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Johor sees rise in divorce applications among Muslims
Johor sees rise in divorce applications among Muslims

The Star

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Star

Johor sees rise in divorce applications among Muslims

ISKANDAR PUTERI: Johor has recorded an increase in divorce applications filed by Muslim couples in the Syariah Court statewide over six years from 2019 to the end of 2024. State Islamic Religious Affairs Committee chairman Mohd Fared Mohd Khalid ( pic ) said the total number of divorce applications rose from 6,844 cases in 2019 to 7,306 cases last year. He said the causes of divorce include incompatibility, financial problems, irresponsible partners and interference from third parties, such as in-laws. 'The most significant increase was in divorce applications, which rose from 3,273 cases in 2019 to 4,264 cases in 2024. 'As for applications to verify divorce pronouncements (lafaz cerai), although there was a slight drop in 2021 (1,856 cases), the number increased again to 2,462 cases in 2024,' he added. Mohd Fared said this in reply to Marina Ibrahim (Pakatan–Skudai) during the state assembly meeting at Bangunan Sultan Ismail in Kota Iskandar on Monday (May 19). Earlier, Marina requested data from the Johor Islamic Religious Department (JAINJ) on alimony claims following divorce among married Muslim couples. Mohd Fared said applications for the verification of taklik divorces remained low throughout the period, between 25 and 38 cases annually. Applications for khulu' or redemption divorces also stayed low, dropping slightly from 10 cases in 2019 to eight cases in 2024. 'Meanwhile, fasakh divorce applications recorded a notable decrease from 988 cases in 2019 to 545 cases in 2024,' he said, adding that the highest number of divorce applications came from individuals aged 26 to 35, involving 16,159 people. Mohd Fared also said this was followed by applicants aged 36 to 45 (10,517), 18 to 25 (4,877), 46 to 55 (4,631), 56 to 65 (1,715), and those aged 66 and above (588). 'In total, 371 alimony claims have been filed from May last year to April this year. Through the Family Support Division, eligible individuals received assistance after an investigation and approval by the committee. 'From 2012 to August 2023, the Family Support Division has channelled RM77,400 in advance payments to eligible ex-wives using funds contributed by the Johor Islamic Religious Council (MAIJ),' he added.

Director of Missouri's long-troubled public assistance agency announces retirement
Director of Missouri's long-troubled public assistance agency announces retirement

Yahoo

time17-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Director of Missouri's long-troubled public assistance agency announces retirement

Kim Evans, center, announced Friday she was retiring from her position as director of the Family Support Division. She's pictured here speaking to the media in Jefferson City on March 28, 2023, about Medicaid renewals, alongside MO HealthNet director Todd Richardson, right, and former department director, Robert Knodell (Clara Bates/Missouri Independent). The head of the Missouri agency that for years has struggled to administer public benefit programs like food assistance and Medicaid announced her retirement on Friday afternoon, effective immediately. Kim Evans had served as director of the Family Support Division within the Missouri Department of Social Services since 2020. She spent over two decades working for the department, including as a program eligibility specialist, manager and deputy director. '(The Department of Social Services) is grateful for her service and wishes her the best in the next chapter,' Baylee Watts, the department's spokeswoman, said in an email. The interim director will be Mandi Adams, who is currently one of the division's deputy directors. Evans' departure last week is the latest in a series of leadership changes underway at Missouri's embattled social services agency since Gov. Mike Kehoe was elected in November. A new department director, Jessica Bax, began in January, and a new director for the child welfare division, Sara Smith, was named last week. Federal court rules Missourians were illegally denied food aid by the state During Evans' tenure, the department faced criticism from state lawmakers, the federal government and advocacy organizations over its administration of public benefits — which affect the lives of millions of Missourians. A federal judge last year ruled Missourians were illegally denied food aid by the state due to hours-long call center wait times for participants to receive a required interview. Those delays — which leadership has largely blamed on call center staffing issues — translate to families struggling to feed their young children while rearranging their days to wait on hold, Missourians with disabilities who can't understand the application forms being unable to get help and some subsisting on little food while using up prepaid phone minutes on hold. 'While call wait times fluctuate and have shown some improvement, the record demonstrates too little progress,' the judge in that case, U.S. District Court Judge M. Douglas Harpool, wrote last year. 'Consequently, Missourians who suffer food insecurity have been forced to either go hungry or seek alternative sources of food when their applications are denied.' The state has been required to submit monthly reports as part of the lawsuit. The average wait time for the interview line for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, was 45 minutes in January, the most recent monthly data states. The average wait time for the general call line, which handles all other inquiries — for programs including Medicaid, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, and non-interview related SNAP queries — was just under one hour in January. That case is still ongoing, and the parties are in mediation. Missouri children are losing Medicaid coverage at rate that is alarming pediatricians The department in its budget request to the state legislature asked for $11 million to hire 220 new staff in the Family Support Division to help ensure the agency complies with federal and state rules on timely processing, and 'maintains a reasonable wait time in the call centers,' the budget request stated. The governor recommended only 55 new positions. Asked about the call center issues in a Senate appropriations committee hearing last month, Bax was candid about the ongoing problems, stating that over 10,000 applications for SNAP were rejected solely due to failure to interview in January. Bax told the committee the agency is looking at 'overall efficiencies' including trying to get a shortened and condensed SNAP interview approved, and specializing some of the call center staff. 'So that is where the plan is: to really kind of take back those specialized teams and then have an ability to condense that interview so that we can free up the phone lines,' Bax said. Democratic state Sen. Maggie Nurrenbern of Kansas City said she continues to hear from constituents about their issues accessing aid to which they're entitled. 'This is one of the things that I continue to have very grave concerns about,' Nurrenbern said at last months's appropriations committee hearing. 'How long people are waiting online for essential services, and hear a lot of frustration from constituents reaching out and saying, 'I've been waiting online all day and nobody's getting back to us.' 'So I really hope that this is something that this committee can put some emphasis on and making sure that we are being as efficient as possible with these services,' she added. Bax replied that she 'could not agree more.' Bax's testimony differed from prior testimony of Evans, who typically downplayed issues with wait times to legislators. At one hearing in late 2023, Evans told lawmakers she was 'excited' the wait time was only a few minutes the morning of a hearing, though records obtained by The Independent would later show the average that month was actually over an hour. There have also been years-long problems with Medicaid application processing, leading to issues like pregnant Missourians going without prenatal care. Last summer, the federal Medicaid agency announced it was intervening to help bring the state back into compliance with timely processing. Bax said last month, regarding some Medicaid cases, 'we're about three months behind on the applications.' According to data for January, the average time to process Medicaid applications for aged, blind and disabled applications was 107 days. The federal limit is 90 days for those applications. The average for the other category of Medicaid applications was 29 days, climbing in recent months but still below the 45-day standard. Bax also said last month the department is looking at using contractors to help with annual Medicaid renewals. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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