Minn. Stat. § 518A.40
Subd. 1. Child care costs.
Unless otherwise agreed to by the parties and approved by the court, the court must order that work-related or education-related child care costs of joint children be divided between the obligor and obligee based on their proportionate share of the parties' combined monthly PICS. The amount of work-related or education-related child care costs required by this subdivision to be divided between the obligor and obligee is the total amount received by the child care provider from the obligee and any public agency for the joint child or children. Child care costs shall be adjusted by the amount of the estimated federal and state child care credit payable on behalf of a joint child. The Department of Human Services shall develop tables to calculate the applicable credit based upon the custodial parent's PICS.
Subd. 2. Low-income obligor.
(a) If the obligor's PICS meets the income eligibility requirements for child care assistance under the basic sliding fee program under chapter 142E, the court must order the obligor to pay the lesser of the following amounts:
Subd. 3. Determining costs.
Subd. 3a. Child care cost information.
(a) Upon the request of the obligor when child care support is ordered to be paid, unless there is a protective or restraining order issued by the court regarding one of the parties or on behalf of a joint child, or the obligee is a participant in the Safe at Home program:
Subd. 4. Change in child care.
(a) When a court order provides for child care expenses, and child care support is not assigned under section 518A.81, the public authority, if the public authority provides child support enforcement services, may suspend collecting the amount allocated for child care expenses when either party informs the public authority that no child care expenses are being incurred and:
(2) the obligee fails to respond within 30 days of the date of a written request from the public authority for information regarding child care costs. A written or oral response from the obligee that child care costs are being incurred is sufficient for the public authority to continue collecting child care expenses.
The suspension is effective as of the first day of the month following the date that the public authority either verified the information with the obligee or the obligee failed to respond.
The public authority will resume collecting child care expenses when either party provides information that child care costs are incurred, or when a child care support assignment takes effect under section 518A.81, subdivision 4. The resumption is effective as of the first day of the month after the date that the public authority received the information.