SB 348

  • Virginia Senate Bill
  • 2022 Regular Session
  • Introduced in Senate Jan 11, 2022
  • Passed Senate Feb 15, 2022
  • Passed House Mar 07, 2022
  • Signed by Governor Apr 11, 2022

Support orders; retroactivity, arrearages, party's incarceration.

Abstract

Support orders; retroactivity; arrearages; party's incarceration. Makes various changes to provisions of law related to child and spousal support orders, including (i) providing that in cases in which jurisdiction over child support or spousal support has been divested from the juvenile and domestic relations district court and no final support order has been entered, any award for child support or spousal support in the circuit court shall be retroactive to the date on which the proceeding was commenced by the filing of the action in the juvenile and domestic relations district court and (ii) specifying that prejudgment interest on child support should be retroactive to the date of filing.The bill provides that a party's incarceration for 180 or more consecutive days shall not be deemed voluntary unemployment or underemployment for the purposes of calculating child support and imputing income for such calculation. The bill further provides that a party's incarceration for 180 or more days shall be a material change of circumstances upon which a modification of a child support order may be based. The provisions of the bill related to imputation of income apply only to petitions for child support and petitions for a modification of a child support order commenced on or after July 1, 2022, and do not create a material change in circumstances for the purposes of modifying a child support order if a parent was incarcerated prior to July 1, 2022, and the incarcerated party cannot establish a material change in circumstances other than incarceration.

Support orders; retroactivity; arrearages; party's incarceration. Makes various changes to provisions of law related to child and spousal support orders, including (i) providing that in cases in which jurisdiction over child support or spousal support has been divested from the juvenile and domestic relations district court and no final support order has been entered, any award for child support or spousal support in the circuit court shall be retroactive to the date on which the proceeding was commenced by the filing of the action in the juvenile and domestic relations district court and (ii) specifying that prejudgment interest on child support should be retroactive to the date of filing.The bill provides that a party's incarceration alone for 180 or more consecutive days shall not ordinarily be deemed voluntary unemployment or underemployment for the purposes of calculating child support and imputing income for such calculation. The bill further provides that a party's incarceration for 180 or more days shall be a material change of circumstances upon which a modification of a child support order may be based. The provisions of the bill related to imputation of income apply only to petitions for child support and petitions for a modification of a child support order commenced on or after July 1, 2022, and do not create a material change in circumstances for the purposes of modifying a child support order if a parent was incarcerated prior to July 1, 2022, and the incarcerated party cannot establish a material change in circumstances other than incarceration.

Support orders; retroactivity; arrearages; party's incarceration. Makes various changes to provisions of law related to child and spousal support orders, including (i) providing that in cases in which jurisdiction over child support or spousal support has been divested from the juvenile and domestic relations district court and no final support order has been entered, any award for child support or spousal support in the circuit court shall be retroactive to the date on which the proceeding was commenced by the filing of the action in the juvenile and domestic relations district court and (ii) specifying that prejudgment interest on child support should be retroactive to the date of filing.The bill provides that a party's incarceration alone for 180 or more consecutive days shall not ordinarily be deemed voluntary unemployment or underemployment for the purposes of calculating child support and imputing income for such calculation. The bill further provides that a party's incarceration for 180 or more days shall be a material change of circumstances upon which a modification of a child support order may be based. The provisions of the bill related to imputation of income apply only to petitions for child support and petitions for a modification of a child support order commenced on or after July 1, 2022, and do not create a material change in circumstances for the purposes of modifying a child support order if a parent was incarcerated prior to July 1, 2022, and the incarcerated party cannot establish a material change in circumstances other than incarceration.

Bill Sponsors (1)

Votes


Actions


Apr 11, 2022

Office of the Governor

Approved by Governor-Chapter 527 (effective 7/1/22)

Mar 22, 2022

Office of the Governor

Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 11, 2022

Senate

Enrolled Bill Communicated to Governor on March 22, 2022

House

Signed by Speaker

Mar 21, 2022

Senate

Impact statement from DPB (SB348ER)

Senate

Signed by President

Senate

Enrolled

Mar 12, 2022

House

Conference report agreed to by House (73-Y 19-N)

Senate

Conference report agreed to by Senate (40-Y 0-N)

House

VOTE: Adoption (73-Y 19-N)

Virginia General Assembly

Amended by conference committee

Mar 10, 2022

Senate

Conferees appointed by Senate

House

Conferees appointed by House

Senate

Senate acceded to request (40-Y 0-N)

Mar 09, 2022

House

House insisted on amendments

House

House requested conference committee

Mar 08, 2022

Senate

House amendments rejected by Senate (0-Y 39-N)

Mar 07, 2022

House

Read third time

House

Committee amendments agreed to

House

Engrossed by House as amended

House

Passed House with amendments (74-Y 24-N)

House

VOTE: Passage (74-Y 24-N)

Mar 04, 2022

House

Read second time

Mar 02, 2022

House

Reported from Courts of Justice with amendment(s) (13-Y 7-N)

Feb 28, 2022

House

Subcommittee recommends reporting with amendments (5-Y 3-N)

House

House subcommittee amendments and substitutes offered

Feb 25, 2022

House

Assigned Courts sub: Subcommittee #2

Feb 22, 2022

House

Read first time

House

Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice

House

Placed on Calendar

Feb 15, 2022

Senate

Read third time and passed Senate (37-Y 3-N)

Senate

Impact statement from DPB (SB348E)

Feb 14, 2022

Senate

Printed as engrossed 22101341D-E

Senate

Engrossed by Senate as amended SB348E

Senate

Committee amendment agreed to

Senate

Reading of amendment waived

Senate

Read second time

Feb 11, 2022

Senate

Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N)

Feb 10, 2022

Senate

Reported from Finance and Appropriations (15-Y 0-N)

Feb 07, 2022

Senate

Reported from Judiciary with amendment (11-Y 3-N 1-A)

Senate

Rereferred to Finance and Appropriations

Jan 18, 2022

Senate

Impact statement from DPB (SB348)

Jan 11, 2022

Senate

Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22101341D

Senate

Referred to Committee on the Judiciary

Bill Text

Bill Text Versions Format
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22101341D PDF HTML
Printed as engrossed 22101341D-E PDF HTML
SB348ER PDF HTML
CHAP0527 PDF HTML

Related Documents

Document Format
Fiscal Impact Statement: SB348FER122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: SB348FE122.PDF PDF
Fiscal Impact Statement: SB348F122.PDF PDF
Amendment: SB348AS HTML
Amendment: SB348AHE HTML
Amendment: SB348AH HTML
Amendment: SB348AC HTML

Sources

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