Home > 1995 Presidential Documents > pd06mr95 The President's News Conference...pd06mr95 The President's News Conference...
Thank you very much.
[[Page 321]]
Lincoln-Douglas Sculpture
Q. And what are you doing with Lincoln and Douglas on your desk?
Does that portend something?
The President. When C-SPAN came in here and did the interview for
President's Day, they gave me that. I liked it a lot. And I met the
people who played Lincoln and Douglas in the Galesburg, Illinois, debate
when we were out there. I just liked it. I thought it looked good on the
desk. Besides that, it reminds me that this town has always been about
argument. [Laughter]
Thank you.
Note: The President spoke at 9:14 a.m. in the Oval Office at the White
House.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 321-323]
Monday, March 6, 1995
Volume 31--Number 9
Pages 315-359
Week Ending Friday, March 3, 1995
Executive Order 12953--Actions Required of All Executive Agencies To
Facilitate Payment of Child Support
February 27, 1995
Children need and deserve the emotional and financial support of
both their parents.
The Federal Government requires States and, through them, public and
private employers to take actions necessary to ensure that monies in
payment of child support obligations are withheld and transferred to the
child's caretaker in an efficient and expeditious manner.
The Federal Government, through its civilian employees and Uniformed
Services members, is the Nation's largest single employer and as such
should set an example of leadership and encouragement in ensuring that
all children are properly supported.
Now, Therefore, by the authority vested in me as President by the
Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including
section 301 of title 3, United States Code, it is hereby ordered as
follows:
Part I--PURPOSE
Section 101. This executive order: (a) Establishes the executive
branch of the Federal Government, through its civilian employees and
Uniformed Services members, as a model employer in promoting and
facilitating the establishment and enforcement of child support.
(b) Requires all Federal agencies, including the Uniformed Services,
to cooperate fully in efforts to establish paternity and child support
orders and to enforce the collection of child and medical support in all
situations where such actions may be required.
(c) Requires each Federal agency, including the Uniformed Services,
to provide information to its employees and members about actions that
they should take and services that are available to ensure that their
children are provided the support to which they are legally entitled.
Part 2--DEFINITIONS
For purposes of this order:
Sec. 201. ``Federal agency'' means any authority as defined at 5
U.S.C. 105, including the Uniformed Services, as defined in section 202
of this order.
Sec. 202. ``Uniformed Services'' means the Army, Navy, Marine Corps,
Air Force, Coast Guard, and the Commissioned Corps of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Public Health Service.
Sec. 203. ``Child support enforcement'' means any administrative or
judicial action by a court or administrative entity of a State necessary
to establish paternity or establish a child support order, including a
medical support order, and any actions necessary to enforce a child
support or medical support order. Child support actions may be brought
under the civil or criminal laws of a State and are not limited to
actions brought on behalf of the State or individual by State agencies
providing services under title IV-D of the Social Security Act, 42
U.S.C. 651 et seq.
Sec. 204. ``State'' means any of the fifty States, the District of
Columbia, the territories, the possessions, and the Commonwealths of
Puerto Rico and of the Mariana Islands.
Part 3--IMMEDIATE ACTIONS TO ENSURE CHILDREN ARE SUPPORTED BY THEIR
PARENTS
Sec. 301. Wage Withholding. (a) Within 60 days from the date of this
order, every Federal agency shall review its procedures for wage
withholding under 42 U.S.C. 659 and implementing regulations to ensure
that it is in full compliance with the requirements
[[Page 322]]
of that section, and shall endeavor, to the extent feasible, to process
wage withholding actions consistent with the requirements of 42 U.S.C.
666(b).
(b) Beginning no later than July 1, 1995, the Director of the Office
of Personnel Management (OPM) shall publish annually in the Federal
Register the list of agents (and their addresses) designated to receive
service of withholding notices for Federal employees.
