May 12, 2006
Deadbeat mom ordered
to pay child support
Jail time could be only
alternative: Judge
JOHN
THOMPSON
A judge threatened to throw
an Iqaluit woman in prison last week for refusing to pay child support to her
estranged husband.
"You're defying this
court, and there's only one solution to that, and that's putting you in jail
for a while," Justice Earle Johnson said in the Nunavut Court of Justice
on Thursday last week.
The woman, known as O.N.,
is seven months behind child support payments she owes her estranged husband,
known as T.M. The two lived together for 18 years, until O.N. left her husband
two years ago. She now lives with another man who supports her.
During a hearing last October,
Johnson ordered O.N. to begin providing $376 a month to T.M, starting November
1. She now owes $2,632.
Johnson asked O.N. what
effort she's put into finding a job since October. "None," she replied,
"Because knowing him, it won't go to the kids."
"That's not your choice
to make," Johnson said. "That shows contempt. My next step is to send
you to jail."
Johnson also criticized
the woman for filing a financial disclosure statement that contains almost no
information.
"This is absolutely
a waste of time to file this," Johnson said, holding the blank statement
in the air.
O.N. said she wants to
buy food vouchers for the children, instead of providing money to her ex-husband.
Johnson said she had no choice.
"That's the whole
idea of it going to the [Family Support] office," Johnson said.
"You can't sit back
and be the judge, as to how the money is spent."
During an interview, the
estranged husband said the missing child support money is sorely needed. He
supports three children with a net income of only $2,451 a month, which he earns
from a full-time job. He added he's still paying off debts incurred from living
with his estranged wife.
"It doesn't make any
sense," he said. "I have the choice of going into debt, or providing
for my kids."
Until three years ago O.N.
did work, earning $10 to $12 an hour, or between $19,500 to $23,400 a year.
In court last week, Johnson said he had trouble believing O.N. is unable to
work now.
"Surely you could
have found something," he said.
Marcel La Flamme, a family
support lawyer, recommended that O.N. be found in contempt of court if no progress
was made by her next court appearance, on June 8.
Johnson stopped short of
committing to this timeline, but said, "If nothing significant happens,
I can say it gets likely a decision like that will be made."
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