Highlights
- Technology helps agencies locate non‑custodial parents faster and with greater accuracy.
- Integrated data tools save time and strengthen enforcement outcomes.
- Automated alerts provide timely updates that accelerate case progress.
Child support professionals play a critical role in the lives of millions of families. The program reaches 12.2 million children, underscoring its impact on our communities. Yet agencies are under immense pressure, managing larger caseloads with fewer resources while trying to locate non-custodial parents who may move often or work outside traditional jobs. Meeting these demands isn’t just important—it’s essential to ensuring children get the support they deserve. essential to ensuring children get the support they deserve.
Technology has emerged as a critical ally in addressing these challenges, transforming how agencies locate individuals, manage cases, and ultimately close enforcement actions.
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Comprehensive data as a foundation
Beyond static searches: The power of automation
Addressing the incarceration factor
Empowering agencies with reliable insights
The location challenge
Locating non-custodial parents remains one of the most significant obstacles to effective child support enforcement. Traditional methods of tracking individuals—phone books, manual database searches, and agency-to-agency information sharing—simply cannot keep pace with modern mobility patterns and the volume of cases requiring attention.
According to industry research, child support professionals report that increased mobility, limited information sharing between agencies, and informal employment arrangements make location efforts increasingly difficult. Additionally, about 30% of customer inquiries reveal incarceration events that occur outside the originating state, adding jurisdictional complexities with conflicting laws and procedures.
Comprehensive data as a foundation
Modern investigative platforms address these challenges by aggregating vast collections of public and proprietary records into a single working environment. Rather than searching multiple databases separately, child support professionals can access driver’s license records, motor vehicle registrations, real property assets, court records, and even real-time credit header data through one interface.
This broader approach is especially useful when traditional, siloed contact information isn’t enough. Survey data shows that 79% of child support enforcement users experience an average time savings of at least 50% when using integrated technology platforms1, allowing them to redirect efforts toward higher-value enforcement activities.
1. Data pulled from Thomson Reuters Survey of Child Support Enforcement Users, October 2024.
Beyond static searches: The power of automation
Perhaps the most transformative technological advancement for child support enforcement is the shift from manual, periodic searches to automated monitoring. Traditional quarterly searches of locate databases often result in stale leads and missed opportunities. By the time an agency uncovers updated address information, the individual may have already relocated, making it hard to keep pace with incomplete data.
Automated alert systems change this dynamic entirely. These systems continuously monitor non-custodial parents in locate status and deliver event-based notifications, sometimes in near real-time, when new information appears. Whether it’s a new address, phone number, vehicle registration, professional license, or change in incarceration status, agencies receive timely updates that enable responsive action.
This automation delivers tangible results. Child support enforcement users report they are able to uncover new information for over 70% of their cases using modern investigative platforms.
Addressing the incarceration factor
The impact of incarceration on child support cases cannot be overstated. High rates of recidivism lead to repeated incarceration, interrupting payment streams and creating instability for children. Moreover, many incarcerations occur outside the originating state, making them difficult to track through conventional means.
Technology platforms that provide access to real-time booking information from thousands of facilities—along with historical arrest records—enable agencies to quickly identify when a non-custodial parent is incarcerated. Automated alerts for incarceration status changes, including notifications at the critical 180-day mark or upon release, help agencies comply with modification requirements while managing workload more effectively.
Managing increased caseloads
In an environment of expanding caseloads and shrinking workforces, technology serves as a force multiplier. Batch processing capabilities allow agencies to search thousands of individuals simultaneously, maintaining data hygiene across entire caseloads rather than addressing cases one at a time.
This efficiency doesn’t just boost job satisfaction it can also strengthen the agency’s reputation. When staff have the right tools to manage larger caseloads without sacrificing quality, frustration drops, morale rises, and the agency is more likely to be seen as reliable and effective across the board.
Empowering agencies with reliable insights
Technology designed specifically for child support enforcement does more than simply collect data. It provides the comprehensive, current, and actionable intelligence that professionals need to locate non-custodial parents efficiently, prioritize cases effectively, and ultimately ensure that 97% of child support collected goes to families who depend on it.
For child support professionals looking to enhance their location and enforcement efforts, exploring specialized investigative platforms represents a strategic investment in both operational efficiency and mission success.
Disclaimer
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