Well, apparently the issue is that there is no order for support...anywhere. This is why I filed in Georgia. They contend that the order has to be issued in state of custody. I have heard this is not true. I received custody and moved almost immediately.
Okay, that isn't a big problem.
Does the custody speak to where the children must be domiciled?
That is to say, do you have permission to take the children outside PA, or outside the county where the order was issued?
Usually custody orders prohibit the children from residing further than XX miles away from a certain city, or county. Sometimes they direct that the child NOT be taken outside of the state to reside.
Can you copy and paste your custody for us to review?
You should redact personal details, and substitute same with Daisy Duck, Deputy Dawg, or Mickey Mouse for readability.
Normally, child support is addressed during the custody matter. Your problem seems as if it's only able to be resolved through the PA court system.
Under federal law, PA retains jurisdiction over the subject matter children.
How is a child support order established in a state other than PA?
The Domestic Relations Section in the county of residence of the custodial parent will ask the custodial parent to provide information needed to complete the necessary documents that will be sent to the noncustodial parent's resident state to establish a child support order. The noncustodial parent's resident state will then use this information to establish a court order of support.
Your problem, as the apparent custodial parent is that your PA custody order failed to address support. GA can't act, only to collect and transmit the support to you. I'm afraid, your remedy lies in PA.
Alternatively, you can wait, time passes, you seek custody in GA (assuming the other parent doesn't fight you, and you were allowed to take kiddos to GA); start all over for custody and support.
That is the long way around, and it's fraught with obstacles a plenty.
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