| 2. MODIFICATION STATUTORILY RESTRICTED. Under UIFSA, the only |
| tribunal that can modify a support order is one having |
| continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over the support issue. As |
| an initial matter, this is the tribunal that first acquires |
| personal and subject matter jurisdiction over the parties and |
| the support obligation. If modification of the order by the |
| issuing tribunal is no longer appropriate, another tribunal |
| may become vested with the continuing, exclusive jurisdiction |
| necessary to modify the order. Primarily this occurs when |
| neither the individual parties nor the child reside in the |
| issuing State, or when the parties agree in a record that |
| another tribunal may assume modification jurisdiction. Only |
| then may another tribunal with personal jurisdiction over the |
| parties assume continuing, exclusive jurisdiction and have |
| jurisdiction to modify the order, Sections 205, 206, 603(c), |
| 609-612. Further, except for modification by agreement, |
| Section 205 and 207, or when the parties have all moved to the |
| same new State, Section 613, the party petitioning for |
| modification must be a nonresident of the responding State and |
| must submit himself or herself to the forum State, which must |
| have personal jurisdiction over the respondent, Section 611. |
| The vast majority of the time this is the State in which the |
| respondent resides. A colloquial short-hand summary of the |
| principle is that ordinarily the movant for modification of a |
| child support order "must play an away game." |