This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with Conduent

Your EAP offers these great resources.

If Your Wages Are Garnished: Your Rights

If you're subject to a wage garnishment, what are your rights?

Your wages may be garnished if you owe child support, student loans, or back taxes, or a court judgment has been entered against you. A wage garnishment is when a court issues an order requiring your employer to withhold a certain amount of your paycheck and send it directly to the person or institution to whom you owe money, until your debt is paid off. Different garnishment rules apply to different types of debt and there are legal limits on how much of your paycheck can be garnished.

Wage Garnishments for Court Judgments

If you lose a lawsuit and a money judgment is entered against you, the person or entity that won the lawsuit can garnish your wages by providing a copy of the court order to the local sheriff or marshal, who will send it along to your employer. Your employer must then notify you of the garnishment, begin withholding part of your wages, send the garnished money to your creditor, and give you information on how you can protest the garnishment.

For court judgments, the amount that can be garnished is limited to 25% of your disposable earnings (what's left after mandatory deductions) or the amount by which your wages exceed 30 times the minimum wage, whichever is lower. Some states set a lower percentage limit for how much of your wages can be garnished.

You may not be fired or otherwise retaliated against because your wages have been garnished to pay one debt. Once you have one or more garnishments, however, less protection is available. Under federal law, you are not protected from retaliation if more than one creditor has garnished your wages or the same creditor has garnished your wages for two or more debts. Some states offer more protection.

If you want to protest a wage garnishment, you must file papers with the court to get a hearing date. At the hearing, you can present evidence showing that you need more of your paycheck to pay your expenses. The judge can terminate the garnishment or leave it in place.

Wage Garnishments for Child Support and Alimony

Since 1988, all new or modified child support orders include an automatic wage withholding order. (If child support and alimony are combined into one family support payment, the wage withholding order applies to the whole amount owed; however, orders involving only alimony don't result in automatic wage withholding.)

Once the court orders you to pay child support, the court or the child's other parent sends a copy of the order to your employer, who will withhold the ordered amount from your paycheck and send it to the other parent. If you are required to maintain health insurance coverage for your child, the payment for that will be deducted from your paycheck as well.

More of your paycheck can be taken to pay child support. Up to 50% of your disposable earnings may be garnished to pay child support if you are currently supporting a spouse or a child who isn't the subject of the order. If you aren't supporting a spouse or child, up to 60% of your earnings may be taken.

You may not be fired, disciplined, or otherwise retaliated against because your pay is subject to a wage withholding order to pay child support.

Wage Garnishments for Student Loans

In 2006, Congress passed a law that allows the U.S. Department of Education (or any agency trying to collect a student loan on its behalf) to garnish up to 15% of your pay if you are in default on a student loan. No lawsuit or court order is required for this type of garnishment; if you are in default, your wages can be garnished.

At least 30 days before the garnishment is set to begin, you must be notified in writing of:

  • how much you owe
  • how to get a copy of records relating to the loan
  • how to enter into a voluntary repayment schedule, and
  • how to request a hearing on the proposed garnishment.

The law specifies only one basis for objecting to the garnishment: that you returned to work within the past 12 months after being fired or laid off. See Nolo's article What Happens If You Default on Your Student Loans for more information on what to expect if you fall behind on student loan payments.

Wage Garnishments for Back Taxes

If you owe money to the IRS, watch out: The agency can take a big chunk of your wages, and it doesn't have to get a court order first. The amount you get to keep depends on how many dependents you have and your standard deduction amount. Your employer will pay you a fairly low minimum amount each week and give the rest to the IRS.

The IRS must send a wage levy notice to your employer, who is required to give you a copy. The notice includes an exemption claim form, which you should complete and return.

State and local tax agencies also have the right to take some of your wages. In many states, however, the law limits how much the taxing authority can take. Contact your state labor department for information on your state's law. Learn more about back taxes in Nolo's Back Taxes and Tax Debt section.

http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/if-wages-are-garnished-rights-33050.html

More about this Topics

  • Product Liability Claims Involving Defective Cars

  • Travel Scams: Where to Get Help

  • How Do Insurers Value an Injury Claim?

  • How Dog Owners Can Avoid a Lawsuit

  • Motorcycle Helmet Laws and Recovery for Injuries

Other Topics

    • Tarmac Delays and Airline Passenger Rights
    • Product Liability FAQ
    • Slip and Fall Accidents: Proving Fault
    • Crib Recalls, Safety, and Litigation
    • Neighbors and Noise FAQ
    • File a Consumer Complaint: Part 1
    • Small Claims Court: Part 1
    • Consumer Tips: After You Buy
    • Warranties
    • Employment: Consumer Tips