Home > Laws & Policies > Policy/Program Issuances > Program Instructions > PI-98-02
This
document reflects amendments made to the Social Security Act by the
Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-89), and the
Child Support Performance and Incentive Act of 1998 (Public Law
105-200), as of 8/25/98. Deleted text is in strikeout and added
text is underlined. This document is designed for easy viewing and
does not contain the proper spacing and formatting that is
reflected in the hardcopy.
Title IV-B, Subpart 1 - Child Welfare
Services | Title IV-B, Subpart 2 -
Promoting Safe and Stable Families | Title
IV-E - Federal Payments for Foster Care and Adoption
Assistance
TITLE IV
PART B--CHILD AND FAMILY SERVICES
Subpart
1--Child Welfare Services
APPROPRIATION
SEC. 420. [42 U.S.C. 620] (a) For the purpose of enabling the
United States, through the Secretary, to cooperate with State
public welfare agencies in establishing, extending, and
strengthening child welfare services, there is authorized to be
appropriated for each fiscal year the sum of $325,000,000.
(b) Funds appropriated for any fiscal year pursuant to the
authorization contained in subsection (a) shall be included in the
appropriation Act (or supplemental appropriation Act) for the
fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which such funds are
available for obligation. In order to effect a transition to this
method of timing appropriation action, the preceding sentence shall
apply notwithstanding the fact that its initial application will
result in the enactment in the same year (whether in the same
appropriation Act or otherwise) of two separate appropriations, one
for the then current fiscal year and one for the succeeding fiscal
year.
ALLOTMENTS TO STATES
SEC. 421. [42 U.S.C. 621] (a) The sum appropriated pursuant to
section 420 for each fiscal year shall be allotted by the Secretary
for use by cooperating State public welfare agencies which have
plans developed jointly by the State agency and the Secretary as
follows: He shall first allot $70,000 to each State, and shall then
allot to each State an amount which bears the same ratio to the
remainder of such sum as the product of (1) the population of the
State under the age of twenty-one and (2) the allotment percentage
of the State (as determined under this section) bears to the sum of
the corresponding products of all the States.
(b) The "allotment percentage" for any State shall be 100 per
centum less the State percentage; and the State percentage shall be
the percentage which bears the same ratio to 50 per centum as the
per capita income of such State bears to the per capita income of
the United States; except that (1) the allotment percentage shall
in no case be less than 30 per centum or more than 70 per centum,
and (2) the allotment percentage shall be 70 per centum in the case
of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa.
(c) The allotment percentage for each State shall be promulgated
by the Secretary between October 1 and November 30 of each
even-numbered year, on the basis of the average per capita income
of each State and of the United States for the three most recent
calendar years for which satisfactory data are available from the
Department of Commerce. Such promulgation shall be conclusive for
each of the two fiscal years in the period beginning October 1 next
succeeding such promulgation.
(d) For purposes of this section, the term "United States" means
the fifty States and the District of Columbia.
STATE PLANS FOR CHILD WELFARE SERVICES
SEC. 422. [42 U.S.C. 622] (a) In order to be eligible for
payment under this subpart, a State must have a plan for child
welfare services which has been developed jointly by the Secretary
and the State agency designated pursuant to subsection (b)(1), and
which meets the requirements of subsection (b).
(b) Each plan for child welfare services under this subpart
shall--
- provide that (A) the individual or agency that administers or
supervises the administration of the State's services program under
title XX will administer or supervise the administration of the
plan (except as otherwise provided in section 103(d) of the
Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980), and (B) to the
extent that child welfare services are furnished by the staff of
the State agency or local agency administering the plan, a single
organizational unit in such State or local agency, as the case may
be, will be responsible for furnishing such child welfare
services;
- provide for coordination between the services provided for
children under the plan and the services and assistance provided
under title XX, under the State program funded under part A, under
the State plan approved under subpart 2 of this part,
under
under under the State plan approved under part E,
and under other State programs having a relationship to the program
under this subpart, with a view to provision of welfare and related
services which will best promote the welfare of such children and
their families.
- provide that the standards and requirements imposed with
respect to child day care under title XX shall apply with respect
to day care services under this subpart, except insofar as
eligibility for such services is involved;
- provide for the training and effective use of paid
paraprofessional staff, with particular emphasis on the full-time
or part-time employment of persons of low income, as community
service aides, in the administration of the plan, and for the use
of nonpaid or partially paid volunteers in providing services and
in assisting any advisory committees established by the State
agency;
- contain a description of the services to be provided and
specify the geographic areas where such services will be
available;
-
contain a description of the steps which the State will take to
provide child welfare services and to make progress in--
- covering additional political subdivisions,
- reaching additional children in need of services, and
- expanding and strengthening the range of existing services and
developing new types of services, along with a description of the
State's child welfare services staff development and training
plans;
- provide, in the development of services for children, for
utilization of the facilities and experience of voluntary agencies
in accordance with State and local programs and arrangements, as
authorized by the State;
- provide that the agency administering or supervising the
administration of the plan will furnish such reports, containing
such information, and participate in such evaluations, as the
Secretary may require;
- provide for the diligent recruitment of potential foster and
adoptive families that reflect the ethnic and racial diversity of
children in the State for whom foster and adoptive homes are
needed;
-
provide assurances that the State--
-
since June 17, 1980, has completed an inventory of all children
who, before the inventory, had been in foster care under the
responsibility of the State for 6 months or more, which
determined--
- the appropriateness of, and necessity for, the foster care
placement;
- whether the child could or should be returned to the parents of
the child or should be freed for adoption or other permanent
placement; and
- the services necessary to facilitate the return of the child or
the placement of the child for adoption or legal guardianship;
-
is operating, to the satisfaction of the Secretary--
- a statewide information system from which can be readily
determined the status, demographic characteristics, location, and
goals for the placement of every child who is (or, within the
immediately preceding 12 months, has been) in foster care;
- a case review system (as defined in section 475(5) for each
child receiving foster care under the supervision of the
State;
-
a service program designed to help children--
- where safe and appropriate, return to families from
which they have been removed; or
- be placed for adoption, with a legal guardian, or, if adoption
or legal guardianship is determined not to be appropriate for a
child, in some other planned, permanent living arrangement;
and
- a preplacement preventive services program designed to help
children at risk of foster care placement remain safely with their
families; and
-
- has reviewed (or within 12 months after the date of the
enactment of this paragraph will review) State policies and
administrative and judicial procedures in effect for children
abandoned at or shortly after birth (including policies and
procedures providing for legal representation of such children);
and
- is implementing (or within 24 months after the date of the
enactment of this paragraph will implement) such policies and
procedures as the State determines, on the basis of the review
described in clause (i), to be necessary to enable permanent
decisions to be made expeditiously with respect to the placement of
such children;
and
- contain a description, developed after consultation with tribal
organizations (as defined in section 4 of the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act) in the State, of
the specific measures taken by the State to comply with the Indian
Child Welfare Act
.; and
-
contain assurances that the State shall develop plans for
the effective use of cross-jurisdictional resources to facilitate
timely adoptive or permanent placements for waiting
children.
PAYMENT TO STATES
SEC. 423. [42 U.S.C. 623] (a) From the sums appropriated
therefor and the allotment under this subpart, subject to the
conditions set forth in this section, the Secretary shall from time
to time pay to each State that has a plan developed in accordance
with section 422 an amount equal to 75 per centum of the total sum
expended under the plan (including the cost of administration of
the plan) in meeting the costs of State, district, county, or other
local child welfare services.
(b) The method of computing and making payments under this
section shall be as follows:
- The Secretary shall, prior to the beginning of each period for
which a payment is to be made, estimate the amount to be paid to
the State for such period under the provisions of this
section.
- From the allotment available therefor, the Secretary shall pay
the amount so estimated, reduced or increased, as the case may be,
by any sum (not previously adjusted under this section) by which he
finds that his estimate of the amount to be paid the State for any
prior period under this section was greater or less than the amount
which should have been paid to the State for such prior period
under this section
(c)(1)No payment may be made to a State under this part, for any
fiscal year beginning after September 30, 1979, with respect to
State expenditures made for (A) child day care necessary solely
because of the employment, or training to prepare for employment,
of a parent or other relative with whom the child involved is
living, (B) foster care maintenance payments, and (C) adoption
assistance payments, to the extent that the Federal payment with
respect to those expenditures would exceed the total amount of the
Federal payment under this part for fiscal year 1979.
