SALT LAKE CITY (AP) —July 1, a law passed by the Utah State Legislature last year goes into effect. It will affect thousands of Utahns who have been delinquent on paying child support. This will possibly cause them to be denied a hunting or fishing license if they owe more than $2,500 in unpaid child support.
Republican Rep. Karianne Lisonbee of Clearfield, who sponsored the law, cites the importance of the children in question needing this child support.
The state is trying to notify people before they show up to purchase a hunting or fishing license and get rejected.
“We want people to know about this before it goes into effect so they can try to rectify it,” said Faith Heaton Jolley, a spokesperson for Utah’s Division of Wildlife Resources.
Utah’s Office of Recovery Services is sending out letters this week to 19,062 people who have been identified as being behind on child support. Of those, 9,454 people have been found to be in both agencies’ databases, meaning they have purchased a hunting or fishing license in the past.
If they are not current on child support or actively making payments, they will be denied a permit this year.
“We don’t want to deny these licenses. We want compliance with child support. We’re hoping this gets their attention, they come in and make the payment arrangements, keep those payment arrangements and we never take their license,” Liesa Stockdale, the director of the Utah Office of Recovery Services, said in an interview with FOX 13.
The agency currently estimates it has more than $377 million in child support arrears that goes back decades. The new law might cost Utah’s Division of Wildlife Resources more than $440,000 in lost hunting/fishing licenses. (However, Jolley said that with record numbers of tags purchased last year, they do not anticipate a significant loss, if at all.)
If someone pays in full or is currently making payments, they can still potentially get a hunting or fishing license. They need to contact Utah’s Office of Recovery Services.
“They do have to basically be paying on that plan for a full 12 months before they would be eligible to get a hunting or fishing license,” Jolley said.
Rep. Lisonbee said she has already heard from constituents who are both angry with the new law and thrilled with it. She recalled one man who called her upset about his inability to get a hunting license this year, declaring that “child support is socialism.”
“I reminded him that as Republicans, we believe that personal responsibility is one of the foremost principles we operate under, and part of personal responsibility is to take care of one’s children,” she said.
Rep. Lisonbee said she’s also heard from some parents who are happy.
“I heard from several women who said, ‘I’ve received my first child support payment in years and the only thing I can attribute it to is your bill,’” she said.