Sec. 302. Service of Legal Process. Every Federal agency shall
assist in the service of legal process in civil actions pursuant to
orders of courts of States to establish paternity and establish or
enforce a support obligation by making Federal employees and members of
the Uniformed Services stationed outside the United States available for
the service of process. Each agency shall designate an official who
shall be responsible for facilitating a Federal employee's or member's
availability for service of process, regardless of the location of the
employee's workplace or member's duty station. The OPM shall publish a
list of these officials annually in the Federal Register, beginning no
later than July 1, 1995.
Sec. 303. Federal Parent Locator. Every Federal agency shall
cooperate with the Federal Parent Locator Service, established under 42
U.S.C. 653, by providing complete, timely and accurate information that
will assist in locating noncustodial parents and their employers.
Sec. 304. Crossmatch for Delinquent Obligors. (a) The master file of
delinquent obligors that each State child support enforcement agency
submits to the Internal Revenue Service for Federal income tax refund
offset purposes shall be matched at least annually with the payroll or
personnel files of Federal agencies in order to determine if there are
any Federal employees with child support delinquencies. The list of
matches shall be forwarded to the appropriate State child support
enforcement agency to determine, in each instance, whether wage
withholding or other enforcement actions should be commenced. All
matches will be performed in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(o)-(u).
(b) All Federal agencies shall inform current and prospective
employees that crossmatches are routinely made between Federal personnel
records and State records on individuals who owe child support, and
inform employees how to initiate voluntary wage withholding requests.
Sec. 305. Availability of Service. All Federal agencies shall advise
current and prospective employees of services authorized under title IV-
D of the Social Security Act that are available through the States. At a
minimum, information shall be provided annually to current employees
through the Employee Assistance Program, or similar programs, and to new
employees during routine orientation.
Sec. 306. Report on Actions Taken. Within 90 days of the date of
this order, all Federal agencies shall report to the Director of the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) on the actions they have taken to
comply with this order and any statutory, regulatory, and administrative
barriers that hinder them from complying with the requirements of part 3
of this order.
Part 4--ADDITIONAL ACTIONS
Sec. 401. Additional Review for the Uniformed Services.
(a) In addition to the requirements outlined above, the Secretary of
the Department of Defense (DOD) will chair a task force, with
participation by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the
Department of Commerce, and the Department of Transportation, that shall
conduct a full review of current policies and practices within the
Uniformed Services to ensure that children of Uniformed Services
personnel are provided financial and medical support in the same manner
and within the same time frames as is mandated for all other children
due such support. This review shall include, but not be limited to,
issues related to withholding non-custodial parents' wages, service of
legal process, activities to locate parents and their income and assets,
release time to attend civil paternity and support proceedings, and
health insurance coverage under the Civilian Health and Medical Program
of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS). All relevant existing statutes,
including the Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act of 1940, the
Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection Act, and the Tax Equity
[[Page 323]]
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, shall be reviewed and appropriate
legislative modifications shall be identified.
(b) Within 180 days of the date of this order, DOD shall submit to
OMB a report based on this review. The report shall recommend additional
policy, regulatory and legislative changes that would improve and
enhance the Federal Government's commitment to ensuring parental support
for all children.
Sec. 402. Additional Federal Agency Actions. (a) OPM and HHS shall
jointly study and prepare recommendations concerning additional
administrative, regulatory, and legislative improvements in the policies
and procedures of Federal agencies affecting child support enforcement.
Other agencies shall be included in the development of recommendations
for specific items as appropriate. The recommendations shall address,
among other things:
(i) any changes that would be needed to ensure that Federal
employees comply with child support orders that require them to
provide health insurance coverage for their children;
(ii) changes needed to ensure that more accurate and up-to-date data
about civilian and uniformed personnel who are being sought in
conjunction with State paternity or child support actions can be
obtained from Federal agencies and their payroll and personnel
records, to improve efforts to locate noncustodial parents and
their income and assets;
(iii) changes needed for selecting Federal agencies to test and
evaluate new approaches to the establishment and enforcement of
child support obligations;
(iv) proposals to improve service of process for civilian employees
and members of the Uniformed Services stationed outside the United
States, including the possibility of serving process by certified
mail in establishment and enforcement cases or of designating an
agent for service of process that would have the same effect and
bind employees to the same extent as actual service upon the
employees;
(v) strategies to facilitate compliance with Federal and State child
support requirements by quasi-governmental agencies, advisory
groups, and commissions; and
(vi) analysis of whether compliance with support orders should be a
factor used in defining suitability for Federal employment.