(2) Expenditures made by a State for any fiscal year which
begins after September 30, 1979, for foster care maintenance
payments shall be treated for purposes of making Federal payments
under this part with respect to expenditures for child welfare
services, as if such foster care maintenance payments constituted
child welfare services of a type to which the limitation imposed by
paragraph (1) does not apply; except that the amount payable to the
State with respect to expenditures made for other child welfare
services and for foster care maintenance payments during any such
year shall not exceed 100 per centum of the amount of the
expenditures made for child welfare services for which payment may
be made under the limitation imposed by paragraph (1) as in effect
without regard to this paragraph.
(d) No payment may be made to a State under this part in excess
of the payment made under this part for fiscal year 1979, for any
fiscal year beginning after September 30, 1979, if for the latter
fiscal year the total of the State's expenditures for child welfare
services under this part (excluding expenditures for activities
specified in subsection (c)(1)) is less than the total of the
State's expenditures under this part (excluding expenditures for
such activities) for fiscal year 1979.
REALLOTMENT
SEC. 424. [42 U.S.C. 624] (a) IN GENERAL.--Subject to subsection
(b), the amount of any allotment to a State under section 421 for
any fiscal year which the State certifies to the Secretary will not
be required for carrying out the State plan developed as provided
in section 422 shall be available for reallotment from time to
time, on such dates as the Secretary may fix, to other States which
the Secretary determines (1) have need in carrying out their State
plans so developed for sums in excess of those previously allotted
to them under section 421 and (2) will be able to use such excess
amounts during such fiscal year. Such reallotments shall be made on
the basis of the State plans so developed, after taking into
consideration the population under the age of twenty-one, and the
per capita income of each such State as compared with the
population under the age of twenty-one, and the per capita income
of all such States with respect to which such a determination by
the Secretary has been made. Any amount so reallotted to a State
shall be deemed part of its allotment under section 421.
(b) EXCEPTION RELATING TO FOSTER CHILD PROTECTIONS.--The
Secretary shall not reallot under subsection (a) of this section
any amount that is withheld or recovered from a State due to the
failure of the State to meet the requirements of section
422(b)(10).
DEFINITIONS
SEC. 425. [42 U.S.C. 625] (a)(1) For purposes of this title, the
term "child welfare services" means public social services which
are directed toward the accomplishment of the following
purposes:(A) protecting and promoting the welfare of all children,
including handicapped, homeless, dependent, or neglected children;
(B) preventing or remedying, or assisting in the solution of
problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse, exploitation, or
delinquency of children; (C) preventing the unnecessary separation
of children from their families by identifying family problems,
assisting families in resolving their problems, and preventing
breakup of the family where the prevention of child removal is
desirable and possible; (D) restoring to their families children
who have been removed, by the provision of services to the child
and the families; (E) placing children in suitable adoptive homes,
in cases where restoration to the biological family is not possible
or appropriate; and (F) assuring adequate care of children away
from their homes, in cases where the child cannot be returned home
or cannot be placed for adoption.
(2) Funds expended by a State for any calendar quarter to comply
with section 422(b)(10) or 476(b), and funds expended with respect
to nonrecurring costs of adoption proceedings in the case of
children placed for adoption with respect to whom assistance is
provided under a State plan for adoption assistance approved under
part E of this title, shall be deemed to have been expended for
child welfare services.
(b) For other definitions relating to this part and to part E of
this title, see section 475 of this Act.
RESEARCH, TRAINING, OR DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS
SEC. 426. [42 U.S.C. 626] (a) There are hereby authorized to be
appropriated for each fiscal year such sums as the Congress may
determine--
-
for grants by the Secretary--
- to public or other nonprofit institutions of higher learning,
and to public or other nonprofit agencies and organizations engaged
in research or child-welfare activities, for special research or
demonstration projects in the field of child welfare which are of
regional or national significance and for special projects for the
demonstration of new methods or facilities which show promise of
substantial contribution to the advancement of child welfare;
- to State or local public agencies responsible for
administering, or supervising the administration of, the plan under
this part, for projects for the demonstration of the utilization of
research (including findings resulting there- from) in the field of
child welfare in order to encourage experimental and special types
of welfare services; and
- to public or other nonprofit institutions of higher learning
for special projects for training personnel for work in the field
of child welfare, including traineeships described in section 429
with such stipends and allowances as may be permitted by the
Secretary; and
- for contracts or jointly financed cooperative arrangements with
States and public and other organizations and agencies for the
conduct of research, special projects, or demonstration projects
relating to such matters.
(b)(1) There are authorized to be appropriated $4,000,000 for
each of the fiscal years 1988, 1989, and 1990 for grants by the
Secretary to public or private nonprofit entities submitting
applications under this subsection for the purpose of conducting
demonstration projects under this subsection to develop alternative
care arrangements for infants who do not have health conditions
that require hospitalization and who would otherwise remain in
inappropriate hospital settings.
(2) The demonstration projects conducted under this section may
include--
- multidisciplinary projects designed to prevent the
inappropriate hospitalization of infants and to allow infants
described in paragraph (1) to remain with or return to a parent in
a residential setting, where appropriate care for the infant and
suitable treatment for the parent (including treatment for drug or
alcohol addiction) may be assured, with the goal (where possible)
of rehabilitating the parent and eliminating the need for such care
for the infant;
- multidisciplinary projects that assure appropriate,
individualized care for such infants in a foster home or other
non-medical residential setting in cases where such infant does not
require hospitalization and would otherwise remain in inappropriate
hospital settings, including projects to demonstrate methods to
recruit, train, and retain foster care families; and
- such other projects as the Secretary determines will best serve
the interests of such infants and will serve as models for projects
that agencies or organizations in other communities may wish to
develop.
(3) In the case of any project which includes the use of funds
authorized under this subsection for the care of infants in foster
homes or other non-medical residential settings away from their
parents, there shall be developed for each such infant a case plan
of the type described in section 475(1) (to the extent that such
infant is not otherwise covered by such a plan), and each such
project shall include a case review system of the type described in
section 475(5) (covering each such infant who is not otherwise
subject to such a system).
(4) In evaluating applications from entities proposing to
conduct demonstration projects under this subsection, the Secretary
shall give priority to those projects that serve areas most in need
of alternative care arrangements for infants described in paragraph
(1).
(5) No project may be funded unless the application therefor
contains assurances that it will--
- provide for adequate evaluation;
- provide for coordination with local governments;
- provide for community education regarding the inappropriate
hospitalization of infants;
- use, to the extent practical, other available private, local,
State, and Federal sources for the provision of direct services;
and
- meet such other criteria as the Secretary may prescribe.
(6) Grants may be used to pay the costs of maintenance and of
necessary medical and social services (to the extent that these
costs are not otherwise paid for under other titles of this Act),
and for such other purposes as the Secretary may allow.
(7) The Secretary shall provide training and technical
assistance to grantees, as requested.
(c) Payments of grants or under contracts or cooperative
arrangements under this section may be made in advance or by way of
reimbursement, and in such installments, as the Secretary may
determine; and shall be made on such conditions as the Secretary
finds necessary to carry out the purposes of the grants, contracts,
or other arrangements.
PAYMENTS TO INDIAN TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS
SEC. 428. [42 U.S.C. 628] (a) The Secretary may, in appropriate
cases (as determined by the Secretary) make payments under this
subpart directly to an Indian tribal organization within any State
which has a plan for child welfare services approved under this
subpart. Such payments shall be made in such manner and in such
amounts as the Secretary determines to be appropriate.
(b) Amounts paid under subsection (a) shall be deemed to be a
part of the allotment (as determined under section 421) for the
State in which such Indian tribal organization is located.
(c) For purposes of this section, the terms "Indian tribe" and
"tribal organization" shall have the meanings given such terms by
subsections (e) and (l) of section 4 of the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450b),
respectively.
