Written answers
Tuesday, 21 October 2025
Department of Justice and Equality
Court Orders
John Paul O'Shea (Cork North-West, Fine Gael)
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616. To ask the Tánaiste and Minister for Justice and Equality to provide an update on the review of the enforcement of child maintenance orders which was published in January 2024; the number of the 26 recommendations have been implemented to date; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [57325/25]
Jim O'Callaghan (Dublin Bay South, Fianna Fail)
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The Review of the Enforcement of Child Maintenance Orders, completed by officials in my Department, was published on 8 January 2024. It was one of the actions contained in the “Supporting Children” goal of the Family Justice Strategy.
The Review put forward 26 recommendations focused on generating maximum compliance with child maintenance orders, to ensure security and stability for children and to aid poverty prevention. The key recommendations of the review include:
- Development of a set of child maintenance guidelines.
- Introduction of mandatory mediation information sessions.
- Strengthening attachment of earnings orders and exploring the possibility of attaching an order to a PPS number rather than employing entities, so that orders do not lapse when there is a change in employer.
- Introduction of a single enforcement procedure when the receiving parent makes an enforcement application, allowing the judge to choose the most appropriate enforcement option based on the circumstances of the case.
- Simplification of the bench warrant process.
- Placing the onus on paying parents to pay costs associated with enforcement proceedings.
- Allowing for deductions from social welfare, the paying parent’s bank accounts, from government grants and subsidies and allowing for the recovery of arrears from tax refunds.
My Department is also engaging with the Legal Aid Board on the development of an automatic mediation information sessions pilot for child maintenance cases. It is hoped that these initiatives will encourage voluntary child maintenance agreements and increase compliance with those agreements.
As a number of recommendations in the Review require legislative change, work on examining these recommendations with a view to identifying potential legislative measures that could be progressed has begun.
Officials in the Department are liaising with other organisations and bodies to implement the other recommendations in the Review.
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