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The ODJFS Office of Child Support collects and distributes nearly $2 billion annually to more than 1 million Ohio children. In federal fiscal year (FFY) 2011, Ohio had the third largest "IV-D"-designated child support caseload in the country. IV-D refers to the section of federal law that created the child support program.
A breaker boy was a coal-mining worker in the United States [1] and United Kingdom [2] whose job was to separate impurities from coal by hand in a coal breaker. Though boys were primarily children, elderly coal miners who could no longer work in the mines because of age, disease, or accident were sometimes employed as breaker boys. [3]
Coal miners in Hazleton, Pennsylvania, in 1905. The five-month Coal Strike of 1902, led by the United Mine Workers and centered in eastern Pennsylvania, ended after direct intervention of President Theodore Roosevelt as a neutral arbitrator. 1903 Colorado coal strike – October 1903.
Child Support Enforcement Agency [77] Ohio Rev. Code §§ 3119.01 et seq., [78] based on the Income Shares model [13] Office of Child Support [79] Oklahoma State title 43, §§ 118 to 120 [80] Department of Human Services [81] Oregon Child Support Guidelines, [82] based on the Income Shares model [13] Division of Child Support [83] Pennsylvania
Coal mining employment in the US, 1950-2017. Coal-mining employment increased rapidly in the late 1800s and early 1900s, and peaked in 1923 at 798,000. Since then, the number of miners has fallen considerably since, due to mechanization. By 2019 it had fallen below 55,000. [37]
In 1878, Jeffrey partnered with F.C. Sessions to purchase the patent and other rights to the coal cutting machine from Lechner, and they formed the Lechner Mining Machine Company to produce it. [3] The Lechner machine used a chain drive for the coal cutting heads and was the first practical coal cutter.
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Today, it is still one of the major employers in Morgan County, Ohio, [6] although its high-sulfur coal now spurs little demand. [7] Many of the company's employees were members of the United Mine Workers. [8] 10,000 acres (40 km2) of reclaimed land owned by the company was donated to form The Wilds. [9]