CHILD WELFARE TRAINEESHIPS
SEC. 429. [42 U.S.C. 628a] The Secretary may approve an
application for a grant to a public or nonprofit institution for
higher learning to provide traineeships with stipends under section
426(a)(1)(C) only if the application--
(1) provides assurances that each individual who receives a
stipend with such traineeship (in this section referred to as a
"recipient") will enter into an agreement with the institution
under which the recipient agrees--
- to participate in training at a public or private nonprofit
child welfare agency on a regular basis (as determined by the
Secretary) for the period of the traineeship;
- to be employed for a period of years equivalent to the period
of the traineeship, in a public or private nonprofit child welfare
agency in any State, within a period of time (determined by the
Secretary in accordance with regulations) after completing the
postsecondary education for which the traineeship was
awarded;
- to furnish to the institution and the Secretary evidence of
compliance with subparagraphs (A) and (B); and
- if the recipient fails to comply with subparagraph (A) or (B)
and does not qualify for any exception to this subparagraph which
the Secretary may prescribe in regulations, to repay to the
Secretary all (or an appropriately prorated part) of the amount of
the stipend, plus interest, and, if applicable, reasonable
collection fees (in accordance with regulations promulgated by the
Secretary);
(2) provides assurances that the institution will--
- enter into agreements with child welfare agencies for onsite
training of recipients;
- permit an individual who is employed in the field of child
welfare services to apply for a traineeship with a stipend if the
traineeship furthers the progress of the individual toward the
completion of degree requirements; and
- develop and implement a system that, for the 3-year period that
begins on the date any recipient completes a child welfare services
program of study, tracks the employment record of the recipient,
for the purpose of determining the percentage of recipients who
secure employment in the field of child welfare services and remain
employed in the field.
NATIONAL RANDOM SAMPLE STUDY OF CHILD WELFARE
SEC. 429A. [42 U.S.C. 628b] (a) IN GENERAL.--The Secretary shall
conduct (directly, or by grant, contract, or interagency agreement)
a national study based on random samples of children who are at
risk of child abuse or neglect, or are determined by States to have
been abused or neglected.
(b) REQUIREMENTS.--The study required by subsection (a)
shall--
- have a longitudinal component; and
- yield data reliable at the State level for as many States as
the Secretary determines is feasible.
(c) PREFERRED CONTENTS.--In conducting the study required by
subsection (a), the Secretary should--
- carefully consider selecting the sample from cases of confirmed
abuse or neglect; and
-
follow each case for several years while obtaining information
on, among other things--
- the type of abuse or neglect involved;
- the frequency of contact with State or local agencies;
- whether the child involved has been separated from the family,
and, if so, under what circumstances;
- the number, type, and characteristics of out-of-home placements
of the child; and
- the average duration of each placement.
(d) REPORTS.--
- IN GENERAL.--From time to time, the Secretary shall prepare
reports summarizing the results of the study required by subsection
(a).
- AVAILABILITY.--The Secretary shall make available to the public
any report prepared under paragraph (1), in writing or in the form
of an electronic data tape.
- AUTHORITY TO CHARGE FEE.--The Secretary may charge and collect
a fee for the furnishing of reports under paragraph (2).
(e) APPROPRIATION.--Out of any money in the Treasury of the
United States not otherwise appropriated, there are appropriated to
the Secretary for each of fiscal years 1996 through 2002 $6,000,000
to carry out this section.
Subpart 2--Family
Preservation and Support Services
Subpart 2--Promoting Safe and Stable
Families
PURPOSES; LIMITATIONS ON AUTHORIZATIONS OF
APPROPRIATIONS; RESERVATION OF CERTAIN AMOUNTS
SEC. 430. [42 U.S.C. 629] (a) PURPOSES; LIMITATIONS ON
AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.--For the purpose of encouraging
and enabling each State to develop and establish, or expand, and to
operate a program of family preservation services and
community-based family support services,
community-based family support services, time-limited family
reunification services, and adoption promotion and support
services, there are authorized to be appropriated to the
Secretary the amounts described in subsection (b) for the fiscal
years specified in subsection (b).
(b) Description of Amounts.--The amount described in this
subsection is--
- for fiscal year 1994, $60,000,000;
- for fiscal year 1995, $150,000,000;
- for fiscal year 1996, $225,000,000;
- for fiscal year 1997, $240,000,000;
or
- for fiscal year 1998, the greater of--
- $255,000,000; or
- the amount described in this subsection for fiscal year 1997,
increased by the inflation percentage applicable to fiscal year
1998
.;
-
for fiscal year 1999, $275,000,000;
-
for fiscal year 2000, $295,000,000; and
-
for fiscal year 2001, $305,000,000.
(c) INFLATION PERCENTAGE.--For purposes of subsection (b)(5)(B)
of this section, the inflation percentage applicable to any fiscal
year is the percentage (if any) by which--
- the average of the Consumer Price Index (as defined in section
1(f)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986) for the 12-month
period ending on December 31 of the immediately preceding fiscal
year; exceeds
- the average of the Consumer Price Index (as so defined) for the
12-month period ending on December 31 of the 2nd preceding fiscal
year.
(d) RESERVATION OF CERTAIN AMOUNTS.--
-
EVALUATION, RESEARCH, TRAINING, AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.--The
Secretary shall reserve $2,000,000 of the amount described in
subsection (b) for fiscal year 1994, and $6,000,000 of the amounts
so described for each of fiscal years 1995, 1996, 1997, and
1998 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001, for expenditure by
the Secretary--
- for research, training, and technical assistance related to the
program under this subpart; and
- for evaluation of State programs funded under this subpart and
any other Federal, State, or local program, regardless of whether
federally assisted, that is designed to achieve the same purposes
as the program under this subpart.
- STATE COURT ASSESSMENTS.--The Secretary shall reserve
$5,000,000 of the amount described in subsection (b) for fiscal
year 1995, and $10,000,000 of the amounts so described for each of
fiscal years 1996, 1997,
and 1998 1998, 1999,
2000, and 2001, for grants under section 13712 of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993.
- Indian tribes.--The Secretary shall reserve 1 percent of the
amounts described in subsection (b) for each fiscal year, for
allotment to Indian tribes in accordance with section 433(a)
DEFINITIONS
SEC. 431. [42 U.S.C. 629a] (a) IN GENERAL.--As used in this
subpart:
-
FAMILY PRESERVATION SERVICES.--The term "family preservation
services" means services for children and families designed to help
families (including adoptive and extended families) at risk or in
crisis, including--
-
service programs designed to help children--
- where safe and appropriate, return to families from
which they have been removed; or
- be placed for adoption, with a legal guardian, or, if adoption
or legal guardianship is determined not to be safe and
appropriate for a child, in some other planned, permanent living
arrangement;
- preplacement preventive services programs, such as intensive
family preservation programs, designed to help children at risk of
foster care placement remain safely with their
families;
- service programs designed to provide followup care to families
to whom a child has been returned after a foster care
placement;
- respite care of children to provide temporary relief for
parents and other caregivers (including foster parents); and
- services designed to improve parenting skills (by reinforcing
parents' confidence in their strengths, and helping them to
identify where improvement is needed and to obtain assistance in
improving those skills) with respect to matters such as child
development, family budgeting, coping with stress, health, and
nutrition.
- FAMILY SUPPORT SERVICES.--The term "family support services"
means community-based services to promote the safety and
well-being of children and families designed to increase the
strength and stability of families (including adoptive, foster, and
extended families), to increase parents' confidence and competence
in their parenting abilities, to afford children a
stable safe, stable and supportive family
environment, and otherwise to enhance child development.
- State agency.--The term "State agency" means the State agency
responsible for administering the program under subpart 1.
- State.--The term "State" includes an Indian tribe or tribal
organization, in addition to the meaning given such term for
purposes of subpart 1.
- Tribal organization.--The term "tribal organization" means the
recognized governing body of any Indian tribe.
- Indian tribe.--The term "Indian tribe" means any Indian tribe
(as defined in 482(i)(5)) and any Alaska Native organization (as
defined in 482(i)(7)(A)).
-
TIME-LIMITED FAMILY REUNIFICATION SERVICES.--
-
IN GENERAL.--The term `time-limited family reunification
services' means the services and activities described in
subparagraph (B) that are provided to a child that is removed from
the child's home and placed in a foster family home or a child care
institution and to the parents or primary caregiver of such a
child, in order to facilitate the reunification of the child safely
and appropriately within a timely fashion, but only during the
15-month period that begins on the date that the child, pursuant to
section 475(5)(F), is considered to have entered foster
care.
-
SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED.--The services and
activities described in this subparagraph are the
following:
-
Individual, group, and family counseling.
-
Inpatient, residential, or outpatient substance abuse
treatment services.
-
Mental health services.
-
Assistance to address domestic violence.
-
Services designed to provide temporary child care and
therapeutic services for families, including crisis
nurseries.
-
Transportation to or from any of the services and activities
described in this subparagraph.
-
ADOPTION PROMOTION AND SUPPORT SERVICES.--The term `adoption
promotion and support services' means services and activities
designed to encourage more adoptions out of the foster care system,
when adoptions promote the best interests of children, including
such activities as pre- and post-adoptive services and activities
designed to expedite the adoption process and support adoptive
families.
