San Antonio Divorce Lawyer

Q: " an earlier study that found a small decline in the proportion of low-income children living in one-parent households without other adults, and another that found a two-percentage-point increase in marriage among 2,000 low-income women in Boston, Chicago and San Antonio. But those studies did not focus on welfare applicants, their authors noted. Unlike the Connecticut and Iowa evaluations, they were not set up to separate the impact of welfare policy from the strong economy and other factors. And the results are quite compatible, said a professor of public policy at Johns Hopkins University and an author of the three-city study" I read this information recently but don't find some worthy example? Can anyone help me???

A: "Are they going to give discounts on divorces when they promote marriage?" asked a woman. She said she fled an abusive husband when their daughter was an infant and her son about 5, and was "floored" when the first divorce lawyer she called wanted a $2,500 retainer. Assigned to Jobs First when she applied for

aid, she got by on a mix of public assistance and part-time wages of $9.50 an hour in the same bank job she has held since she was 19. She finally found a lawyer willing to accept installments of $30 a month, she said, but by the time her husband was ordered to pay $94.50 a week in child support, he was in prison. When her aid ended, she increased her hours at the bank and gave up her dream to study social work at college. Now, she said, she is happily engaged to a man with "a swell job" who is the father of her third child, a 2-year-old boy. But he pays steep child support for a son of his own, she said, adding, "We don't have a set date, only because of money."