Sign our open letter calling for reform of the Child Maintenance Service

The government has announced big changes to the Child Maintenance Service (CMS).

We've written an open letter to Baroness Sherlock, the Minister responsible for the CMS, calling on the government to ensure our 5 core principles are embedded in the changes.

While the government's changes could strengthen protections for domestic abuse survivors, enable better compliance monitoring, and help more children get the maintenance they're entitled to, the changes must be made in the right way to avoid the risk of large numbers of families leaving CMS and ending up with private maintenance arrangements or no arrangement at all.  

Our 5 core principles are:

✅ Harness full potential to reduce child poverty

✅ Clear communication to all users

✅ Support for those leaving CMS

✅ Sufficient resources for transitions

✅ Measurable targets for success

Join us in supporting single parent families by signing our open letter.

👇READ OUR FULL OPEN LETTER TO THE MINISTER

Open Letter to Baroness Sherlock OBE

Dear Minister,

Re: Five core principles to embed in the consolidation of the Child Maintenance Service

We write to you to welcome the announced consolidation of the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) into one service type that monitors and transfers all maintenance payments, and to propose five core principles that should be embedded into its implementation.

The consolidation is a positive step forward that has the potential to significantly improve the CMS, by strengthening protections for victim-survivors of domestic abuse and enabling better compliance monitoring. The change paves the way for enforcement action to be streamlined and for more children to receive the maintenance they’re entitled to.

This could have a substantial impact on child poverty levels. It is well documented that where child maintenance is received, it cuts the child poverty rate by 25%.1 And with 43% of children in single-parent families living in poverty in the UK,2 it is crucial to ensure that the CMS is operating as effectively as possible.

However, if it is not implemented with extreme care, the move poses considerable risks, including inadvertently alienating users who currently use the Direct Pay service and a reduction in the quality of customer service. Additionally, if the consolidation is not coupled with a transformation in enforcement efforts against arrears, then the impact of better compliance monitoring will be severely limited.

With this considered, we have identified five key principles to guide the consolidation as set out below. 

In the meantime, we would like to see immediate implementation of the Child Support Collection (Domestic Abuse) Act 2023. Gingerbread understands that the announced reforms will require legislative change, with an introduction expected in 2027/28, and it is essential for the CMS to safeguard victim-survivors of domestic abuse on Direct Pay now.

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