13 CSR 40-108.040 - Prosecuting Attorneys' Performance Standards
PURPOSE: This amendment moves this rule to the Family Support Division and groups it in a chapter with other child support rules. It also updates terminology throughout.
(1) Definitions.
(A) "Prosecuting attorney" means the person
elected as the prosecuting attorney for any county or the City of St. Louis, or
any assistant prosecuting attorney duly appointed by a prosecuting attorney, or
any person employed by the prosecuting attorney, or any person acting on behalf
of the prosecuting attorney with actual or apparent authority.
(B) "Division" means the Family Support
Division.
(C) "Director" means the
person serving as director of the Missouri Family Support Division.
(D) "State agency" means the Missouri
Department of Social Services.
(E)
"Case" means a matter in which the state agency or the division has initiated
or will initiate an action to collect funds arising from a child support
matter, including the case record maintained under
45 CFR
302.33 and
45 CFR
303.2.
(F) "Referral" means a case sent to a
prosecuting attorney on behalf of the division.
(G) "Successful completion" of an action
means that a referral has been determined by the division or the prosecuting
attorney to require no further action by the prosecuting attorney. In cases
where judicial proceedings are determined necessary by the prosecuting
attorney, a case is completed successfully if the necessary documentation has
been submitted to the clerk for filing and service of process has been
completed or an unsuccessful attempt to serve process has been documented by
the prosecuting attorney, and the prosecuting attorney is proceeding with due
diligence. If the initial attempt at service of process is unsuccessful, then
the prosecuting attorney shall proceed with diligent efforts to serve process
as defined in subsection (1)(M).
(H) "Adequate documentation" means written or
electronically stored records, the accuracy and authenticity of which
specifically are adopted by the prosecuting attorney, and from which a
reasonable person, by normal and reasonable review, can determine what actions
were taken by the prosecuting attorney and the outcome of those actions.
Adequate documentation and adequate records shall have the same meaning.
Documentation includes all case file records and all other records pertaining
to referrals. For purposes of service of process, adequate documentation shall
be a copy of the return of service from the process server or documentation in
the case file of the contents of the return of service. No documentation shall
be deemed adequate if it fails to meet the requirements of
45 CFR
303.2.
(I) "Requested action" means any act by the
prosecuting attorney requested to be performed by the division including, but
not limited to, the initiating of correspondence on a case, the researching of
legal issues and/or investigation, the filing or preparation of legal documents
or other correspondence, or the obtaining and forwarding to the division or the
state agency data and information related to a referral(s). A requested action
shall include all requirements of the cooperative agreement and any training or
cooperation with federal or state agency auditors, as may be asked of the
prosecuting attorney by the division.
(J) "A Level A county" means a county in
which the prosecuting attorney has sole responsibility for the operation of the
IV-D program in that county, for cases assigned by the division, and also
performs specific legal functions on referrals sent to him/her by the
division.
(K) "A Level B county"
means a county in which the prosecuting attorney has sole responsibility for a
specific portion of the IV-D program in that county, for cases assigned by the
division, and also performs specific legal functions on referrals sent to
him/her by the division.
(L) "A
Level C county" means a county in which the division has sole responsibility
for the entire operation of the IV-D program in that county and the prosecuting
attorney performs specific legal functions on referrals sent to him/her by the
division.
(M) "Diligent efforts" to
serve process means efforts which, in the sound discretion of the prosecuting
attorney, are designed reasonably, under the particular circumstances of the
case, to ensure accomplishment of personal service, taking into account the
potential cost of the service and the risk of personal safety of the person
attempting service. The prosecuting attorney shall provide adequate
documentation to explain the failure of service. In cases where previous
attempts to serve process failed and adequate identifying and other information
exists, the prosecuting attorney, within ninety (90) days of the last attempt
at service, shall reattempt service of process in the event that there is a
likelihood of successful service of process.
(2) Performance Requirements Standards for
All Counties on Cases Referred by the Division.
(A) The county shall complete all necessary
actions and achieve successful completion of all requested actions as defined
by subsections (1)(G), (1)(I), and (1)(M) of this rule within sixty (60)
calendar days after the county accepts any referral from the division. A
failure to comply with the terms contained in subsections (1)(G), (1)(I), or
(1)(M) shall be deemed a failure to comply with this sub-section (2)(A) only.
