West Virginia Code § 48-18-202

Request for assistance by party
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) To make a request for assistance under this article, a party shall submit the request in
writing to the Bureau for Child Support Enforcement on a form provided by the bureau. The
written request form shall include all of the requesting party's information known to the
party that is relevant to determine the child support amount. The request shall be
accompanied by: e
(1) A copy of the order being modified or, in the discretion of the bureau, information
sufficient to permit the bureau to retrieve or identify the order;
(2) A form containing a statement of all of the requesting party's information known to the
party that is relevant to determining the amount of child support, including a general
statement or argument advancing the reason the request is being made;
(3) Copies of documentation reasonably available to the requesting party setting forth all of
the requesting party's information that is relevant tlo determine the amount of child support;
(4) A statement setting forth the relevant information pertaining to the responding party's
earnings and child support that is known oir believed to be true by the requesting party;
(5) Copies of any relevant documentation which the requesting party may have in its
possession which would be relevant to determining the responding party's child support
obligations; and
(6) A statement of all other known proceedings, pending court proceedings or other pending
requests for assistance involving the parties or related to the child or children whose
support is being reev aluated.
(b) Upon receipt of notification that an obligor is incarcerated in a regional jail or a state or
federal correctional facility, the Bureau for Child Support Enforcement shall determine
whether the expected incarceration will exceed six months. If the incarceration will exceed
six months, the bureau shall file a petition to modify child support.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.