View Full Version : Re: any knowledge of this...
Bob Whiteside
August 2nd 03, 07:24 PM
"Chris" > wrote in message
...
> Your child completes their senior year of high school in a half of a year
> instead of a full school year. (half a year of full days instead of a full
> year of half days). The child support stops when the child graduates or
> turns 18, which ever is later. feedback would be helpful.
Graduation based on achieving the required number of credits and walking in
a graduation ceremony are separate events. If the child is 18 when the
credit requirements are met early, then CS would stop.
Jon
August 2nd 03, 08:55 PM
I'm thinking that the credits may have been completed, but unless the school
issues a diploma, you have to wait for that.
Jon
Bob Whiteside wrote:
> "Chris" > wrote in message
> ...
>> Your child completes their senior year of high school in a half of a
>> year instead of a full school year. (half a year of full days
>> instead of a full year of half days). The child support stops when
>> the child graduates or turns 18, which ever is later. feedback would
>> be helpful.
>
> Graduation based on achieving the required number of credits and
> walking in a graduation ceremony are separate events. If the child
> is 18 when the credit requirements are met early, then CS would stop.
J.D. Hoeye
August 3rd 03, 10:54 PM
On Sat, 2 Aug 2003 14:08:51 -0400, "Chris" >
wrote:
>Your child completes their senior year of high school in a half of a =
year
>instead of a full school year. (half a year of full days instead of a =
full
>year of half days). The child support stops when the child graduates or
>turns 18, which ever is later. feedback would be helpful.
>
who's child support?
oh, 'the," good political phrasing.
in any case, whichever is later, would seem to be self defining.
JD
If the Facts Fail to Support Your Position,=20
Manipulate the Data.
J.D. Hoeye
August 3rd 03, 10:58 PM
On Sat, 02 Aug 2003 18:24:43 GMT, "Bob Whiteside"
> wrote:
>
>"Chris" > wrote in message
...
>> Your child completes their senior year of high school in a half of a =
year
>> instead of a full school year. (half a year of full days instead of a =
full
>> year of half days). The child support stops when the child graduates =
or
>> turns 18, which ever is later. feedback would be helpful.
>
>Graduation based on achieving the required number of credits and walking=
in
>a graduation ceremony are separate events. If the child is 18 when the
>credit requirements are met early, then CS would stop.
>
wait - the specification is 'graduates,' not 'becomes elegible...'
and, the CS stops at age 18, regardless graduation status.
JD
If the Facts Fail to Support Your Position,=20
Manipulate the Data.
Tracy
August 4th 03, 02:11 AM
"Jon" > wrote in message
...
> I'm thinking that the credits may have been completed, but unless the
school
> issues a diploma, you have to wait for that.
> Jon
It stops when the child turns 18 and credits have been achieved. I was
requested by the State of Oklahoma twice to show proof that my middle son
was enrolled *and* taking classes at his high school after he turned 18 -
otherwise child support would have ended. Therefore, if the child is 18 and
he/she has completed all credits, the child is not attending high school.
Child support would end.
BTW - the above is dependant on the state and how the laws are written. My
experience is with Oklahoma.
Tracy
~~~~~~~
http://www.hornschuch.net/tracy/
"You can't solve problems with the same
type of thinking that created them."
Albert Einstein
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>
>
> Bob Whiteside wrote:
> > "Chris" > wrote in message
> > ...
> >> Your child completes their senior year of high school in a half of a
> >> year instead of a full school year. (half a year of full days
> >> instead of a full year of half days). The child support stops when
> >> the child graduates or turns 18, which ever is later. feedback would
> >> be helpful.
> >
> > Graduation based on achieving the required number of credits and
> > walking in a graduation ceremony are separate events. If the child
> > is 18 when the credit requirements are met early, then CS would stop.
>
>
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