(B) In all cases needing support
order establishment, regardless of whether paternity has been established, the
county shall complete action to establish support orders from the date of
service of process to the time of disposition within one (1) year. The term
"disposition," as used herein, shall include an order of support or genetic
exclusion of all alleged fathers referred.
(C) The time frames contained in subsection
(2)(A) of this rule shall be tolled for those time periods during which the
prosecuting attorney has requested information from the division that is
essential to the successful completion of the requested action; or time periods
in which the custodian does not cooperate with the prosecuting attorney and the
custodian's cooperation is essential to the successful completion of the
requested action, provided the prosecuting attorney has documented the date the
noncooperation occurred and the reason for determination of noncooperation in
the automated child support system. Tolling due to noncooperation shall
terminate only upon the custodian's affirmative action that is essential to the
successful completion of the requested action. The prosecuting attorney (PA)
shall document the date the affirmative action occurred and the reason for
determination of cooperation in the automated child support system.
(D) If a support order needs to be
established in a case and an order is established in accordance with Missouri
Supreme Court Rule 88.01 during the audit period, the county will be considered
to have taken appropriate action in that case for audit purposes regardless of
whether the requirements of subsection (A) of this section have been
met.
(E) If the requested action is
an enforcement action and an action is taken, in addition to a federal and
state income tax refund offset, which results in a collection during the audit
period, the county will be considered to have taken appropriate action in the
case for audit purposes regardless of whether the requirements of subsection
(A) of this section have been met.
(F) In all petitions filed with the court for
the establishment of child support orders, the prosecuting attorney shall
request an order for medical support.
(G) If a prosecuting attorney determines that
no appropriate legal remedy is available on a case, and documents in the
automated child support system the reason for return or rejection, that case
shall be dropped from the audit sample of a compliance review conducted based
on the requirements of
13 CSR
30-2.010(2).
(H) The prosecuting attorney shall notify the
division of the conclusion of all requested actions by documenting the
conclusion in the automated child support system and sending to the division
any supporting documentation that provides information regarding the
disposition of the referral within twenty (20) calendar days of the supporting
documentation being received by the PA.
(3) Performance Standards for Level A and
Level B Counties for Cases in Their Own Caseload. The prosecuting attorney
shall-
(A) Make applications for child
support enforcement services readily accessible to the public;
(B) Maintain records of all persons applying
for IV-D services. The records shall include documentation that applications
are being provided to the applicants in conformance with
45 CFR
303.2(a)(2);
(C) For all cases referred to the division
or applying for services, the prosecuting attorney shall attempt to locate all
noncustodial parents or alleged fathers, the location of noncustodial parents'
or alleged fathers' employers, or other sources of income and/or assets when
location is necessary to take necessary action. The location attempts shall be
in full compliance with
45 CFR
303.3(b)(1)-(3);
(D) In all cases where previous attempts to
locate noncustodial parents or alleged fathers, employers, or sources of income
and/or assets have failed, but adequate identifying or other information exists
to meet requirements for submittal for location, the prosecuting attorney shall
comply fully with all requirements of
45 CFR
303.3(b)(5) and
(6);
(E) The prosecuting attorney shall refer all
appropriate cases to the IV-D agency of any other state in full compliance with
the requirements of
45 CFR
303.7;
(F) The prosecuting attorney, within ninety (90)
calendar days of locating the noncustodial parent or alleged father, regardless
of whether paternity has been established, shall establish an order for
support, or complete service of process necessary to begin proceedings to
establish an order for support, or complete service of process necessary to
begin proceedings to establish a court order, and if necessary, paternity, or
document unsuccessful attempts to serve process in accordance with subsection
(1)(M) of this rule. In all cases needing support order establishment,
regardless of whether paternity has been established-
1. The prosecuting attorney shall complete
action to establish support orders from the date of service of process to the
time of disposition within the following time frames:
A. Seventy-five percent (75%) in six (6)
months; and
B. Ninety percent (90%)
in twelve (12) months;
2.
