LRB-4519/1
PJK:cmh:hmh
1999 - 2000 LEGISLATURE
March 29, 2000 - Introduced by Senator George, cosponsored by Representative
Musser, by request of Jan Raz of Hales Corner. Referred to Committee on
Judiciary and Consumer Affairs.
SB520,2,2 1An Act to repeal 767.51 (4m), 767.51 (5) (intro.) and 767.51 (5d); to renumber
2and amend
767.32 (2); to amend 46.10 (14) (b), 46.10 (14) (c) (intro.), 46.10
3(14) (d), 46.247, 48.30 (6), 48.31 (7), 48.33 (4m) (intro.), 48.357 (5m), 48.363 (1),
4301.12 (14) (b), 301.12 (14) (c) (intro.), 301.12 (14) (d), 301.12 (14) (g), 767.085
5(2) (b), 767.085 (2m) (a) 2., 767.085 (2m) (b), 767.23 (1n), 767.23 (1n), 767.25 (1j),
6767.25 (1m) (intro.), 767.25 (1n), 767.295 (2) (c), 767.295 (2) (c), 767.32 (1) (b)
72., 767.32 (1) (b) 4., 767.32 (1) (b) 4., 767.32 (1) (b) 5., 767.32 (2m), 767.32 (2m),
8767.45 (7), 767.45 (7), 767.455 (6), 767.455 (6), 767.477 (2), 767.477 (2), 767.51
9(4m), 767.51 (5) (intro.), 767.51 (5d), 767.62 (4) (d) 1., 767.62 (4) (e) (intro.),
10767.62 (4) (f), 938.30 (6), 938.31 (7), 938.33 (4m) (intro.), 938.357 (5m), 938.363
11(1), 948.22 (4) (b), 948.22 (7) (bm) and 948.22 (7) (bm); to repeal and recreate
1249.22 (9) and 767.62 (4); and to create 13.84, 767.251, 767.32 (1) (b) 5., 767.32
13(1) (b) 6., 767.32 (2) (b) and 767.325 (5r) of the statutes; relating to: calculating

1child support and creating committees to review the method of calculating child
2support.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Under current law, in divorces, paternity actions and other actions affecting the
family in which child support is ordered, including actions to revise child support,
the court must determine child support payments by using the percentage standard
established by administrative rule by the department of workforce development.
The percentage standard is a percentage of the payer's gross monthly income. The
percentage of income that the child support payer must pay varies with the number
of children to be supported. A payer must pay 17% of his or her gross income for one
child, 25% for two children, 29% for three children, 31% for four children and 34%
for five or more children. Except in certain situations, the calculation of child support
does not take into account the income of the payee or the amount of time that the
payer cares for the child during periods of physical placement ordered by the court.
The rules provide for a special way of calculating child support for a
shared-time payer. If the payer has physical placement of a child between 31% and
40% of the time, based on the number of times per year that the parent provides
overnight care for the child, the rules provide for a specified reduction in the amount
of child support that the payer would be required to pay by using the percentage
standard alone. (For example, a payer with physical placement of a child for 37% of
the time pays 76.69% of the amount that he or she would pay by using the percentage
standard alone.) Also under the rules, if one parent has physical placement of a child
between 41% and 59% of the time and the other parent has physical placement of the
child for the remainder of the time, based on the number of times that each provides
overnight care, the amount of child support that each parent would pay by using the
percentage standard alone is calculated, reduced by a specified percentage
depending on the amount of time each parent has physical placement of the child and
compared with the other parent's similarly calculated and reduced amount of child
support. (For example, a parent with physical placement of a child for 46% of the
time would be obligated to pay 46.72% of the amount of child support that he or she
would be obligated to pay by using the percentage standard alone while the other
parent with physical placement for 54% of the time would be obligated to pay 20.08%
of the amount calculated by using the percentage standard alone.) The parent with
the larger calculated and reduced amount must pay the difference as child support
to the other parent.
The rules also provide for a special way of calculating child support for a
serial-family payer and for the imputation of income to a payer if the court
determines that the payer has unproductive assets or has diverted income into assets
to avoid paying child support. If a person who is already obligated to pay child
support is later ordered to pay support for another child, from a later marriage or a
paternity adjudication, for example, the amount of support that the person must pay
under the later order is calculated by first reducing the payer's gross income by the

