New section 28C: Imposition of regular payments condition
84.This section provides for the imposition of a regular payments condition. This condition requires a non-resident parent who has made an application for a variation to continue paying maintenance regularly while the application is being considered. This is intended to ensure that children receive maintenance regularly and reliably and that unnecessary debts are not built up during the variation process.
85.New section 28C(1) provides that, where the Secretary of State has made an interim decision pending the determination of a non-resident parent’s variation application, and has not rejected the application at the preliminary sift stage, he may require the parent in question to make regular, ongoing payments of maintenance as a pre-condition of having the application considered. This is called a “regular payments condition”.
86.New section 28C(2) provides that the rate may either be at the rate of the existing interim decision or at a lesser rate which might anticipate the effect of a successful variation application.
87.New section 28C(3) provides that, in these circumstances, the Secretary of State will notify all the persons with care (and child, if the applicant for the maintenance calculation) concerned, and the non-resident parent, of the imposition of the condition and the effect of failing to comply with it.
88.New section 28C(4) provides that the regular payments condition will cease to have effect either when, in response to the variation application, the Secretary of State replaces his interim maintenance decision with a decision under section 11 (whether he agrees to variation or not) or where the variation application is withdrawn.
89.New section 28C(5), (6) and (7) provide that, if the Secretary of State determines that the non-resident parent has failed to comply with the regular payment condition, the Secretary of State may refuse to consider the variation application and proceed to replace the existing interim decision on the basis that the variation application has failed. Regulations will provide for deciding what constitutes a “regular payment”. For example, there will need to be scope for taking some account of occasions where payment is unavoidably late, for example, where a bank fails to operate a direct debit. It is intended that where the Secretary of State is not satisfied that the regular payments condition has been met, progress on the variation application may be suspended to allow the non-resident parent the further opportunity to comply. If within the period of a further calendar month, he has still failed to do so without good reason, the application will fail. In this event, the Secretary of State will not vary the maintenance calculation and will notify all the persons with care (or child) and the non-resident parent accordingly. In these circumstances, the non-resident parent will have to make a fresh application if he again wishes to have special circumstances considered.
90.Subsections (3) and (4) of section 5 of this Act make amendments to the wording of sections 28D and 28E of the 1991 Act (which deal with determination of applications and matters to be taken into account, respectively), substituting references to departure directions with references to variations. With respect to section 28D, the intention is that where the variation application has not failed, been withdrawn, or been rejected at any preliminary stage, the Secretary of State may elect either to determine the application himself or, exceptionally, to refer it direct to the appeal tribunal for determination. This represents no change from the options available to the Secretary of State under the departures scheme. Cases which the Secretary of State might refer to the tribunal are those which are particularly complex or contentious and which he feels unable to resolve.
91.Subsection (5) substitutes section 28F of the 1991 Act (which relates to the determination of departure applications) with equivalent wording – with some modifications – relating to the determination of applications for variations.
