Can my CSEA help me get support if the non-custodial parent lives in another state?
Yes. Your CSEA can ask that your child support case be pursued by the state where the non-custodial parent lives. Every state must provide the same child support services for the children who live outside that state as for children who live within it. However, these cases often take longer than in-state cases. States can use a variety of processes to set up or enforce child support orders when a child's parents live in 2 different states. These processes are part of the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (URESA).

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1. Can my CSEA help me get support if the non-custodial parent lives in another state?
2. Why should I go to a CSEA when I know the non-custodial parent can't pay?
3. Why should I go to a CSEA if I've already worked it out with the non-custodial parent to help support the child?
4. What if the non-custodial parent is in the military? Or in college? Or in jail?
5. Do you have to be the child's parent to get CSEA services?
6. Do I have to keep paying child support if the custodial parent won't let me visit my child?
7. Who can get help from a CSEA?
8. Can my CSEA help me with visitation or other problems?
9. How can I be an effective partner with my CSEA?