Here's what I learned while going through all this. Hopefully this isn't fata'd
somewhere else in the thread:
1) Child support isn't a must do. If both parents make equal money, you can
and do have situations where neither will pay child support to the other by
agreement. It seems that agreements must be authorized by the court(s)
but I'm not sure on that.
2) The idea of child support is that the child will have the lifestyle or
arrangements equivalent to the higher earning parent. This assumes all the
monies go to the childs lifestyle only and not to trips and clothes for your
ex.
3) No receipts are required if the agreements are post-1996 (?) Before
then the receiver of payments had to post receipts.
4) In Alberta you generally defer to the Federal Child Support Guidelines.
Where can you find info on this? The Feds are happy to provide a
helpful
webpage. It's at step 3 on the link, because that's of most interest in this
thread.
5) You can come to other arrangements within the structure. For example,
in a 50/50 split, you may decide to take the amount that you would pay,
say $600, subtract how much she would pay, say $400, and use the
difference as the payment, $200. There is an example in the webpage
above.
6) Income taxes must be filed, all calculations are done off of them.
7) Child support payments cannot be negotiated away. Alimony can,
but not child support. So, those of you saying have a pre-nup, you
can't pre-nup child support.
8) You never want to go to court and have it decide. Think of it this way,
the person making the decision (judge) doesn't know you, probably doesn't
want to know you. Doesn't care about you, probably doesn't want to. Same
for your ex. And all the dirt that you may or may not know you have in your
closet will assist in making the decision; and you are naive to think none of that
will be aired. Based on that, do you really want this stranger making decisions
for you? (This holds true for anything involving court.)
IANAL, but that's what I found out.
ers