Some dozen month’s back I stated in LCI that Western world is realizing that there is no more free lunches as far as Alimony payment from ex Husband goes and my then thought was based on Sweden and Benelux countries legislative model and today after almost a year same is being prudently lobbied in USA right now and very soon Alimony Laws will change in USA for sure and will be awarded to those errant ex wives who really need it. [USA is advance country where feminism movement started and they have mechanism in place to gauge NEEDS of ex wives for simple reason PERJURY laws there are very stringent unlike in India where each Family Law petition carries minimum 15% perjury without which it cannot be admitted is generic view]
Now below is reproduction of news article for prudent readers and understand the ways the world is changing its free lunch dynamics and has gone beyond sari, sindoor and glycerin ………
In Age of Dual Incomes, Alimony Payers Prod States to Update Laws
MIAMI — In the waning days of this year’s legislative session, Florida lawmakers and advocacy groups are pushing to overhaul the state’s alimony law in a bid to better reflect today’s marriages and make the system less burdensome for the alimony payer.
The Florida House recently approved legislation that would make lifelong alimony more difficult to award and less onerous for the payer and, in the case of a remarriage, would place a new spouse’s income off-limits in awarding payments. Attention turns to the Senate, where the companion bill is less far-reaching.
Traditionally, alimony was designed to prevent divorced women who did not work and were less educated from falling into poverty. According to this view, the woman’s job was to raise children and run the household. Today, with both spouses often working, that situation is far less common. The question now is: What is fair alimony in the 21st century?
“I think that with my parents and certainly their parents, there were far less women in the work force,” said State Representative Ritch Workman, a
Last year, the legislature in Massachusetts, which had some of the country’s most antiquated alimony laws, passed without opposition a measure to rewrite the laws and make them more equitable, following the recommendations of a special commission. The changes in Massachusetts, which were supported by the state bar association and women’s groups, have spurred alimony payers in other states to organize and begin lobbying lawmakers.
In
Because laws vary greatly from state to state and grant judges broad discretion with few guidelines, alimony judgments diverge wildly, sometimes within the same jurisdiction. In
For many payers, reducing alimony is difficult, even when circumstances and incomes change. Appeals are often lost. The high cost of legal representation can make it impossible to continue battling in court. Payers say alimony should not deplete retirement funds, discourage women from working or remarrying, or sap the income of a new spouse.
If the standard of living must drop after a divorce, as it often does, the burden should be equally shared, they say. In
“It can strangle the person that is paying it,” said Alan Frisher, the founder of Florida Alimony Reform, an organization of 2,000 members, several of whom testified recently at legislative committee hearings. “Oftentimes, we can’t afford to pay that amount of alimony. It can provide a disincentive for the receiver to ever go back to work, to make more money or remarry. I don’t think anybody should have to be an indentured servant for the rest of their lives.”
But Barry Finkel, a family law lawyer in
“There certainly is a national trend against long-term alimony,” he said, “but the answer is not to create these roadblocks and hurdles because there is an unhappy payer.”
Cynthia Hawkins DeBose, a law professor at
“Over all, I’m mixed about this,” she said. “I don’t think alimony should be welfare for the middle class, but I’m fearful of the tail wagging the dog.”
In
Dr. Perez said his alimony payments had nearly bankrupted him.
David L. Manz, the chairman of the Florida Bar Family Law Section, said his organization opposed the House bill because it was too loosely written and would remove too much judicial discretion. In remedying the plight of a small number of men, Mr. Manz said, the bill could leave more divorced women vulnerable. He said he was negotiating to change parts of the bill.
Even today, Mr. Manz said, divorce is more likely to hurt women. They are still the ones who typically give up their jobs to focus on raising children. Even when they do not give up jobs, their child-rearing responsibilities can sidetrack their careers. Returning to jobs after long absences is difficult.
“For every guy, there is a wife or former wife who got the short end of the stick,” Mr. Manz said. “Look at the standard of living of most people in a long-term marriage: divorced men’s standard of living goes up, and the women’s goes down. That happens every day.”
“We are not in favor of disenfranchising someone who has given up her career,” he added. “What you are hearing about is a very vocal, persuasive minority.”
The men, and the few women, in
Dr. Jose A. Aleman-Gomez, a
Dr. Jose A. Aleman-Gomez said his former wife had a solid income as a dentist.
Each man was also ordered in court to carry a life insurance policy naming his former wife as sole beneficiary.
The aggrieved men say they are not opposed to alimony. They are opposed to alimony payments with no end in sight. In their view, alimony should be awarded for long enough to allow a former spouse to get an education, find a decent job or rehabilitate a career or, when both spouses agree, until children reach a certain age. The
“I am maintaining her standard of living but not mine,” Dr. Aleman-Gomez said of his former wife. He said he was paying off $70,000 in lawyer’s fees. “A person with a doctorate degree, with a six-figure income, should not be receiving alimony,” he said. “Alimony is for the people who need it.”
Importance of News in Indian context:
Unbiased readers should re-read above lobbying views and put their straight forward AYES and or NAYES to below second ever family law forum pool question without much to add as the news article is self explanatory having balanced views from both sides of lobbying groups.
Now a Poll (in family law):-
Is it fair to award alimony to highly educated ex wife in
- AYES
- NAYES