTENDS CHILD SUPPORT
by
Stuart Muntzing Skok
The 2002 Maryland
General Assembly passed Senate Bill 657 to extend
child support obligations beyond the age of 18,
if the child is enrolled in high school, until the
child either graduates from high school or attains
the age of 19, whichever comes first. This law amends
Md. Code, Article 1, § 24 to change the age of majority
and Md. Code, Family Law Article, § 5-203 (b) to
change the powers and duties of parents.
Prior to the passing
of this new law, Maryland was 1 of only 7 states
which still required termination of support when
a child turned 18, even if the child was still in
high school. The majority of states, such
as Virginia, have rewritten their statutes to extend
child support until graduation from high school
or attaining the age of 19. Some states extend
child support beyond graduation from high school,
until the age 19 or 21. In the District of
Columbia, the age of the majority is 21, thereby
requiring child support to be paid until age 21.
The new Maryland
law, effective as of October 1, 2002, provides that
the passage of the law will be "considered to be
a material change in circumstances for purposes
of modifying a child support order issued before
the effective date as of this Act." Therefore
this law will apply retroactively to all child support
obligations in effect prior to October 1st.
Once the law is in effect, custodial parents will
have the right to seek an extension of support if
their child has not yet graduated high school or
turned age 19.
The rationale for
extending child support until graduation from high
school has to do with protecting a child's education.
If a child has to secure a part-time job or drop
out of high school to make up for the lack of support,
that child's education and career opportunities
may be put at risk. Or perhaps the child may
no longer be able to participate in extracurricular
activities if the fees for such activities were
no longer affordable without child support.
Often parents will delay enrollment of children
in kindergarten because of a late birthday.
Other children may be delayed in the education due
to illness of learning difficulties. These
children will turn age 18 prior to the completion
of high school and, by effect under the old Maryland
law, would lose the support they may need prior
to graduating high school.
The lead sponsors
of the Bill were Delegate Paul Carlson in the House
and Senator Ira Ruben in the Senate, both from Montgomery
County. This Bill has been introduced in the
Maryland legislature without success for many years
and the passage now is viewed by many as a long-needed
protection for children.
Stuart Muntzing
Skok is an attorney with the law firm of Gimmel,
Weiman, Ersek, Blomberg & Skok, P.A., in Gaithersburg,
Maryland. She concentrates her practice in
family law.