-
NON-FEDERAL FUNDS.--The term `non-Federal funds' means State
funds, or at the option of a State, State and local funds.
(b) Other Terms.--For other definitions of other terms used in
this subpart, see section 475.
STATE PLANS
SEC. 432. [42 U.S.C. 629b] (a) PLAN REQUIREMENTS.--A State plan
meets the requirements of this subsection if the plan--
- provides that the State agency shall administer, or supervise
the administration of, the State program under this subpart;
-
- (i) sets forth the goals intended to be accomplished under the
plan by the end of the 5th fiscal year in which the plan is in
operation in the State, and (ii) is updated periodically to set
forth the goals intended to be accomplished under the plan by the
end of each 5th fiscal year thereafter;
- describes the methods to be used in measuring progress toward
accomplishment of the goals;
-
contains assurances that the State--
- after the end of each of the 1st 4 fiscal years covered by a
set of goals, will perform an interim review of progress toward
accomplishment of the goals, and on the basis of the interim review
will revise the statement of goals in the plan, if necessary, to
reflect changed circumstances; and
- after the end of the last fiscal year covered by a set of
goals, will perform a final review of progress toward
accomplishment of the goals, and on the basis of the final review
(I) will prepare, transmit to the Secretary, and make available to
the public a final report on progress toward accomplishment of the
goals, and (II) will develop (in consultation with the entities
required to be consulted pursuant to subsection (b)) and add to the
plan a statement of the goals intended to be accomplished by the
end of the 5th succeeding fiscal year;
- provides for coordination, to the extent feasible and
appropriate, of the provision of services under the plan and the
provision of services or benefits under other Federal or federally
assisted programs serving the same populations;
- contains assurances that not more than 10 percent of
expenditures under the plan for any fiscal year with respect to
which the State is eligible for payment under section 434 for the
fiscal year shall be for administrative costs, and that the
remaining expenditures shall be for programs of family preservation
services
and community-based family support
services, community-based family support services,
time-limited family reunification services, and adoption promotion
and support services, with significant portions of such
expenditures for each such program;
-
contains assurances that the State will--
-
annually prepare, furnish to the Secretary, and make available
to the public a description (including separate descriptions with
respect to family preservation services and community-based
family support services, community-based family support
services, time-limited family reunification services, and adoption
promotion and support services) of--
- the service programs to be made available under the plan in the
immediately succeeding fiscal year;
- the populations which the programs will serve; and
- the geographic areas in the State in which the services will be
available; and
-
perform the activities described in subparagraph (A)--
- in the case of the 1st fiscal year under the plan, at the time
the State submits its initial plan; and
- in the case of each succeeding fiscal year, by the end of the
3rd quarter of the immediately preceding fiscal year;
- provides for such methods of administration as the Secretary
finds to be necessary for the proper and efficient operation of the
plan;
-
- contains assurances that Federal funds provided to the State
under this subpart will not be used to supplant Federal or
non-Federal funds for existing services and activities which
promote the purposes of this subpart; and
- provides that the State will furnish reports to the Secretary,
at such times, in such format, and containing such information as
the Secretary may require, that demonstrate the State's compliance
with the prohibition contained in subparagraph (A);
and
- provides that the State agency will furnish such reports,
containing such information, and participate in such evaluations,
as the Secretary may require; and
-
contains assurances that in administering and conducting
service programs under the plan, the safety of the children to be
served shall be of paramount concern.
(b) APPROVAL OF PLANS.--
- IN GENERAL.--The Secretary shall approve a plan that meets the
requirements of subsection (a) only if the plan was developed
jointly by the Secretary and the State, after consultation by the
State agency with appropriate public and nonprofit private agencies
and community-based organizations with experience in administering
programs of services for children and families (including family
preservation
and family support, family
support, time-limited family reunification, and adoption promotion
and support services).
-
PLANS OF INDIAN TRIBES.--
- EXEMPTION FROM INAPPROPRIATE REQUIREMENTS.--The Secretary may
exempt a plan submitted by an Indian tribe from any requirement of
this section that the Secretary determines would be inappropriate
to apply to the Indian tribe, taking into account the resources,
needs, and other circumstances of the Indian tribe.
- SPECIAL RULE.--Notwithstanding subparagraph (A) of this
paragraph, the Secretary may not approve a plan of an Indian tribe
under this subpart to which (but for this subparagraph) an
allotment of less than $10,000 would be made under section 433(a)
if allotments were made under section 433(a) to all Indian tribes
with plans approved under this subpart with the same or larger
numbers of children.
ALLOTMENTS TO STATES
SEC. 433. [42 U.S.C. 629c] (a) INDIAN TRIBES.--From the amount
reserved pursuant to section 430(d)(3) for any fiscal year, the
Secretary shall allot to each Indian tribe with a plan approved
under this subpart an amount that bears the same ratio to such
reserved amount as the number of children in the Indian tribe bears
to the total number of children in all Indian tribes with State
plans so approved, as determined by the Secretary on the basis of
the most current and reliable information available to the
Secretary.
(b) TERRITORIES.--From the amount described in section 430(b)
for any fiscal year that remains after applying section 430(d) for
the fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to each of the
jurisdictions of Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa an amount determined
in the same manner as the allotment to each of such jurisdictions
is determined under section 421.
(c) OTHER STATES.--
- IN GENERAL.--From the amount described in section 430(b) for
any fiscal year that remains after applying section 430(d) and
subsection (b) of this section for the fiscal year, the Secretary
shall allot to each State (other than an Indian tribe) which is not
specified in subsection (b) of this section an amount equal to such
remaining amount multiplied by the food stamp percentage of the
State for the fiscal year.
-
FOOD STAMP PERCENTAGE DEFINED.--
- IN GENERAL.--As used in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the
term "food stamp percentage" means, with respect to a State and a
fiscal year, the average monthly number of children receiving food
stamp benefits in the State for months in the 3 fiscal years
referred to in subparagraph (B) of this paragraph, as determined
from sample surveys made under section 16(c) of the Food Stamp Act
of 1977, expressed as a percentage of the average monthly number of
children receiving food stamp benefits in the States described in
such paragraph (1) for months in such 3 fiscal years, as so
determined.
- FISCAL YEARS USED IN CALCULATION.--For purposes of the
calculation pursuant to subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall use
data for the 3 most recent fiscal years, preceding the fiscal year
for which the State's allotment is calculated under this
subsection, for which such data are available to the
Secretary.
PAYMENTS TO STATES
SEC. 434. [42 U.S.C. 629d] (a) ENTITLEMENT.--
-
GENERAL RULE.--Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this
subsection, each State which has a plan approved under this subpart
shall be entitled to payment of the lesser of--
- 75 percent of the total expenditures by the State for
activities under the plan during the fiscal year or the immediately
succeeding fiscal year; or
- the allotment of the State under section 433 for the fiscal
year.
-
SPECIAL RULE.--Upon submission by a State to the Secretary
during fiscal year 1994 of an application in such form and
containing such information as the Secretary may require
(including, if the State is seeking payment of an amount pursuant
to subparagraph (B) of this paragraph, a description of the
services to be provided with the amount), the State shall be
entitled to payment of an amount equal to the sum of--
- such amount, not exceeding $1,000,000, from the allotment of
the State under section 433 for fiscal year 1994, as the State may
require to develop and submit a plan for approval under section
432; and
-
an amount equal to the lesser of--
- 75 percent of the expenditures by the State for services to
children and families in accordance with the application and the
expenditure rules of section 432(a)(4); or
- the allotment of the State under section 433 for fiscal year
1994, reduced by any amount paid to the State pursuant to
subparagraph (A) of this paragraph.
(b) PROHIBITIONS.--
- NO USE OF OTHER FEDERAL FUNDS FOR STATE MATCH.--Each State
receiving an amount paid under paragraph (1) or (2)(B) of
subsection (a) may not expend any Federal funds to meet the costs
of services described in this subpart not covered by the amount so
paid.
- AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS.--A State may not expend any amount paid
under subsection (a)(1) for any fiscal year after the end of the
immediately succeeding fiscal year.
(c) DIRECT PAYMENTS TO TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS OF INDIAN
TRIBES.--The Secretary shall pay any amount to which an Indian
tribe is entitled under this section directly to the tribal
organization of the Indian tribe.
