well I hate to bust your bubble here, but most states base the child support percentage on ONE child, each subsequent child only counts for roughly 2% of an order. As each child of an order comes of age for example, the next child takes over the oldest childs spot, so that child support does not signifigantly change over the course of the support paying years.
therefore, mom getting dads rights terminated would likely not affect the support payment much. Actually were she to find the bio dad and make him pay, it could work out even more to her financial advantage, were this man to only have her child to pay for, for example.
therefore, mom getting dads rights terminated would likely not affect the support payment much. Actually were she to find the bio dad and make him pay, it could work out even more to her financial advantage, were this man to only have her child to pay for, for example.