PRESS RELEASE
Treasurer Fitzpatrick Partners with Department of Social Services to Streamline Use of Unclaimed Property for Past-Due Child Support
Jefferson City, MO—Missouri State Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick and the
Department of Social Services have partnered to launch a newly-automated
process that uses unclaimed property held by the Missouri State Treasurer’s
Office to pay past-due child support. “Missouri’s kids benefit from
this collaborative effort with the State Treasurer’s Office. In the first phase
over $2 million has been applied to 18,724 child support cases,” Jennifer
Tidball, Acting Director, Department of Social Services, said. “When a parent
fails to pay child support, children who rely on these critical dollars to live
and thrive are the ones who suffer. I am very grateful for Treasurer
Fitzpatrick’s help to ensure the needs of children come first when it comes to
claiming unclaimed properties of Missouri parents owing child support.” “This is a perfect example of good
government,” Fitzpatrick said. “By working with the Department of Social
Services to automate this system, we are increasing efficiency and ensuring
more children in Missouri will receive money that is rightfully theirs. I
appreciate Acting Director Tidball’s continued attention to this matter and I
am always happy to see an outcome that benefits Missouri children.” Electronic files of past-due
child support cases are matched against the State Treasurer’s Office unclaimed
property database. If a match is found, it generates an automated property
attachment and transmission of payment to the Department of Social Services.
This enables the Department to withhold unclaimed property before a
parent owing support can claim it. The electronic process pays child support
and eliminates the manual paperwork between agencies to improve efficiency and
timeliness. It also enables the State Treasurer’s Office to reduce the number
of unclaimed property accounts. In some cases, the collection of
these funds is significant; more than $28,000 was collected from one parent who
owed past-due child support. “Working together, our agencies are able to meet
our goals and better serve Missourians. Children benefit, getting the money
they are entitled to receive and Missouri taxpayers benefit by not burdening
the financial responsibility of parents,” said Tidball. Follow the Treasurer’s Office on Twitter,
Facebook, and Instagram @motreasurer. ###