EVALUATIONS
SEC. 435. [42 U.S.C. 629e] (a) EVALUATIONS.--
- IN GENERAL.--The Secretary shall evaluate the effectiveness of
the programs carried out pursuant to this subpart in accomplishing
the purposes of this subpart, and may evaluate any other Federal,
State, or local program, regardless of whether federally assisted,
that is designed to achieve the same purposes as the program under
this subpart, in accordance with criteria established in accordance
with paragraph (2).
-
CRITERIA TO BE USED.--In developing the criteria to be used in
evaluations under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall consult with
appropriate parties, such as--
- State agencies administering programs under this part and part
E;
- persons administering child and family services programs
(including family preservation and family support programs) for
private, nonprofit organizations with an interest in child welfare;
and
- other persons with recognized expertise in the evaluation of
child and family services programs (including family preservation
and family support programs) or other related programs.
(b) COORDINATION OF EVALUATIONS.--The Secretary shall develop
procedures to coordinate evaluations under this section, to the
extent feasible, with evaluations by the States of the
effectiveness of programs under this subpart.
*****
Part
E--Federal Payments for Foster Care
and Adoption Assistance
PURPOSE: APPROPRIATION
SEC. 470. [42 U.S.C. 670] For the purpose of enabling each State
to provide, in appropriate cases, foster care and transitional
independent living programs for children who otherwise would have
been eligible for assistance under the State's plan approved under
part A (as such plan was in effect on June 1, 1995) and adoption
assistance for children with special needs, there are authorized to
be appropriated for each fiscal year (commencing with the fiscal
year which begins October 1, 1980) such sums as may be necessary to
carry out the provisions of this part. The sums made available
under this section shall be used for making payments to States
which have submitted, and had approved by the Secretary, State
plans under this part.
STATE PLAN FOR FOSTER CARE AND ADOPTION
ASSISTANCE
SEC. 471. [42 U.S.C. 671] (a) In order for a State to be
eligible for payments under this part, it shall have a plan
approved by the Secretary which--
- provides for foster care maintenance payments in accordance
with section 472 and for adoption assistance in accordance with
section 473;
- provides that the State agency responsible for administering
the program authorized by subpart 1 of part B of this title shall
administer, or supervise the administration of, the program
authorized by this part;
- provides that the plan shall be in effect in all political
subdivisions of the State, and, if administered by them, be
mandatory upon them;
- provides that the State shall assure that the programs at the
local level assisted under this part will be coordinated with the
programs at the State or local level assisted under parts A and B
of this title, under title XX of this Act, and under any other
appropriate provision of Federal law;
- provides that the State will, in the administration of its
programs under this part, use such methods relating to the
establishment and maintenance of personnel standards on a merit
basis as are found by the Secretary to be necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the programs, except that the Secretary
shall exercise no authority with respect to the selection, tenure
of office, or compensation of any individual employed in accordance
with such methods;
- provides that the State agency referred to in paragraph (2)
(hereinafter in this part referred to as the "State agency") will
make such reports, in such form and containing such information as
the Secretary may from time to time require, and comply with such
provisions as the Secretary may from time to time find necessary to
assure the correctness and verification of such reports;
- provides that the State agency will monitor and conduct
periodic evaluations of activities carried out under this
part;
- provides safeguards which restrict the use of or disclosure of
information concerning individuals assisted under the State plan to
purposes directly connected with (A) the administration of the plan
of the State approved under this part, the plan or program of the
State under part A, B, or D of this title (including activities
under part F) or under title I, V, X, XIV, XVI (as in effect in
Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands), XIX, or XX, or the
supplemental security income program established by title XVI, (B)
any investigation, prosecution, or criminal or civil proceeding,
conducted in connection with the administration of any such plan or
program, (C) the administration of any other Federal or federally
assisted program which provides assistance, in cash or in kind, or
services, directly to individuals on the basis of need, (D) any
audit or similar activity conducted in connection with the
administration of any such plan or program by any governmental
agency which is authorized by law to conduct such audit or
activity, and (E) reporting and providing information pursuant to
paragraph (9) to appropriate authorities with respect to known or
suspected child abuse or neglect; and the safeguards so provided
shall prohibit disclosure, to any committee or legislative body
(other than an agency referred to in clause (D) with respect to an
activity referred to in such clause), of any information which
identifies by name or address any such applicant or recipient;
except that nothing contained herein shall preclude a State from
providing standards which restrict disclosures to purposes more
limited than those specified herein, or which, in the case of
adoptions, prevent disclosure entirely;
-
provides that the State agency will--
- report to an appropriate agency or official, known or suspected
instances of physical or mental injury, sexual abuse or
exploitation, or negligent treatment or maltreatment of a child
receiving aid under part B or this part under circumstances which
indicate that the child's health or welfare is threatened thereby;
and
- provide such information with respect to a situation described
in subparagraph (A) as the State agency may have;
- provides for the establishment or designation of a State
authority or authorities which shall be responsible for
establishing and maintaining standards for foster family homes and
child care institutions which are reasonably in accord with
recommended standards of national organizations concerned with
standards for such institutions or homes, including standards
related to admission policies, safety, sanitation, and protection
of civil rights, and provides that the standards so established
shall be applied by the State to any foster family home or child
care institution receiving funds under this part or part B of this
title;
- provides for periodic review of the standards referred to in
the preceding paragraph and amounts paid as foster care maintenance
payments and adoption assistance to assure their continuing
appropriateness;
- provides for granting an opportunity for a fair hearing before
the State agency to any individual whose claim for benefits
available pursuant to this part is denied or is not acted upon with
reasonable promptness;
- provides that the State shall arrange for a periodic and
independently conducted audit of the programs assisted under this
part and part B of this title, which shall be conducted no less
frequently than once every three years;
- provides (A) specific goals (which shall be established by
State law on or before October 1, 1982) for each fiscal year
(commencing with the fiscal year which begins on October 1, 1983)
as to the maximum number of children (in absolute numbers or as a
percentage of all children in foster care with respect to whom
assistance under the plan is provided during such year) who, at any
time during such year, will remain in foster care after having been
in such care for a period in excess of twenty-four months, and (B)
a description of the steps which will be taken by the State to
achieve such goals;
-
effective October 1, 1983, provides that, in each case,
reasonable efforts will be made (A) prior to the placement of a
child in foster care, to prevent or eliminate the need for removal
of the child from his home, and (B) to make it possible for the
child to return to his home;
-
provides that--
-
in determining reasonable efforts to be made with respect to
a child, as described in this paragraph, and in making such
reasonable efforts, the child's health and safety shall be the
paramount concern;
-
(B) except as provided in subparagraph (D), reasonable
efforts shall be made to preserve and reunify families--
-
prior to the placement of a child in foster care, to prevent
or eliminate the need for removing the child from the child's home;
and
-
to make it possible for a child to safely return to the
child's home;
-
if continuation of reasonable efforts of the type described
in subparagraph (B) is determined to be inconsistent with the
permanency plan for the child, reasonable efforts shall be made to
place the child in a timely manner in accordance with the
permanency plan, and to complete whatever steps are necessary to
finalize the permanent placement of the child;
-
reasonable efforts of the type described in subparagraph (B)
shall not be required to be made with respect to a parent of a
child if a court of competent jurisdiction has determined
that--
-
the parent has subjected the child to aggravated
circumstances (as defined in State law, which definition may
include but need not be limited to abandonment, torture, chronic
abuse, and sexual abuse);
-
(ii) the parent has--
-
committed murder (which would have been an offense under
section 1111(a) of title 18, United States Code, if the offense had
occurred in the special maritime or territorial jurisdiction of the
United States) of another child of the parent;
-
committed voluntary manslaughter (which would have been an
offense under section 1112(a) of title 18, United States Code, if
the offense had occurred in the special maritime or territorial
jurisdiction of the United States) of another child of the
parent;
-
aided or abetted, attempted, conspired, or solicited to
commit such a murder or such a voluntary manslaughter; or
-
committed a felony assault that results in serious bodily
injury to the child or another child of the parent; or
- the parental rights of the parent to a sibling have been
terminated involuntarily;
-
if reasonable efforts of the type described in subparagraph
(B) are not made with respect to a child as a result of a
determination made by a court of competent jurisdiction in
accordance with subparagraph (D)--
-
a permanency hearing (as described in section 475(5)(C))
shall be held for the child within 30 days after the determination;
and
-
reasonable efforts shall be made to place the child in a
timely manner in accordance with the permanency plan, and to
complete whatever steps are necessary to finalize the permanent
placement of the child; and
-
reasonable efforts to place a child for adoption or with a
legal guardian may be made concurrently with reasonable efforts of
the type described in subparagraph (B);
- provides for the development of a case plan (as defined in
