I was not working but still CSA wants money
I have been told that i owe arrears of £6500. I have tried time and time again to tell them i do not owe arrears because i was not working and unemployed during this period. They told me that because i did not contact them the arrears would still stand, totally stupid – no money but have to pay support.
Now i am working and they take £84 p/w. I have asked them for a breakdown and that will take 12-20 weeks. Well, that is how long i waited and then was told they had not started it. Now been told will start again and will have to wait longer.
I have previous assessments saying i do not owe anything due to no income, so where have these arrears come from?
It’s totally stupid and no help out there unless you have money to be able to pay.
10 thoughts on “I was not working but still CSA wants money”
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This is just another example of the discrimination against fathers imposed by the CSA.
If your income increases and you fail to tell them your increased liability is backdated.
If your income decreases and you fail to tell them then your decreased liability is not backdated.
Where is the fairness in that?
CSA would only say your in arrears if you were not on job seekers allowance, otherwise they would have recalculated it. Im not by any means sticking up for CSA, i think they are rubbish. But I know that when my Ex has been out of work for real, they simply take £5 per week from his job seekers allowance, via the Job Centre. So surely you must have proof your out of work, ie your papers that prove you were on job seekers or disability allowance. They should only work out arrears, if you were working and they base that about on 15 percent of your net pay! You need to reguarly keep in touch with CSA with updates, payslips, benefit details, its not just a service for the Resident parent.
Message to Broken Father – It is Fair. If a Single Parent, who gets benefits, gets a job or their part time job increases, they have to declare this to the DWP, otherwise payments get back dated for them too!! Its a fact. Deal with it and stop emailing everyone that fathers get the rough end of the deal. Its the children that are suffering.
Noush.
I am not emailing anyone, I am simply commenting on a public internet message board.
Why would you lie?
I meant leaving posts not emailing. No one is attacking Fathers, people are attacking CSA and NRP that get out of paying for their children. It is a fact that there is an actual law called FATHERS RIGHTS, out there, which means CSA dont push NRP to pay incase they get taken to court for harressment. An actual call centre operative at CSA told me so. Im not against fathers or NRP having rights at all, I just think that both parents should have equal rights in court and with CSA.
“It is a fact that there is an actual law called FATHERS RIGHTS!”
No there isn’t. You have been mis-informed.
http://www.classactionhero.co.uk/assist.htm
Re: Harassment – if you check the Harassment Act 1997 and subsequent revisions you will find that government departments pursuing terrorists, debtors, nefarious persons etc are exempt. This accounts for some of the appalling behaviour of individuals in, for example, the CSA, HMRC, Social Services. These people see themselves as beyond the law until, of course, they are pulled up short by victims who are sufficiently tenacious and knowledgeable. The situation is made so much worse by the apparently limited intellect of such individuals and their amoral approach to their working lives. As an advocate for vulnerable people I feel a great sense of accomplishment when I am able to get to grips with bullying state employees.
i have the same case i have arrears THEY HAVE DUG UP from 17 years ago , when i told them i was unemployed they said prove it, i did after a 6 month process( data protection etc special request to inland revenue etc) and now they are saying sorry you should have told us 17 years ago and you only had 28 days to appeal ! so you appeal is rejected cos ur 17 years too late…… wtf are these morons on…
To sapman: the CSA always play the ‘out of time’ card. If you can show that they made a mistake at the time (used wrong data etc) you could be in with a chance. The out-of-time rules are there to limit the time in which new evidence can be brought to bear. It is not there to protect them against their mistakes which you have to discover within a certain amount of time. In a long running case (alleged arrears dating back 8 years) which I am now concluding I discovered their errors only when I received all personal data under the Data Protection Act 1998. The case is now with the independent case examiner. Good luck – it can be a long battle but it’s winnable.