In this рost-dissolution of marriage proceeding between Charles Roberts (father) and Kimberly E. Bolding-Roberts (mother) to modify child support, father appeals the district court’s order regarding treatment of an adoption subsidy for the parties’ adopted daughter. We affirm.
The parties’ marriage was dissolved in 2001. At the time of entry of permanent orders, two of the parties’ three children were unemancipated. One of those children, the parties’ daughter, is an adoptee for whom the State of Colorado pays a monthly subsidy.
As part of its permanent orders, the court ordered father to pay $404 per month in child support. In calculating this amount, the district court included the adoption subsidy for the parties’ daughter as part of mother’s income on the child support worksheet.
In March 2003, father filed a motion to modify child support on the grounds that the calculation of overnights in the original order was improper and the adoption subsidy should have reduced his child suppоrt obligation. The court held a hearing on father’s motion, and the magistrate recalculated child support to subtract the adoption subsidy from mother’s income, resulting in an increase in father’s child support obligation to $727.44 per month. The parties subsequently stipulated to a different calculation of mother’s income, whiсh changed father’s child support obligation to $521 per month.
Father filed a motion for review of the magistrate’s order, which was adopted by the district court.
On aрpeal, father contends the district court erred in calculating child support because the court did not consider whether the adoption subsidy reduced thе child’s basic needs, thereby reducing his support obligation. We disagree.
We review the district court’s award of child support for an abuse of discretion.
In re Marriage of Klein,
The adoption subsidy in question is provided as part of а joint federal and state plan to promote and subsidize the adoption of children with special needs. The federal plan, codified at 42 U.S.C. § 670, et seq. (2000 & Supр.2004), was passed in 1980 as part of the Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act. The program provides federal reimbursements to states that pay benefits to parents who adopt children with special needs.
Hamblen v. Hamblen,
Under Colorado’s adoption subsidy program, the payment is made directly to the adoptive parents, and is intеnded “to help, or remove financial barriers to, the adoption of Colorado children with special needs by providing assistance to the parent or parents in the payment of expenses of caring for and raising the child.” Department of Human Services Regulation No. 7.203.23(A), 12 Code Colo. Regs. 2509-3.
A “child with special needs” is defined as “a child with a special, unusual, or significant physical or mental disability, or emotional disturbance, or such other condition which acts as a seriоus barrier to the child’s adoption.” Section 26-7-101(2), C.R.S.2004.
Here, in its modified child support order, the magistrate treated the adoption subsidy as income of the child, rather than of mother, by removing it from the computation of mother’s income. However, neither the magistrate nor the district court reached the question of whether, as income of the child, the subsidy reduces the child’s basic needs under § l<W0-115(13)(b), C.R.S.2004.
We are unaware of any reported Colorado decisions that have addressed the treatment of adoption subsidies in calculating child support. However, the issue has been addressed in several other jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Hamblen v. Hamblen, supra; In re Marriage of Newberry,
In Hamblen v. Hamblen, supra, the Arizona Court of Appeаls determined that a noncustodial parent should not receive an offset against his child support obligation for the amount of an adoption subsidy. In reaching this conclusion, the court stated:
[T]he [adoption] subsidy is but an addition to a parent’s obligation of financial support. If this subsidy were credited against the parent’s child-suрport obligation it would in effect, eliminate the supplementary effect of the subsidy. And, once the supplementary effect of the subsidy is taken, the effect of its incentive is undermined, leaving the custodial parent of the subsidized child with reduced if any support and greater difficulty in meeting the child’s particular needs. The prospect of this scenario could as well deter a prospective parent from adopting a special-needs child.
Hamblen, supra,
As the court recognized in Hamblen, to adopt father’s position that he should receive a credit against his child support obligation for the amount of the adoption subsidy would be tantamount to absolving father of his duty to suppоrt his child, placing her in a worse position than a child without special needs. See Hamblen, supra.
The New Hampshire Supreme Court recently took a similar position, stating: “[All-lowing the рetitioner to credit the adoption subsidy against her child support payment would be against the interests of the adopted children because it would diminish the resources deemed necessary for the care and incorporation of these ‘special needs’ children.”
In re Hennessey-Martin, supra,
Although the decisions of the New Hampshire аnd Arizona courts appear to be at *1268 odds because the court in Hennessey-Martin treated the adoption subsidy as gross income of the parent, both courts determined that the subsidy should not be considеred a credit against the noncustodial parent’s child support obligation. We agree that adoption subsidies should be treated the same way in this state.
A child suрport order is calculated to serve the best interests of children and to mitigate the potential harm to them caused by the dissolution of marriage.
In re Marriage of Bohn,
We are not persuaded that
In re Marriage of Kluver,
Other than generally referring to the child’s “gross income,” the Kluver decision did not specify the source of that income, including whether it was from a federal program, such as the adoption subsidy at issue here. Thus, Kluver provides no guidance on the issue of whether an adoption subsidy should be considered income of the child that may reduce the child’s basic needs under § 14 — 10—115(13)(b).
Nor are we persuaded that
In re Marriage of Quintana,
Unlike the social security payments at issue in Quintana, which were intended as a substitute or replacement for lost income of a disabled parent, the adoption subsidy at issue here is intended as a supplement to allow the parents to address the special needs of the adopted child. Given the different purposes underlying these two types of payments, we conclude that there is a reasonable bаsis for treating them differently under § 14-10-115(13)(b).
We perceive no abuse of discretion in the court’s treatment of the subsidy in calculating child support.
The order is affirmed.
Notes
Sitting by assignment of tine Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S.2004.