section 475(1)) for each child receiving foster care maintenance
payments under the State plan and provides for a case review system
which meets the requirements described in section 475(5)(B) with
respect to each such child;
- provides that, where appropriate, all steps will be taken,
including cooperative efforts with the State agencies administering
the program funded under part A and plan approved under part D, to
secure an assignment to the State of any rights to support on
behalf of each child receiving foster care maintenance payments
under this part;
-
not later than January 1, 1997, provides that neither the State
nor any other entity in the State that receives funds from the
Federal Government and is involved in adoption or foster care
placements may--
- deny to any person the opportunity to become an adoptive or a
foster parent, on the basis of the race, color, or national origin
of the person, or of the child, involved; or
- delay or deny the placement of a child for adoption or into
foster care, on the basis of the race, color, or national origin of
the adoptive or foster parent, or the child, involved;
and
- provides that the State shall consider giving preference to an
adult relative over a non-related caregiver when determining a
placement for a child, provided that the relative caregiver meets
all relevant State child protection standards
.;
and
-
-
unless an election provided for in subparagraph (B) is made
with respect to the State, provides procedures for criminal records
checks for any prospective foster or adoptive parent before the
foster or adoptive parent may be finally approved for placement of
a child on whose behalf foster care maintenance payments or
adoption assistance payments are to be made under the State plan
under this part, including procedures requiring that--
-
in any case in which a record check reveals a felony
conviction for child abuse or neglect, for spousal abuse, for a
crime against children (including child pornography), or for a
crime involving violence, including rape, sexual assault, or
homicide, but not including other physical assault or battery, if a
State finds that a court of competent jurisdiction has determined
that the felony was committed at any time, such final approval
shall not be granted; and
-
in any case in which a record check reveals a felony
conviction for physical assault, battery, or a drug-related
offense, if a State finds that a court of competent jurisdiction
has determined that the felony was committed within the past 5
years, such final approval shall not be granted; and
-
subparagraph (A) shall not apply to a State plan if the
Governor of the State has notified the Secretary in writing that
the State has elected to make subparagraph (A) inapplicable to the
State, or if the State legislature, by law, has elected to make
subparagraph (A) inapplicable to the State
.;
and
-
provides for health insurance coverage (including, at State
option, through the program under the State plan approved under
title XIX) for any child who has been determined to be a child with
special needs, for whom there is in effect an adoption assistance
agreement (other than an agreement under this part) between the
State and an adoptive parent or parents, and who the State has
determined cannot be placed with an adoptive parent or parents
without medical assistance because such child has special needs for
medical, mental health, or rehabilitative care, and that with
respect to the provision of such health insurance
coverage--
-
such coverage may be provided through 1 or more State
medical assistance programs;
-
the State, in providing such coverage, shall ensure that the
medical benefits, including mental health benefits, provided are of
the same type and kind as those that would be provided for children
by the State under title XIX;
-
in the event that the State provides such coverage through a
State medical assistance program other than the program under title
XIX, and the State exceeds its funding for services under such
other program, any such child shall be deemed to be receiving aid
or assistance under the State plan under this part for purposes of
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(I); and
-
in determining cost-sharing requirements, the State shall
take into consideration the circumstances of the adopting parent or
parents and the needs of the child being adopted consistent, to the
extent coverage is provided through a State medical assistance
program, with the rules under such program
.;
and
-
provides that, not later than January 1, 1999, the State
shall develop and implement standards to ensure that children in
foster care placements in public or private agencies are provided
quality services that protect the safety and health of the
children
.; and
-
provides that the State shall not--
-
deny or delay the placement of a child for adoption when an
approved family is available outside of the jurisdiction with
responsibility for handling the case of the child; or
-
fail to grant an opportunity for a fair hearing, as
described in paragraph (12), to an individual whose allegation of a
violation of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph is denied by the
State or not acted upon by the State with reasonable
promptness.
(b) The Secretary shall approve any plan which complies with the
provisions of subsection (a) of this section.
FOSTER CARE MAINTENANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM
SEC. 472. [42 U.S.C. 672] (a) Each State with a plan approved
under this part shall make foster care maintenance payments (as
defined in section 475(4)) under this part with respect to a child
who would have met the requirements of section 406(a) or of section
407 (as such sections were in effect on July 16, 1996) but for his
removal from the home of a relative (specified in section 406(a)
(as so in effect), if--
- the removal from the home occurred pursuant to a voluntary
placement agreement entered into by the child's parent or legal
guardian, or was the result of a judicial determination to the
effect that continuation therein would be contrary to the welfare
of such child and (effective October 1, 1983) that reasonable
efforts of the type described in section 471(a)(15) for a
child have been made;
- such child's placement and care are the responsibility of (A)
the State agency administering the State plan approved under
section 471, or (B) any other public agency with whom the State
agency administering or supervising the administration of the State
plan approved under section 471 has made an agreement which is
still in effect;
- such child has been placed in a foster family home or
child-care institution as a result of the voluntary placement
agreement or judicial determination referred to in paragraph (1);
and
-
such child--
- would have received aid under the State plan approved under
section 402 (as in effect on July 16, 1996) in or for the month in
which such agreement was entered into or court proceedings leading
to the removal of such child from the home were initiated, or
- (i) would have received such aid in or for such month if
application had been made therefor, or (ii) had been living with a
relative specified in section 406(a) (as in effect on July 16,
1996) within six months prior to the month in which such agreement
was entered into or such proceedings were initiated, and would have
received such aid in or for such month if in such month he had been
living with such a relative and application therefor had been
made.
In any case where the child is an alien disqualified under
section 245A(h), 210(f), or 210A(d)(7) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act from receiving aid under the State plan approved
under section 402 in or for the month in which such agreement was
entered into or court proceedings leading to the removal of the
child from the home were instituted, such child shall be considered
to satisfy the requirements of paragraph (4) (and the corresponding
requirements of section 473(a)(2)(B)), with respect to that month,
if he or she would have satisfied such requirements but for such
disqualification.
(b) Foster care maintenance payments may be made under this part
only on behalf of a child described in subsection (a) of this
section who is--
- in the foster family home of an individual, whether the
payments therefor are made to such individual or to a public or
nonprofit private child-placement or child-care agency, or
- in a child-care institution, whether the payments therefor are
made to such institution or to a public or nonprofit private
child-placement or child-care agency, which payments shall be
limited so as to include in such payments only those items which
are included in the term "foster care maintenance payments" (as
defined in section 475(4)).
(c) For the purposes of this part, (1) the term "foster family
home" means a foster family home for children which is licensed by
the State in which it is situated or has been approved, by the
agency of such State having responsibility for licensing homes of
this type, as meeting the standards established for such licensing;
and (2) the term "child-care institution" means a private
child-care institution, or a public child-care institution which
accommodates no more than twenty-five children, which is licensed
by the State in which it is situated or has been approved, by the
agency of such State responsible for licensing or approval of
institutions of this type, as meeting the standards established for
such licensing, but the term shall not include detention
facilities, forestry camps, training schools, or any other facility
operated primarily for the detention of children who are determined
to be delinquent.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, Federal
payments may be made under this part with respect to amounts
expended by any State as foster care maintenance payments under
this section, in the case of children removed from their homes
pursuant to voluntary placement agreements as described in
subsection (a), only if (at the time such amounts were expended)
the State has fulfilled all of the requirements of section
422(b)(10).
(e) No Federal payment may be made under this part with respect
to amounts expended by any State as foster care maintenance
payments under this section, in the case of any child who was
removed from his or her home pursuant to a voluntary placement
agreement as described in subsection (a) and has remained in
voluntary placement for a period in excess of 180 days, unless
there has been a judicial determination by a court of competent
jurisdiction (within the first 180 days of such placement) to the
effect that such placement is in the best interests of the
child.
(f) For the purposes of this part and part B of this title, (1)
the term "voluntary placement" means an out-of-home placement of a
minor, by or with participation of a State agency, after the
parents or guardians of the minor have requested the assistance of
the agency and signed a voluntary placement agreement; and (2) the
term "voluntary placement agreement" means a written agreement,
binding on the parties to the agreement, between the State agency,
any other agency acting on its behalf, and the parents or guardians
of a minor child which specifies, at a minimum, the legal status of
the child and the rights and obligations of the parents or
guardians, the child, and the agency while the child is in
placement.