(b) The recommendations are due within 180 days of the date of this
order. The recommendations are to be submitted in writing to the Office
of Management and Budget.
Sec. 501. Internal Management. This order is intended only to
improve the internal management of the executive branch with regard to
child support enforcement and shall not be interpreted to create any
right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by a
party against the United States, its officers, or any other person.
Sec. 502. Sovereignty of the United States Government. This order is
intended only to provide that the Federal Government has elected to
require Federal agencies to adhere to the same standards as are
applicable to all other employers in the Nation and shall not be
interpreted as subjecting the Federal Government to any State law or
requirement. This order should not be construed as a waiver of the
sovereign immunity of the United States Government or of any existing
statutory or regulatory provisions, including 42 U.S.C. 659, 662, and
665; 5 CFR Part 581; 42 CFR Part 21, Subpart C; 32 CFR Part 54; and 32
CFR Part 81.
Sec. 503. Defense and Security. This order is not intended to
require any action that would compromise the defense or national
security interest of the United States.
William J. Clinton
The White House,
February 27, 1995.
[Filed with the Office of the Federal Register, 11:23 a.m., February 27,
1995]
Note: This Executive order was published in the Federal Register on
February 28.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 323-325]
Monday, March 6, 1995
Volume 31--Number 9
Pages 315-359
Week Ending Friday, March 3, 1995
Remarks at the American Red Cross
February 27, 1995
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you, Elizabeth
Dole. Thank you for your remarks, and thank you espe-
[[Page 324]]
cially for the strong leadership you have given to the Red Cross. In my
own experience, I have watched you give it through hurricanes and
earthquakes, through fires and floods, and I am delighted to be the
honorary chairman of the American Red Cross and to be here at the start
of the 1995 community campaign.
You know, when I became President, I spent a great deal of time
early trying to make sure that the Federal Government could do its part
in dealing with natural disasters. There had been so much criticism of
the Federal disaster relief program before I took office. And we worked
hard, and I think that everyone in America would admit that the Federal
Emergency Management Agency is doing the best job it has perhaps ever
done. But I can tell you this: We never could have done what needed to
be done for the American people had it not been for the Red Cross, in
the floods in the Middle West, in California, all across the country.
I also can't help saying that on the way in here, Elizabeth, who
never misses a chance to get you to do something else for the Red
Cross--[laughter]--said, ``Oh, by the way, on the way out, we're a
little short in our blood drive, and would you mind making a public
service announcement?'' [Laughter] And I said, ``No, I also wouldn't
mind giving blood, and I think I should catch up.'' As a matter of fact,
it occurred to me that I ought to--I could really require everyone--
[laughter]--I could really require everyone at the White House to
contribute, since they give blood every day every way. [Laughter] They
might as well give it to the Red Cross and do some good.
I want to say, again, a special word of thanks to all of you who
have been involved in the work of the Red Cross. I have, for several
years now, said I thought what our country needed, in thinking about how
we relate to each other, is the idea of a New Covenant, that we are
entitled to more opportunity but we owe, each of us, more
responsibility. We've got to build this country at the grassroots level,
and that means we have to do it primarily as citizens, as private
citizens with public spirits. That's what the Red Cross is all about. I
have seen the Red Cross workers in Florida and in California and all
those terrible States that were devastated in the Middle West.
I'm reminded of the example of Debbie Blanton, the head of the Red
Other Popular 1995 Presidential Documents Documents:
|
| GovRecords.org presents information on various agencies of the United States Government. Even though all information is believed to be credible and accurate, no guarantees are made on the complete accuracy of our government records archive. Care should be taken to verify the information presented by responsible parties. Please see our reference page for congressional, presidential, and judicial branch contact information. GovRecords.org values visitor privacy. Please see the privacy page for more information. |

![]() |