<a href="/CS/photos/jan2007/picture3631.aspx" target="_blank"><img src="/CS/photos/jan2007/images/3631/175x131.aspx" align="right" border="0" height="175" hspace="4"></a>Unlike Arkansas, which recently <a href="http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/strollerderby/archive/2007/01/12/arkansas-court-rules-that-non-father-must-pay-child-support.aspx">required a non-father to pay child support</a>, legislators in Colorado are drawing the line with a <a href="http://cbs4denver.com/local/local_story_030090732.html">proposed bill</a>
that exempts non-fathers from paying child support for other guys'
kids.&nbsp; The intricacies of child support awards are hard to master these
days, and no one can avoid the craziness, including <a href="http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/strollerderby/archive/2007/01/28/man-must-pay-child-support-for-son-of-a-sperm-bank.aspx">sperm donors</a>.&nbsp; <br><p>Dylan
Davis, the a 33-year old at the center of the Colorado legislative
effort, didn't get a paternity test for his twins until after he and
his wife divorced.&nbsp; Even though the test revealed someone else was the
children's father, he was still required to pay, since the test
occurred after the specified time limit. The proposed bill would remove
that time limit, allowing paternity testing results to inform child
support awards at any time.</p>