amount under the first child support order and then applying the percentage
standard to that reduced income amount. The income imputation involves
multiplying the net value of the assets by the current six-month treasury bill rate
or any other reasonable rate.
Under current law, a court is authorized, upon the request of a party, to modify
the amount of child support that would be ordered by using the percentage standard.
The court must find that use of the percentage standard is unfair to the child or either
of the parties after considering a number of factors, such as the earning capacity of
each parent, the desirability that the custodian remain in the home as a full-time
parent and extraordinary travel expenses incurred in exercising physical placement
rights.
This bill changes the method of determining the amount of child support to be
paid in actions affecting the family, including actions to revise child support. Under
the bill, the court must determine each parent's gross income and percentage of
physical placement with the child. The bill specifies what the court must include in
income, what the court must exclude from income and what the court must deduct
from income in determining each parent's gross income. The bill allows the court to
include in a parent's gross income wages that the court determines were paid to other
family members for the purpose of diverting income. The court may impute income
to a parent if the court determines that the parent has concealed or transferred
assets for the purpose of avoiding child support; that the gross incomes of the parents
will not adequately provide for the child and there are unproductive assets; or that
a parent who is able to work is not working at least 40 hours per week and work is
available in the parent's community. The court determines the percentage of
physical placement that a parent has on the basis of the number of days, rather than
overnights, that a parent cares for the child in a year. If both parents care for the
child on the same day, the court determines the amount of time that each parent
cares for the child on that day on a basis that reflects each parent's proportionate
share of the total expenses incurred for the child by both parents on that day.
After the court determines each parent's gross income and percentage of
physical placement, the court determines each parent's gross monthly child support
obligation. How that obligation is determined depends on the combined gross
monthly income of the two parents. If the combined gross monthly income of the two
parents is equal to or less than $4,000, each parent's gross monthly child support
obligation is equal to the percentage standard under current law. That is, if there
is one child, each parent's gross monthly child support obligation is 17% of his or her
gross monthly income. If the combined gross monthly income of the two parents is
greater than $4,000, determining a parent's gross monthly child support obligation
is a multi-step process. The court must first determine the combined gross monthly
child support obligation of the two parents. For combined gross monthly incomes
that do not exceed $20,000, the combined gross monthly child support obligation of
the two parents equals a specified amount, depending on the number of children,
plus a specified percentage of the combined gross monthly income of the two parents
above $4,000. For combined gross monthly incomes that exceed $20,000, the
combined gross monthly child support obligation of the two parents equals a

specified amount, depending on the number of children, plus a specified percentage
of the combined gross monthly income of the two parents above $20,000. The court
must then determine what percentage each parent's gross monthly income is of the
parents' combined gross monthly income. Each parent's gross monthly child support
obligation is the same percentage of the parents' combined gross monthly child
support obligation as that parent's gross monthly income is of the parents' combined
gross monthly income. Just as under current law, a parent's gross monthly child
support obligation is reduced if the parent is subject to another child support order
or is otherwise legally obligated to support one or more other children. Under the
bill, however, a parent's gross monthly child support obligation is reduced by a
specified percentage, depending on the number of other children being supported,
rather than by the amount of support being paid for the other children.
After determining each parent's gross monthly child support obligation, the
court determines which parent pays support to the other parent and the amount of
support to be paid. If the court grants a parent fewer than 55 days of physical
placement in a year, that parent pays the amount of his or her gross monthly child
support obligation to the other parent. If the court grants at least 55 days of physical
placement to each parent, the court multiplies each parent's gross monthly child
support obligation by 1.4 and by the other parent's percentage of physical placement.
The resulting amount is each parent's net monthly child support obligation. The
parent with the larger net monthly child support obligation pays to the other parent
the difference between the two net monthly child support obligations. As under
current law, the court may upon request modify the amount of support that would
be determined by using the method of calculating child support that is provided for
in the bill, after considering the same factors as under current law and upon finding
that use of the new method is unfair to the child or either of the parties.
The bill also makes a couple of changes related to revisions of child support
orders. Under current law, the court may revise the amount of child support under
an order only if the court finds that there has been a substantial change in
circumstances. The court must use the percentage standard in revising the amount.
The bill requires the new method of calculating child support to be used in a revision.
Current law specifies a number of situations that constitute rebuttable
presumptions of a substantial change in circumstances sufficient to justify a
revision. Among those situations is the expiration of 33 months since the date of
entry of the last support order, including a revision, unless the order is expressed as
a percentage of income rather than as a specific amount. The bill changes this
provision so that the expiration of 33 months since the date of entry of the last
support order, including a revision, constitutes a rebuttable presumption of a
substantial change in circumstances, regardless of how the order is expressed, if the
amount of child support calculated by using the new method exceeds the amount
under the last order by at least 10% of the amount under the last order or by at least
$40 per month. The bill also adds a new situation that constitutes a rebuttable
presumption of a substantial change in circumstances: if the amount of child support
last ordered was based on the amount of physical placement awarded to the parties,
the payer has consistently failed to exercise his or her physical placement rights and

