RulesofCivilProcedure.com Civil Procedure · Every State

Rule 90.5.Expedited Judicial Relief from Action Against Occupational or Driver’s License for Unpaid Child Support.

Last amended October 15, 2008 · Last verified July 6, 2026

In one sentenceRule 90.5 sets the expedited court procedure for challenging a state action against a delinquent child-support obligor's occupational or driver's license, from the petition deadline through a narrow, de novo hearing on three specific questions.

Full Text of Rule 90.5

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g)

(a) Scope. This rule sets out the procedure for requesting expedited judicial relief from a decision by the Child Support Services Division (CSSD) under AS 25.27.244 (adverse action against delinquent obligor’s occupational license) or AS 25.27.246 (adverse action against delinquent obligor’s driver’s license).
(b) Petition.
(1) Requirements. To request expedited judicial relief under AS 25.27.244 or 25.27.246, a person must file a petition in the superior court. The petition must be on a form published by the Alaska Court System and must specify which of the statutory grounds for relief the petitioner is relying on. The petition should be accompanied by:
(A) a written explanation of why the petitioner is entitled to judicial relief (not to exceed five pages);
(B) any documents that the petitioner intends to present to the court;
(C) a list of the witnesses whom the petitioner intends to present at the court hearing;
(D) a copy of CSSD’s decision (titled “Notice of Occupational License Review Decision” or “Notice of Driver’s License Review Decision”); and
(E) a copy of the child support order or payment schedule that CSSD seeks to enforce.
(2) Number of Copies. The petitioner must file the original plus one copy of the petition and any attachments.
(3) Deadline for Filing. The petition must be filed within 30 days after the date that the petitioner receives CSSD’s decision (titled “Notice of Occupational License Review Decision” or “Notice of Driver’s License Review Decision”). The petition may be filed either by delivering or mailing it to the clerk of court. A petition is deemed to be filed on the date it is received by the clerk.
(4) Service on CSSD. Upon receipt of the petition, the court shall promptly serve CSSD by mailing or delivering the extra copy to the appropriate office of the Department of Law.
(5) Grounds for Rejecting Petition. The clerk shall refuse to accept the petition for filing if the petitioner has failed to specify which of the statutory grounds for relief the petitioner is relying on and has provided no other written explanation of why the petitioner is entitled to judicial relief.
(c) Response. CSSD’s response to the petition must be filed and served within fifteen days after service of the petition under (b)(4). The response must include a written explanation of CSSD’s position (not to exceed five pages) and must be accompanied by any documents that CSSD intends to present at the hearing and a list of the witnesses whom CSSD intends to present.
(d) Hearing. Upon receipt of the petition, the court shall schedule a hearing. The hearing must be held not less than 20 nor more than 30 days after the petition is served under (b)(4). Telephonic participation at the hearing is governed by Civil Rule 99.
(e) Peremptory Challenge. A party may file a notice of change of judge under Civil Rule 42(c). A party’s notice is timely if filed within five days after notice that the case has been assigned to a specific judge.
(f) Relief Available in Expedited Proceeding. The court’s decision is limited to a determination of the following issues, which the court shall determine de novo:
(1) whether a support order or payment schedule is in effect;
(2) whether the petitioner is the obligor under the support order that CSSD is seeking to enforce; and
(3) whether the petitioner is in substantial compliance with the support order or payment schedule. A petitioner is in substantial compliance if: (A) the petitioner owes less than four times the monthly obligation; or (B) the petitioner is making the best possible efforts under the circumstances to pay the arrearages.
(g) Other Judicial Relief. To obtain other judicial relief, the petitioner must file an appeal from an administrative agency decision under Appellate Rule 602.

Amendment History

(Adopted by SCO 1375 effective October 15, 1999; amended by SCO 1676 effective October 15, 2008)

Notes

Note: The petition forms (DR-335 for occupational licenses and DR-336 for driver’s licenses) are available at all superior court locations and from the Child Support Services Division.

Plain-English Summary

A person facing an adverse decision from the Child Support Services Division (CSSD) against an occupational or driver's license for unpaid support can petition the superior court for expedited relief, using a court-published form that specifies the statutory ground relied on and is accompanied by a written explanation (no more than five pages), supporting documents, a witness list, a copy of CSSD's decision, and a copy of the support order or payment schedule CSSD is enforcing. The original plus one copy must be filed within 30 days after the petitioner receives CSSD's decision, and the clerk can refuse to accept a petition that fails to identify a statutory ground or provide any explanation. The court promptly serves CSSD, which must file and serve its own response — including a written explanation of its position, capped at five pages, plus documents and a witness list — within 15 days.

The court schedules a hearing between 20 and 30 days after the petition is served on CSSD, with telephonic participation available under Rule 99, and either party can file a timely notice of change of judge under Rule 42(c) within five days of learning which judge was assigned. The court's review is limited to three questions, decided de novo: whether a support order or payment schedule is in effect, whether the petitioner is the obligor under it, and whether the petitioner is in substantial compliance — defined as owing less than four times the monthly obligation, or making the best possible effort to pay under the circumstances. Any other kind of relief from CSSD's decision has to be pursued through an administrative appeal under the appellate rules rather than this expedited petition.

Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly do I have to petition after CSSD moves against my license?

Within 30 days after you receive CSSD's decision, using the court's published petition form and specifying which statutory ground for relief you're relying on.

What can the court decide in this expedited proceeding?

Only three things, reviewed de novo: whether a support order or payment schedule is in effect, whether you're the obligor under it, and whether you're in substantial compliance with it.

What if I want a different kind of relief from CSSD's decision?

This expedited petition doesn't cover it — you'd need to pursue an administrative appeal from the agency decision under the appellate rules instead.

Source & verification. The rule text, Amendment History, and Notes are reproduced verbatim from the official Alaska Rules of Civil Procedure (Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.5). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Alaska (Alaska Const. art. IV, § 15). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 6, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: driver's license child support Alaskaoccupational license CSSD appeal AlaskaAlaska R. Civ. P. 90.5