(g) In any case where--
- the placement of a minor child in foster care occurred pursuant
to a voluntary placement agreement entered into by the parents or
guardians of such child as provided in subsection (a), and
- such parents or guardians request (in such manner and form as
the Secretary may prescribe) that the child be returned to their
home or to the home of a relative, the voluntary placement
agreement shall be deemed to be revoked unless the State agency
opposes such request and obtains a judicial determination, by a
court of competent jurisdiction, that the return of the child to
such home would be contrary to the child's best interests.
(h)(1) For purposes of titles XIX, any child with respect to
whom foster care maintenance payments are made under this section
is deemed to be a dependent child as defined in section 406 (as in
effect as of July 16, 1996) and deemed to be a recipient of aid to
families with dependent children under part A of this title (as so
in effect). For purposes of title XX, any child with respect to
whom foster care maintenance payments are made under this section
is deemed to be a minor child in a needy family under a State
program funded under part A of this title and is deemed to be a
recipient of assistance under such part.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), a child whose costs in a
foster family home or child care institution are covered by the
foster care maintenance payments being made with respect to the
child's minor parent, as provided in section 475(4)(B), shall be
considered a child with respect to whom foster care maintenance
payments are made under this section.
ADOPTION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
SEC. 473. [42 U.S.C. 673] (a)(1)(A) Each State having a plan
approved under this part shall enter into adoption assistance
agreements (as defined in section 475(3)) with the adoptive parents
of children with special needs.
(B) Under any adoption assistance agreement entered into by a
State with parents who adopt a child with special needs, the
State--
- shall make payments of nonrecurring adoption expenses incurred
by or on behalf of such parents in connection with the adoption of
such child, directly through the State agency or through another
public or nonprofit private agency, in amounts determined under
paragraph (3), and
- in any case where the child meets the requirements of paragraph
(2), may make adoption assistance payments to such parents,
directly through the State agency or through another public or
nonprofit private agency, in amounts so determined.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (1)(B)(ii), a child meets the
requirements of this paragraph if such child--
-
- at the time adoption proceedings were initiated, met the
requirements of section 406(a) or section 407 (as such sections
were in effect on July 16, 1996) or would have met such
requirements except for his removal from the home of a relative
(specified in section 406(a) (as so in effect)) or, either pursuant
to a voluntary placement agreement with respect to which Federal
payments are provided under section 474 (or 403) (as such section
was in effect on July 16, 1996) or as a result of a judicial
determination to the effect that continuation therein would be
contrary to the welfare of such child,
- meets all of the requirements of title XVI with respect to
eligibility for supplemental security income benefits, or
- is a child whose costs in a foster family home or child-care
institution are covered by the foster care maintenance payments
being made with respect to his or her minor parent as provided in
section 475(4)(B),
-
- would have received aid under the State plan approved under
section 402 (as in effect on July 16, 1996) in or for the month in
which such agreement was entered into or court proceedings leading
to the removal of such child from the home were initiated, or
- (I) would have received such aid in or for such month if
application had been made therefor, or (II) had been living with a
relative specified in section 406(a) (as in effect on July 16,
1996) within six months prior to the month in which such agreement
was entered into or such proceedings were initiated, and would have
received such aid in or for such month if in such month he had been
living with such a relative and application therefor had been made,
or
- is a child described in subparagraph (A)(ii) or (A)(iii),
and
(C) has been determined by the State, pursuant to subsection (c)
of this section, to be a child with special needs.
The last sentence of section 472(a) shall apply, for purposes of
subparagraph (B), in any case where the child is an alien described
in that sentence. Any child who meets the requirements of
subparagraph (C), who was determined eligible for adoption
assistance payments under this part with respect to a prior
adoption, who is available for adoption because the prior adoption
has been dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive parents
have been terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have
died, and who fails to meet the requirements of subparagraphs (A)
and (B) but would meet such requirements if the child were treated
as if the child were in the same financial and other circumstances
the child was in the last time the child was determined eligible
for adoption assistance payments under this part and the prior
adoption were treated as never having occurred, shall be treated as
meeting the requirements of this paragraph for purposes of
paragraph (1)(B)(ii).
(3) The amount of the payments to be made in any case under
clauses (i) and (ii) of paragraph (1)(B) shall be determined
through agreement between the adoptive parents and the State or
local agency administering the program under this section, which
shall take into consideration the circumstances of the adopting
parents and the needs of the child being adopted, and may be
readjusted periodically, with the concurrence of the adopting
parents (which may be specified in the adoption assistance
agreement), depending upon changes in such circumstances. However,
in no case may the amount of the adoption assistance payment made
under clause (ii) of paragraph (1)(B) exceed the foster care
maintenance payment which would have been paid during the period if
the child with respect to whom the adoption assistance payment is
made had been in a foster family home.
(4) Notwithstanding the preceding paragraph, (A) no payment may
be made to parents with respect to any child who has attained the
age of eighteen (or, where the State determines that the child has
a mental or physical handicap which warrants the continuation of
assistance, the age of twenty-one), and (B) no payment may be made
to parents with respect to any child if the State determines that
the parents are no longer legally responsible for the support of
the child or if the State determines that the child is no longer
receiving any support from such parents. Parents who have been
receiving adoption assistance payments under this section shall
keep the State or local agency administering the program under this
section informed of circumstances which would, pursuant to this
subsection, make them ineligible for such assistance payments, or
eligible for assistance payments in a different amount.
(5) For purposes of this part, individuals with whom a child
(who has been determined by the State, pursuant to subsection (c),
to be a child with special needs) is placed for adoption in
accordance with applicable State and local law shall be eligible
for such payments, during the period of the placement, on the same
terms and subject to the same conditions as if such individuals had
adopted such child.
(6)(A) For purposes of paragraph (1)(B)(i), the term
"nonrecurring adoption expenses" means reasonable and necessary
adoption fees, court costs, attorney fees, and other expenses which
are directly related to the legal adoption of a child with special
needs and which are not incurred in violation of State or Federal
law.
(B) A State's payment of nonrecurring adoption expenses under an
adoption assistance agreement shall be treated as an expenditure
made for the proper and efficient administration of the State plan
for purposes of section 474(a)(3)(E).
(b)(1) For purposes of title XIX, any child who is described in
paragraph (3) is deemed to be a dependent child as defined in
section 406 (as in effect as of July 16, 1996) and deemed to be a
recipient of aid to families with dependent children under part A
of this title (as so in effect) in the State where such child
resides.
(2) For purposes of title XX, any child who is described in
paragraph (3) is deemed to be a minor child in a needy family under
a State program funded under part A of this title and deemed to be
a recipient of assistance under such part.
(3) A child described in this paragraph is any child--
-
- who is a child described in subsection (a)(2), and
- with respect to whom an adoption assistance agreement is in
effect under this section (whether or not adoption assistance
payments are provided under the agreement or are being made under
this section), including any such child who has been placed for
adoption in accordance with applicable State and local law (whether
or not an interlocutory or other judicial decree of adoption has
been issued), or
- with respect to whom foster care maintenance payments are being
made under section 472.
(4) For purposes of paragraphs (1) and (2), a child whose costs
in a foster family home or child-care institution are covered by
the foster care maintenance payments being made with respect to the
child's minor parent, as provided in section 475(4)(B), shall be
considered a child with respect to whom foster care maintenance
payments are being made under section 472.
(c) For purposes of this section, a child shall not be
considered a child with special needs unless--
- the State has determined that the child cannot or should not be
returned to the home of his parents; and
- the State had first determined (A) that there exists with
respect to the child a specific factor or condition (such as his
ethnic background, age, or membership in a minority or sibling
group, or the presence of factors such as medical conditions or
physical, mental, or emotional handicaps) because of which it is
reasonable to conclude that such child cannot be placed with
adoptive parents without providing adoption assistance under this
section or medical assistance under title XIX, and (B) that, except
where it would be against the best interests of the child because
of such factors as the existence of significant emotional ties with
prospective adoptive parents while in the care of such parents as a
foster child, a reasonable, but unsuccessful, effort has been made
to place the child with appropriate adoptive parents without
providing adoption assistance under this section or medical
assistance under title XIX.
SEC. 473A. ADOPTION INCENTIVE
PAYMENTS.
(a) GRANT AUTHORITY.--Subject to the availability of such
amounts as may be provided in advance in appropriations Acts for
this purpose, the Secretary shall make a grant to each State that
is an incentive-eligible State for a fiscal year in an amount equal
to the adoption incentive payment payable to the State under this
section for the fiscal year, which shall be payable in the
immediately succeeding fiscal year.