the amount of child support under a revised order, using the new method and based
on the actual amount of physical placement that the payer has in the past exercised,
exceeds the amount under the last order by at least 15% of the amount under the last
order or by at least $60 per month. Additionally, the bill requires a court to delay,
until at least 30 days after an order modifying child support is signed, a decision on
a parent's motion to modify physical placement if the court determines that the
parent is seeking the physical placement modification in response to a motion to
modify child support. The delay does not apply, however, if the parent seeking the
physical placement modification presents any credible evidence that the current
allocation of physical placement will cause irreparable harm to the child.
The bill requires the department of workforce development to prepare and
make available to judges and other court personnel computer software, as well as
tables and instruction manuals, to help with the calculation of child support by the
new method provided in the bill.
Finally, federal law requires each state to review, and revise if appropriate, its
child support guidelines at least once every four years to ensure that they result in
the determination of appropriate child support amounts. The bill requires the joint
legislative council to create a child support review committee by April 1, 2002, and
by April 1 every four years after that, to review the adequacy for supporting children
of the new method of calculating child support provided in the bill. The committee
must be composed of representatives of the judicial, executive and legislative
branches of state government, of the state bar and of advocates for children, child
support payers and child support payees. Each committee created must report its
findings and legislative recommendations to the joint legislative council and to the
federal department of health and human services.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB520, s. 1 1Section 1. 13.84 of the statutes is created to read:
SB520,5,7 213.84 Child support review committee. (1) By April 1, 2002, and by April
31 every 4 years thereafter, the joint legislative council shall create a child support
4review committee to review the adequacy to support children of the method of
5calculating child support under s. 767.251. The committee shall consider current
6research and economic and case data, as well as any other relevant resources, on the
7cost of, and expenditures that are necessary for, raising children.
SB520,6,3
1(2) The committee shall be composed of representatives of the state's judicial
2branch, legislative branch, executive branch and state bar, and of advocates for
3children, child support payers and child support payees.
SB520,6,7 4(3) No later than January 1, 2003, and no later than January 1 every 4 years
5thereafter, the committee shall report its findings and legislative and other
6recommendations to the joint legislative council and to the federal department of
7health and human services.
SB520, s. 2 8Section 2. 46.10 (14) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,6,179 46.10 (14) (b) Except as provided in par. (c) and subject to par. (cm), liability
10of a parent specified in sub. (2) or s. 46.03 (18) for the care and maintenance of the
11parent's minor child who has been placed by a court order under s. 48.355 or 48.357
12in a residential, nonmedical facility such as a group home, foster home, treatment
13foster home or child caring institution shall be determined by the court by using the
14percentage standard established by the department of workforce development under
15s. 49.22 (9)
method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 and by applying the
16percentage standard method in the manner established by the department under s.
1746.247.
SB520, s. 3 18Section 3. 46.10 (14) (c) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,6,2319 46.10 (14) (c) (intro.) Upon request by a parent, the court may modify the
20amount of child support payments determined under par. (b), subject to par. (cm), if,
21after considering the following factors, the court finds by the greater weight of the
22credible evidence that the use of the percentage standard method of calculating child
23support under s. 767.251
is unfair to the child or to either of the parents:
SB520, s. 4 24Section 4. 46.10 (14) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,7,8
146.10 (14) (d) If the court finds under par. (c) that use of the percentage
2standard
method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 is unfair to the minor
3child or either of the parents, the court shall state in writing or on the record the
4amount of support that would be required by using the percentage standard method
5under s. 767.251
, the amount by which the court's order deviates from that amount,
6its reasons for finding that use of the percentage standard method under s. 767.251
7is unfair to the child or the parent, its reasons for the amount of the modification and
8the basis for the modification.
SB520, s. 5 9Section 5. 46.247 of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,7,18 1046.247 Application of method of calculating child support standard for
11certain children.
For purposes of determining child support under s. 46.10 (14) (b),
12the department shall promulgate rules related to the application of the standard
13established by the department of workforce development under s. 49.22 (9)
method
14under s. 767.251
to a child support obligation for the care and maintenance of a child
15who is placed by a court order under s. 48.355 or 48.357 in a residential, nonmedical
16facility. The rules shall take into account the needs of any person, including
17dependent children other than the child, whom either parent is legally obligated to
18support.
SB520, s. 6 19Section 6. 48.30 (6) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,8,1020 48.30 (6) If a petition is not contested, the court shall set a date for the
21dispositional hearing which allows reasonable time for the parties to prepare but is
22no more than 10 days after the plea hearing for a child who is held in secure custody
23and no more than 30 days after the plea hearing for a child or an expectant mother
24who is not held in secure custody. If it appears to the court that disposition of the case
25may include placement of the child outside the child's home, the court shall order the

