OPINION
This action for modification of a final judgment of divorce before the Supreme Court addresses three questions certified to us by the Family Court. At issue is whether a parent’s child support obligations extend beyond a child’s twenty-first birthday when the child is a young adult with special needs. The certified questions are:
“1. Does [G.L.1956 § ] 15-5-16.2(b) terminate the Family Court’s jurisdiction over a special needs child who has reached the age of 21 and whose custodial parent is seeking continued child support?
“2. Does the case of Siravo v. Siravo [,] 424[A.]2d 1047 ([R.I.] 1981)[,] provide the Family Court with jurisdiction to extend a parent’s responsibility for support of a special needs child beyond the age of 21 in light of * * * [§ ] 15-5-16.2(b)[?]
“3. Is the Plaintiff, custodial parent, barred by * * * [§ ] 15-5-16.2(b) [from] filing her Motion to extend child support subsequent to [the] child attaining the age of twenty-one (21) years[?]”
These are hard questions to answer— hard because our hearts go out to the young adults with special needs whose very lives will be affected by our answers. In the words of Abraham Lincoln:
*869
But, at the same time, in light of our precedent and the mandate set forth by statute, these questions easily are answered. We conclude that G.L.1956 § 15-5-16.2(b) terminates the Family Court’s jurisdiction over a young adult with special needs who has reached the age of twenty-one and whose custodial parent is seeking child support. We further conclude that
Siravo v. Siravo,
*868 “In this sad world of ours, sorrow comes to all; and, to the young it comes with bitterest agony because it takes them unawares.” 1
*869 A statement of facts was agreed to by the parties. On August 24, 1992, Cheryl A. Pierce (Cheryl or plaintiff) and Paul 0. Pierce (Paul or defendant) were divorced. Pursuant to the divorce decree, Paul was ordered to pay $200 per week in support for the minor children of the parties. Furthermore, the parties recognized that De-van Pierce (Devan) was a special needs child with disabilities. Thus, Paul was ordered to pay support for Devan until she reached the age of twenty-one. However, the final judgment of divorce did not state that Cheryl was prevented from seeking support for Devan beyond the age of twenty-one, nor did it state that support automatically terminated once Devan turned twenty-one.
Subsequent to the entry of the final judgment of divorce, the parties modified the child support order, without the involvement of the Family Court, to $150 per week when the eldest child turned eighteen and graduated from high school. In April 1997, Devan suffered an unanticipated debilitating seizure, confining her to a wheelchair. On June 5, 1999, Devan turned twenty-one.
On August 6,1999, Paul filed a motion to terminate his child support obligation. Cheryl objected to the motion to terminate and filed a motion to continue child support payments. Paul objected to Cheryl’s motion. The parties appeared before the Family Court in Washington County. After reviewing the memoranda prepared by the parties in support of their arguments, the trial justice certified three questions to this Court. We address the certified questions in sequence.
I
The Certification
General Laws 1956 § 9-24-27 provides in pertinent part that:
‘Whenever in any proceedings * * * in the [Sjuperior [Cjourt or in any [Djis-trict [Cjourt, any question of law shall arise or the constitutionality of an act of the [Gjeneral [Ajssembly shall be brought in question upon the record, which, in the opinion of the court * * * is of such doubt and importance and so affects the merits of the controversy that it ought to be determined by the [Sjupreme [Cjourt before further proceedings, the court in which the cause is pending shall certify the question or motion to the [Sjupreme [Cjourt for that purpose and stay all further proceedings until the question is heard and determined * *
“[Jjustices of the [Fjamily [Cjourt shall have, insofar as they are applicable, the same obligations and duties as [Sjuperior [Cjourt justices, and in all matters within the jurisdiction of the court shall be vested with all of the prerogatives and authority of associate justices of the [Sjuperior
*870
[C]ourt.” G.L.1956 § 8-10-43. This Court has found that § 8-10^48 makes § 9-24-27 applicable to the Family Court, and “authorize[s] Family Court justices, like their Superior and District Court counterparts, to certify questions to this Court ‘of such doubt and importance and [that] so affect[ ] the merits of the controversy that [they] ought to be determined by the [S]upreme [C]ourt before further proceedings.’ ”
Rubano v. DiCenzo,
However, “certification require[s] more than just simply being a question on which a justice [is] unwilling at the time to make an immediate ruling.”
