Category: CBC News

  • Top court hears Alberta fathers’ appeal of support payment ruling

    Top court hears Alberta fathers’ appeal of support payment ruling

    CBC News
    The Supreme Court of Canada heard arguments on Monday from four Alberta fathers who are fighting child support rulings.

    The case could have dramatic implications for the finances of divorced parents across the country.

    The men were all told to make retroactive payments of up to $100,000 after the Alberta Court of Appeal ruled they should have disclosed they were making more money than they were when the support order was first issued.

    Their Toronto lawyer, Deirdre Smith, has asked the top court to reverse that decision. She says the Alberta court overstepped federal rules.

    She says there is nothing in federal law requiring the parent paying support to automatically inform the other parent when their income rises, and to increase payments.

    She says that under the current system, the parent with custody can ask about changes in the other parent’s income whenever they wish, and can also ask for an increase in child-support payments.

    “The Alberta Court of Appeal really did take this whole area of law into a new scope and area by making this very strong suggestion that all support payers have a responsibility to annually provide financial disclosure whether it’s requested or not, and more importantly to annually change the amount of child support they are paying whether the mom wants it or not,” she told CBC News on Sunday.

    Smith says she will argue that the Alberta Court of Appeal’s ruling that these payments should be renegotiated once a year is not written into the federal law.

    She says it would be best if families were given flexibility, rather than forcing them to open up custody agreements on an annual basis.

    Meanwhile, Gus Sleiman of the Men’s Educational Support Association in Calgary says it’s not fair to ask for money after the fact.

    “This is an unreasonable kind of expectation of a non-custodial parent to pay when at the time they have spent their money and they are under the presumption they already paid their child support,” Sleiman told CBC News.

    Copyright © CBC 2006

  • Depression risk higher for divorced men: Statistics Canada

    Depression risk higher for divorced men: Statistics Canada

    When a man’s marriage breaks down, he may be at higher risk of depression than people who remain together and women who divorce or separate, Statistics Canada reported Tuesday.

    The study looked at the link between marriages that break down in separation or divorce and their effects on emotional health, using data from the National Population Health Survey.

    Overall, when a couple’s marriage or common-law relationship ended, depression occurred in about 12 per cent of cases, compared with three per cent among people who remained in a relationship, two years after participants were first interviewed in 1994-1995.

    Men aged 20 to 64 who had divorced or separated were six times more likely to report an episode of depression than were men who remained married.

    The comparable depression figure for women left alone after broken marriages was 3.5 times more likely.

    Loss of custody, social support “Research has suggested that for men the loss of custody or a change in parental responsibilities is one of the most stressful aspects of a break-up,” the study said.

    Among 34 per cent of men surveyed, children left their household after the relationship ended, compared with three per cent for women.