Establishing paternity is the critical first step in collecting child support.
When legal paternity is established, a child has the right to the father's
Social Security or veteran's benefits, medical coverage, pensions and inheritance.
Also, the medical genetic information of both parents is available for the
child if needed for diagnosis and treatment of medical problems.
How Can Paternity be Established?
- To make it easier for unwed parents to establish paternity at the time
of the child's birth, Illinois law makes it possible for both parents to
sign a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity form in the hospital. Signing
this form eliminates the court process and is vital to having the father's
name added to the birth certificate.
- Parents who do not sign the voluntary acknowledgment of paternity form
at the hospital may sign it later at any local registrar of vital records,
county clerk's office, local Department of Human Services office or child
support enforcement office. The form can also be completed, witnessed at
home and mailed to the Illinois Department of Public Aid, Administrative
Coordination Unit, 509 South Sixth Street, Springfield, Illinois 62701.
- Persons on public assistance must participate in the establishment of paternity.
The Department of Public Aid's Division of Child Support Enforcement uses
an administrative process when the alleged father and mother consent to establishing
paternity or when the alleged father contests being named the father. The
alleged father has the right to a hearing by an administrative law judge
or a court hearing if he requests.
- Genetic tests are used when an alleged father is in doubt about being the
father or whenever paternity is contested.
- Paternity can be established by default when an alleged father fails to
attend a scheduled interview or to go for a scheduled genetic test and has
been properly served with a notice to appear.
- Paternity can be established by publication of the alleged father's name
in the newspaper.
- Paternity can be established in court using the standard judicial process
for persons not receiving services from the Division of Child Support Enforcement
or for alleged fathers of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
clients when they request it.
-- Illinois Child Support Enforcement