HB 244 - PATERNITY; CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT MS. STRAUBE discussed HB 244. This is about the administrative establishment of paternity. New federal guidelines require that 75 percent of all child support orders be established within six months of us getting the information. Before we can establish an order, we must establish paternity. What that really means is that we have to establish paternity and establish the order within six months. Because of court backlogs, it often takes them six months just to get to the paper work and to rubber stamp what we have done. Obviously we can shave off six months of the process if we were able to administratively establish paternity. We would use the same standards as the court does now, and the same standards we use to even send the cases to the court. We would provide full due process to those affected by the informal conference, and judicial review if they so desire. Basically, again, we are just faced with a really horrible dilemma of trying to live within federal time lines and the process is taking way too long. We believe for yearly general fund investment of approximately $73,000 we can bring in $850,000 per year in our share of AFDC reimbursements to the state. As far as the fiscal note goes, as usual, most of the costs of our programs are paid for by the federal government. They have also been asking for states to take a look at finding any administrative process that will speed up everything, as opposed to having the courts do it. MS. STRAUBE explained that right now, if a child is born in wedlock, and you have the husband and wife both say that the child is not the husband's, and you have a third party who says the child is theirs, and they all three agree, they have to go to court right now, they cannot do affidavits to change paternity. This would allow us to accept the affidavits of all three parties involved as to who the real father is. This happens often enough to be a big deal. MS. MAY added that Alaska is one of the states which has an administrative process for some portions of the child support enforcement system. It is working quite well. When this has been discussed with obligor groups, they are in favor of having administrative establishment of paternity so that they do not have to go through the court system. REPRESENTATIVE DAVIS made amotion to move HB 244 out of committee with individual recommendations and zero fiscal notes. Hearing no objection, it was so ordered.