In cases where the prosecuting attorney uses long-arm jurisdiction and
disposition occurs within twelve (12) months of service of process on the
noncustodial parent or alleged father, the case may be counted as a success
within the six- (6-) month tier of the time frame regardless of when
disposition occurs in the twelve- (12-) month period following service of
process;
3. In all cases in which
the court or administrative authority dismisses a petition for a support order
without prejudice, the prosecuting attorney, at the time of the dismissal,
shall examine the reasons for dismissal and determine when it would be
appropriate to seek an order in the future; and
4. In all cases in which the prosecuting
attorney is seeking to establish a support obligation, the prosecuting attorney
shall apply the child support guidelines as set forth in Supreme Court Rule
88.01. The prosecuting attorney shall notify the division of any deviation from
the guidelines by documenting the deviation in the automated child support
system;
(G) For all
cases assigned to the prosecuting attorney in which paternity has not been
established, the prosecuting attorney shall-
1. File for paternity establishment, or
complete service of process to establish paternity or document unsuccessful
attempts to serve process in accordance with subsection (1)(M) of this rule,
within no more than ninety (90) calendar days of locating the alleged
father;
2. Establish paternity or
exclude the alleged father as a result of genetic tests and/or legal process
within the time frames set out in paragraphs (3)(F)1. and 2. of this rule;
and
3. Meet the requirements set
forth in paragraphs (3)(G)1. and 2. of this rule for all alleged fathers, in
any case where an alleged father is excluded, but more than one (1) alleged
father has been identified;
(H) For all cases assigned to the prosecuting attorney
in which a child support order has been established, the prosecuting attorney
shall maintain and use an effective system to-
1. Monitor compliance with the support
obligation;
2. Identify on the date
the parent owing a duty of support failed to make payments in an amount equal
to the support payable for one (1) month;
3. Enforce the obligation in full compliance
with the requirements of
45 CFR
303.6(c)(1)-(3);
and
4. In cases in which
enforcement attempts have failed, the prosecuting attorneys should examine the
reason the attempt failed and determine when it would be appropriate to take
enforcement action in the future. When appropriate, the prosecuting attorney
shall take action in full compliance with the requirements of
45 CFR
303.6(c)(1)-(3);
(I) The prosecuting attorney
shall comply with the system developed by the division for case assessment and
prioritization;
(J) The
prosecuting attorney shall comply with the system developed by the division for
case closure;
(K) The prosecuting
attorney shall comply with the provisions of
13 CSR
40-102.010; and
(L) Notwithstanding the time frames contained in-
1. Subsection (3)(F) of this rule, if a
support order needs to be established in a case and an order is established in
accordance with Missouri Supreme Court Rule 88.01 during the audit period, the
prosecuting attorney will be considered to have taken appropriate action in
that case for audit purposes; and
2. Paragraph (3)(H)3. of this rule, if the
requested action is an enforcement action and an action is taken, in addition
to federal and state income tax refund offset, which results in a collection
received during the audit period, the prosecuting attorney will be considered
to have taken appropriate action in the case for audit purposes.
(4) Performance
Requirements.
(A) The following are mandatory
requirements by which prosecuting attorneys' actions on referred cases shall be
evaluated:
1. The county shall provide
services on referred cases according to federal and state statutes and
regulations and cooperative agreement requirements, including those related to
financial reimbursement for services provided on referred cases. Failure to do
so shall be deemed failure to comply with this rule and this provision. Waivers
of this provision may be granted by the division director but are not effective
unless granted in writing and are not effective retroactively unless
specifically set forth by the director as being permissibly applied
retroactively for a specified time period;
2. The county shall cooperate with compliance
reviews conducted by the division pursuant to the requirements of
13 CSR
40-108.040(2), which will occur no
more frequently than semi-annually. Upon completion of the compliance review,
the division shall submit a draft compliance review results summary to the
county. The county shall have the right to submit written rebuttals of this
review to the manager of the division compliance review section within thirty
(30) days of receiving the review results. The division shall then have sixty
(60) days in which to submit, in writing, its decision on each and every case
rebutted to the county. The county shall then have fifteen (15) days to submit,
in writing, the division's rebuttal decisions for review de novo by the
division's deputy director. After review de novo, the final decision of the
division shall be issued within sixty (60) days. The county may request in
writing an extension of the timeframes contained herein. The division will
notify the county if an extension of the division's timeframes are
necessary;
3. The division will
otherwise retain authority to conduct special audits and take appropriate
action based on the special audit. The division will also retain the authority
to discuss with the prosecuting attorney the actions taken in all cases that
have been referred to the county and take other action as set forth in the
cooperative agreement between the state agency and the prosecuting attorney;
and
4. The county shall achieve
substantial compliance with the performance requirements set forth in this
regulation concerning actions taken on referred cases and meeting time
requirements in so doing. Substantial compliance means that the county has
achieved the same case quality standards for those activities for which it is
responsible, as are required by the division of its child support offices set
forth by federal statutes, federal regulations, and federal IV-D
policy.
