Uniform state laws that provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing child support obligations in interstate cases (when a noncustodial parent lives in a different state than his or her child and the custodial parent).
is a new model State law used by some States to process interstate cases. It provides a mechanism for establishing and enforcing support obligations when the obligor lives in one State and the obligee and children live in another.
(UIFSA)  Provides uniform state laws to enforce support obligations when the minorâ€(tm)s custodial parent and non-custodial parent reside in different states.
and Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (URESA) -laws enacted at the State level which provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing support obligations when the noncustodial parent lives in one State and the custodial parent and the children live in another
Model state child support enforcement law under which employers must put into effect a child support withholding order from another state's child support enforcement agency if the order appears regular on its face..
A federal law governing laws enacted at the state level to provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing child support obligations in interstate cases. Among the law's provisions is the ability of state IV-D agencies to send withholding orders to employers across state lines.
The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act ("UIFSA") is a Uniform Act that has been adopted by every U.S. State, in order to address the widespread problem of non-payment of child support obligations. The Act was drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1992, and revised in 1996, and again in 2001.