1child's parent to provide a statement of income, assets, debts and living expenses to
2the court or the designated agency under s. 48.33 (1) at least 5 days before the
3scheduled date of the dispositional hearing or as otherwise ordered by the court. The
4clerk of court shall provide, without charge, to any parent ordered to provide a
5statement of income, assets, debts and living expenses a document setting forth the
6percentage standard established by the department of workforce development under
7s. 49.22 (9)
method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 and the manner of
8its application established by the department of health and family services under s.
946.247 and listing the factors that a court may consider under s. 46.10 (14) (c). If all
10parties consent the court may proceed immediately with the dispositional hearing.
SB520, s. 7 11Section 7. 48.31 (7) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,9,312 48.31 (7) At the close of the fact-finding hearing, the court shall set a date for
13the dispositional hearing which allows a reasonable time for the parties to prepare
14but is no more than 10 days after the fact-finding hearing for a child in secure
15custody and no more than 30 days after the fact-finding hearing for a child or
16expectant mother who is not held in secure custody. If it appears to the court that
17disposition of the case may include placement of the child outside the child's home,
18the court shall order the child's parent to provide a statement of income, assets, debts
19and living expenses to the court or the designated agency under s. 48.33 (1) at least
205 days before the scheduled date of the dispositional hearing or as otherwise ordered
21by the court. The clerk of court shall provide, without charge, to any parent ordered
22to provide a statement of income, assets, debts and living expenses a document
23setting forth the percentage standard established by the department of workforce
24development under s. 49.22 (9)
method of calculating child support under s. 767.251
25and the manner of its application established by the department of health and family

1services under s. 46.247 and listing the factors that a court may consider under s.
246.10 (14) (c). If all parties consent, the court may immediately proceed with a
3dispositional hearing.
SB520, s. 8 4Section 8. 48.33 (4m) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,9,105 48.33 (4m) Support recommendations; information to parents. (intro.) In
6making a recommendation for an amount of child support under sub. (4), the agency
7shall consider the factors that the court considers under s. 46.10 (14) (c) for deviation
8from the percentage standard method of calculating child support under s. 767.251.
9Prior to the dispositional hearing under s. 48.335, the agency shall provide the child's
10parent with all of the following:
SB520, s. 9 11Section 9. 48.357 (5m) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,9,2412 48.357 (5m) If a proposed change in placement changes a child's placement
13from a placement in the child's home to a placement outside the child's home, the
14court shall order the child's parent to provide a statement of income, assets, debts
15and living expenses to the court or the person or agency primarily responsible for
16implementing the dispositional order by a date specified by the court. The clerk of
17court shall provide, without charge, to any parent ordered to provide a statement of
18income, assets, debts and living expenses a document setting forth the percentage
19standard established by the department of workforce development under s. 49.22 (9)