Bayview Towing, Inc. v. Stevenson,
“[t]he responsibility of passing upon important and doubtful questions rests upon the trial court in the first instance. [Therefore, a] question of law should not be certified to this [C]ourt as one of doubt and importance unless, after careful consideration, a justice of the [Superior [C]ourt or of a [District [C]ourt [or, as in the instant case, of the Family Court], who is actually required to make a ruling or decision necessarily involving the determination of an important and doubtful question, entertains such doubt concerning the question as to make him [or her] feel that he [or she] is unable to reach a satisfactory conclusion in respect thereto.” Richardson v. Bevilacqua,115 R.I. 49 , 52,340 A.2d 118 , 119-20 (1975) (quoting Easton v. Fessenden,63 R.I. 11 , 14,6 A.2d 714 , 715 (1939)).
This Court has “consistently and repeatedly mandated that a trial or hearing justice should not certify a question of law to [the Supreme] Court unless and until he or she first carefully considers the question or questions sought to be certified and then, after having had the benefit of counsels’ research and informed arguments, believes that he or she is unable to resolve the question satisfactorily.”
Bayview Towing, Inc.,
II
Does § 15-5-16.2(b) Terminate the Family Court’s Jurisdiction over a Young Adult with Special Needs who Has Reached the Age of Twenty-One and whose Custodial Parent is Seeking Continued Child Support?
“The Family Court possesses limited jurisdiction, and its authority to take action in a specific situation or to provide a'particular type of relief must be granted by statute.”
Furia v. Furia,
“[T]he [Family] [C]ourt may, if in its discretion it deems it necessary or advisable, order child support and education costs for children attending high school at the time of their eighteenth (18th) birthday and for ninety (90) days after graduation, but in no case beyond their nineteenth (19th) birthday. In addition, the court may order child support to continue, in the case of a child with a severe physical or mental impairment, until the twenty-first (21st) biHhday of the child.” (Emphasis added.)
The plaintiff argues that this section does not terminate the Family Court’s jurisdiction over a young adult with special needs who has reached the age of twenty-one.
Our canons of statutory construction are well-established. “Generally when a statute expresses a clear and unambiguous meaning, the task of interpretation is at an end and this [C]ourt will apply the plain and ordinary meaning of the words set forth in the statute.”
State v. Bryant,
Ill
Does
Siravo v. Siravo,
In
Siravo,
this Court noted that “a father’s responsibility for the support of his children terminate^] once [the children] reach[ed] the age of majority absent some exceptional circumstances or express agreement between the parties to the contrary.”
Siravo,
Again, we note that “[t]he Family Court is a court of limited jurisdiction, and its authority to act in a given situation, or to allow a specific type of relief, must be granted by statute.”
Adam,
Accordingly, we find that, in light of § 15-^5 — 16.2(b), Siravo did not provide the Family Court with jurisdiction to extend a parent’s responsibility for the support of a young adult with special needs beyond the age of twenty-one. It is the province of the General Assembly to revisit this issue if the result in the instant case is not what it intended.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we answer question one in the affirmative and question two in the *873 negative. The Family Court has jurisdiction to order parental support for a young adult with special needs only until that young adult has reached the age of twenty-one. Because we answer question two in the negative, we need not address the issue presented in question three.
Notes
. Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Fanny McCullough (Dec. 23, 1862), in A Treasury of *869 “Lincoln Quotations" 276 (Fred Kemer ed.1996).
. General Laws 1956 § 15-12-1 defines the age of adulthood, or majority, as eighteen years of age.
. General Laws 1956 § 15 — 5—16.2(b) reads in full:
“The [Family] [C]ourt may, if in its discretion it deems it necessary or advisable, order child support and education costs for children attending high school at the time of their eighteenth (18th) birthday and for ninety (90) days after graduation, but in no case beyond their nineteenth (19th) birthday. In addition, the [Family] [C]ourt may order child support to continue, in the case of a child with a severe physical or mental impairment, until the twenty-first birthday of the child.”
The second sentence in this statute was added in 1998. SeeP.L.1998, ch. 390, § 1.