(5)
Sanctions by the Division.
(A) Upon
determining that a prosecuting attorney has not complied with the requirements
of this rule or is not complying with the requirements of this rule, the
division may send notice that it has determined one (1) of the following
conditions to exist:
1. That the prosecuting
attorney is in significant noncompliance with this rule and that a written
corrective action plan addressing all aspects of noncompliance as described in
the division's notice must be submitted to the division within thirty (30)
calendar days after the division sends the notice of significant noncompliance.
The division shall approve or disapprove each corrective action plan within
twenty (20) calendar days after it is sent to the division by the prosecuting
attorney. The prosecuting attorney shall have twenty (20) calendar days from
the date the division sends a disapproval to resubmit a new corrective action
plan. Failure to submit a new plan timely may be determined by the division to
constitute substantial noncompliance;
A. To
be approved by the division, a corrective action plan, at a minimum, must
contain the following:
1) an overall
completion date of no more than twelve (12) calendar months from the date of
division approval,
2) a statement
of planned correction addressing each item of noncompliance as set forth in the
division's notice of significant noncompliance,
3) an individual completion date for each
item of noncompliance contained in the division's notice of significant
noncompliance,
4) a statement that
during the plan of correction, no part of the prosecuting attorney's
performance will become out of compliance during the plan of correction period,
and
5) a statement that the
prosecuting attorney will attend such training as deemed necessary by the
division. The division's notice of significant noncompliance shall contain the
following:
1) a listing of specific items of
this rule with which the division alleges the prosecuting attorney is not in
compliance,
2) an explanation of
the method used by the division to determine noncompliance,
3) a statement that the division's
determination is final and that a corrective action plan will be required,
and
4) the date the corrective
action plan is due; or
B. That the prosecuting attorney is in substantial
noncompliance with this rule and that the cooperative agreement with the county
of the prosecuting attorney will be cancelled. A notice of substantial
noncompliance shall set forth, in addition to the information required for a
notice of significant noncompliance, a description of the findings, facts and
circumstances giving rise to the notice of substantial noncompliance and shall
specify a date certain upon which the cooperative agreement will no longer be
of any force and effect. The division may issue a notice of substantial
noncompliance to a prosecuting attorney only when-
1) there is no corrective action plan in
effect for the office of the prosecuting attorney to which the notice is
issued,
2) a review or audit of the
prosecuting attorney's child support enforcement procedures and/or records has
been conducted and issued as a final report, and
3) a notice of significant noncompliance has
been previously issued to the prosecuting attorney and has not been
successfully completed or a notice of significant noncompliance has been issued
and no corrective action plan has been approved by the division within ninety
(90) calendar days from the date of the division's notice of significant
noncompliance.
(B) By issuing or failing to issue any notice
of noncompliance, the division does not alter, waive, or otherwise substitute
this rule for any of the division's rights or benefits agreed to in the
cooperative agreement by the county of the prosecuting attorney.
(6) Waivers for Counties. The
director may waive any requirement of this rule for any county if all of the
following conditions have been met by that county prior to the waiver being
granted:
(A) The prosecuting attorney has
requested a waiver in writing, whenever possible, identifying the specific
cases to which the waiver will apply;
(B) The prosecuting attorney has assured the
director in writing that the waiver will not permit or cause a failure to
achieve successful completion of a case; and
(C) The waiver does not violate any state or
federal law or rule.
(7)
All timeliness requirements of this rule that are calculated from the date the
division sends a document, notice, or request, except those requirements found
in paragraphs (4)(A)1.- 4., upon request of the prosecuting attorney, shall be
calculated from the date the prosecuting attorney actually received the notice,
document, or request. This request shall be granted if the prosecuting attorney
has a reasonably accurate and reliable procedure to verify the actual date of
receipt.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.