20method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 and the manner of its
21application established by the department of health and family services under s.
2246.247 and listing the factors that a court may consider under s. 46.10 (14) (c). If the
23child is placed outside the child's home, the court shall determine the liability of the
24parent in the manner provided in s. 46.10 (14).
SB520, s. 10 25Section 10. 48.363 (1) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,11,11
148.363 (1) A child, the child's parent, guardian or legal custodian, an expectant
2mother, an unborn child by the unborn child's guardian ad litem, any person or
3agency bound by a dispositional order or the district attorney or corporation counsel
4in the county in which the dispositional order was entered may request a revision in
5the order that does not involve a change in placement, including a revision with
6respect to the amount of child support to be paid by a parent, or the court may on its
7own motion propose such a revision. The request or court proposal shall set forth in
8detail the nature of the proposed revision and what new information is available that
9affects the advisability of the court's disposition. The request or court proposal shall
10be submitted to the court. The court shall hold a hearing on the matter if the request
11or court proposal indicates that new information is available which affects the
12advisability of the court's dispositional order and prior to any revision of the
13dispositional order, unless written waivers of objections to the revision are signed by
14all parties entitled to receive notice and the court approves. If a hearing is held, the
15court shall notify the child, the child's parent, guardian and legal custodian, all
16parties bound by the dispositional order, the child's foster parent, treatment foster
17parent or other physical custodian described in s. 48.62 (2), the district attorney or
18corporation counsel in the county in which the dispositional order was entered, and,
19if the child is the expectant mother of an unborn child under s. 48.133, the unborn
20child by the unborn child's guardian ad litem or shall notify the adult expectant
21mother, the unborn child through the unborn child's guardian ad litem, all parties
22bound by the dispositional order and the district attorney or corporation counsel in
23the county in which the dispositional order was entered, at least 3 days prior to the
24hearing. A copy of the request or proposal shall be attached to the notice. If the
25proposed revision is for a change in the amount of child support to be paid by a parent,

1the court shall order the child's parent to provide a statement of income, assets, debts
2and living expenses to the court and the person or agency primarily responsible for
3implementing the dispositional order by a date specified by the court. The clerk of
4court shall provide, without charge, to any parent ordered to provide a statement of
5income, assets, debts and living expenses a document setting forth the percentage
6standard established by the department of workforce development under s. 49.22 (9)

7method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 and the manner of its
8application established by the department of health and family services under s.
946.247 and listing the factors that a court may consider under s. 46.10 (14) (c). If all
10parties consent, the court may proceed immediately with the hearing. No revision
11may extend the effective period of the original order.
SB520, s. 11 12Section 11. 49.22 (9) of the statutes is repealed and recreated to read:
SB520,11,1613 49.22 (9) The department shall prepare and make available to judges and other
14court personnel forms, tables, computer software and instruction manuals or other
15publications to aid in the calculation of child support by using the method under s.
16767.251.
SB520, s. 12 17Section 12. 301.12 (14) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,12,218 301.12 (14) (b) Except as provided in par. (c) and subject to par. (cm), liability
19of a parent specified in sub. (2) or s. 301.03 (18) for the care and maintenance of the
20parent's minor child who has been placed by a court order under s. 938.183, 938.355
21or 938.357 in a residential, nonmedical facility such as a group home, foster home,
22treatment foster home, child caring institution or juvenile correctional institution
23shall be determined by the court by using the percentage standard established by the
24department of workforce development under s. 49.22 (9)
method of calculating child

1support under s. 767.251
and by applying the percentage standard method in the
2manner established by the department under par. (g).
SB520, s. 13 3Section 13. 301.12 (14) (c) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,12,84 301.12 (14) (c) (intro.) Upon request by a parent, the court may modify the
5amount of child support payments determined under par. (b), subject to par. (cm), if,
6after considering the following factors, the court finds by the greater weight of the
7credible evidence that the use of the percentage standard method of calculating child
8support under s. 767.251
is unfair to the child or to either of the parents:
SB520, s. 14 9Section 14. 301.12 (14) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB520,12,1710 301.12 (14) (d) If the court finds under par. (c) that use of the percentage
11standard
method of calculating child support under s. 767.251 is unfair to the minor
12child or either of the parents, the court shall state in writing or on the record the
13amount of support that would be required by using the percentage standard method
14under s. 767.251
, the amount by which the court's order deviates from that amount,
15the court's reasons for finding that use of the percentage standard method under s.
16767.251
is unfair to the child or the parent, the court's reasons for the amount of the
17modification and the basis for the modification.
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