(b) INCENTIVE-ELIGIBLE STATE.--A State is an
incentive-eligible State for a fiscal year if--
-
the State has a plan approved under this part for the fiscal
year;
-
the number of foster child adoptions in the State during the
fiscal year exceeds the base number of foster child adoptions for
the State for the fiscal year;
-
the State is in compliance with subsection (c) for the
fiscal year;
-
in the case of fiscal years 2001 and 2002, the State
provides health insurance coverage to any child with special needs
(as determined under section 473(c)) for whom there is in effect an
adoption assistance agreement between a State and an adoptive
parent or parents; and
-
the fiscal year is any of fiscal years 1998 through
2002.
(c) DATA REQUIREMENTS.--
-
IN GENERAL.--A State is in compliance with this subsection
for a fiscal year if the State has provided to the Secretary the
data described in paragraph (2)--
-
for fiscal years 1995 through 1997 (or, if the first fiscal
year for which the State seeks a grant under this section is after
fiscal year 1998, the fiscal year that precedes such 1st fiscal
year); and
-
for each succeeding fiscal year that precedes the fiscal
year.
-
DETERMINATION OF NUMBERS OF ADOPTIONS.--
-
DETERMINATIONS BASED ON AFCARS DATA.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the Secretary shall determine the numbers of
foster child adoptions and of special needs adoptions in a State
during each of fiscal years 1995 through 2002, for purposes of this
section, on the basis of data meeting the requirements of the
system established pursuant to section 479, as reported by the
State and approved by the Secretary by August 1 of the succeeding
fiscal year.
-
ALTERNATIVE DATA SOURCES PERMITTED FOR FISCAL YEARS 1995
THROUGH 1997.--For purposes of the determination described in
subparagraph (A) for fiscal years 1995 through 1997, the Secretary
may use data from a source or sources other than that specified in
subparagraph (A) that the Secretary finds to be of equivalent
completeness and reliability, as reported by a State by
November 30, 1997April 30, 1998, and approved by
the Secretary by March 1, 1998 July 1,
1998.
-
NO WAIVER OF AFCARS REQUIREMENTS.--This section shall not be
construed to alter or affect any requirement of section 479 or of
any regulation prescribed under such section with respect to
reporting of data by States, or to waive any penalty for failure to
comply with such a requirement.
(d) ADOPTION INCENTIVE PAYMENT.--
-
IN GENERAL.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
adoption incentive payment payable to a State for a fiscal year
under this section shall be equal to the sum of--
-
$4,000, multiplied by the amount (if any) by which the
number of foster child adoptions in the State during the fiscal
year exceeds the base number of foster child adoptions for the
State for the fiscal year; and
-
$2,000, multiplied by the amount (if any) by which the
number of special needs adoptions in the State during the fiscal
year exceeds the base number of special needs adoptions for the
State for the fiscal year.
-
PRO RATA ADJUSTMENT IF INSUFFICIENT FUNDS AVAILABLE.--For any
fiscal year, if the total amount of adoption incentive payments
otherwise payable under this section for a fiscal year exceeds the
amount appropriated pursuant to subsection (h) for the fiscal year,
the amount of the adoption incentive payment payable to each State
under this section for the fiscal year shall be--
-
the amount of the adoption incentive payment that would
otherwise be payable to the State under this section for the fiscal
year; multiplied by
-
the percentage represented by the amount so appropriated for
the fiscal year, divided by the total amount of adoption incentive
payments otherwise payable under this section for the fiscal
year.
(e) 2-YEAR AVAILABILITY OF INCENTIVE PAYMENTS.--Payments to a
State under this section in a fiscal year shall remain available
for use by the State through the end of the succeeding fiscal
year.
(f) LIMITATIONS ON USE OF INCENTIVE PAYMENTS.--A State shall
not expend an amount paid to the State under this section except to
provide to children or families any service (including
post-adoption services) that may be provided under part B or E.
Amounts expended by a State in accordance with the preceding
sentence shall be disregarded in determining State expenditures for
purposes of Federal matching payments under sections 423, 434, and
474.
(g) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section:
-
FOSTER CHILD ADOPTION.--The term `foster child adoption'
means the final adoption of a child who, at the time of adoptive
placement, was in foster care under the supervision of the
State.
-
SPECIAL NEEDS ADOPTION.--The term `special needs adoption'
means the final adoption of a child for whom an adoption assistance
agreement is in effect under section 473.
-
BASE NUMBER OF FOSTER CHILD ADOPTIONS.--The term `base number
of foster child adoptions for a State' means--
-
with respect to fiscal year 1998, the average number of
foster child adoptions in the State in fiscal years 1995, 1996, and
1997; and
-
with respect to any subsequent fiscal year, the number of
foster child adoptions in the State in the fiscal year for which
the number is the greatest in the period that begins with fiscal
year 1997 and ends with the fiscal year preceding such subsequent
fiscal year.
-
BASE NUMBER OF SPECIAL NEEDS ADOPTIONS.--The term `base
number of special needs adoptions for a State' means--
-
with respect to fiscal year 1998, the average number of
special needs adoptions in the State in fiscal years 1995, 1996,
and 1997; and
-
with respect to any subsequent fiscal year, the number of
special needs adoptions in the State in the fiscal year for which
the number is the greatest in the period that begins with fiscal
year 1997 and ends with the fiscal year preceding such subsequent
fiscal year.
(h) LIMITATIONS ON AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.--
-
IN GENERAL.--For grants under subsection (a), there are
authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary $20,000,000 for each
of fiscal years 1999 through 2003.
-
AVAILABILITY.--Amounts appropriated under paragraph (1) are
authorized to remain available until expended, but not after fiscal
year 2003.
(i) TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.--
-
IN GENERAL.--The Secretary may, directly or through grants
or contracts, provide technical assistance to assist States and
local communities to reach their targets for increased numbers of
adoptions and, to the extent that adoption is not possible,
alternative permanent placements, for children in foster
care.
-
DESCRIPTION OF THE CHARACTER OF THE TECHNICAL
ASSISTANCE.--The technical assistance provided under paragraph (1)
may support the goal of encouraging more adoptions out of the
foster care system, when adoptions promote the best interests of
children, and may include the following:
-
The development of best practice guidelines for expediting
termination of parental rights.
-
Models to encourage the use of concurrent
planning.
-
The development of specialized units and expertise in moving
children toward adoption as a permanency goal.
-
The development of risk assessment tools to facilitate early
identification of the children who will be at risk of harm if
returned home.
-
Models to encourage the fast tracking of children who have
not attained 1 year of age into pre-adoptive placements.
-
Development of programs that place children into
pre-adoptive families without waiting for termination of parental
rights.
-
TARGETING OF TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TO THE COURTS.--Not less
than 50 percent of any amount appropriated pursuant to paragraph
(4) shall be used to provide technical assistance to the
courts.
-
LIMITATIONS ON AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.--To carry
out this subsection, there are authorized to be appropriated to the
Secretary of Health and Human Services not to exceed $10,000,000
for each of fiscal years 1998 through 2000.
PAYMENTS TO STATES; ALLOTMENTS TO STATES
SEC. 474. [42 U.S.C. 674] (a) For each quarter beginning after
September 30, 1980, each State which has a plan approved under this
part (subject to the limitations imposed by subsection
(b)) shall be entitled to a payment equal to the sum
of--
- an amount equal to the Federal medical assistance percentage
(as defined in section 1905(b) of this Act) of the total amount
expended during such quarter as foster care maintenance payments
under section 472 for children in foster family homes or child-care
institutions; plus
- an amount equal to the Federal medical assistance percentage
(as defined in section 1905(b) of this Act) of the total amount
expended during such quarter as adoption assistance payments under
section 473 pursuant to adoption assistance agreements; plus
-
an amount equal to the sum of the following proportions of the
total amounts expended during such quarter as found necessary by
the Secretary for the provision of child placement services and for
the proper and efficient administration of the State plan--
- 75 per centum of so much of such expenditures as are for the
training (including both short-and long-term training at
educational institutions through grants to such institutions or by
direct financial assistance to students enrolled in such
institutions) of personnel employed or preparing for employment by
the State agency or by the local agency administering the plan in
the political subdivision,
- 75 percent of so much of such expenditures (including travel
and per diem expenses) as are for the short-term training of
current or prospective foster or adoptive parents and the members
of the staff of State-licensed or State-approved child care
institutions providing care to foster and adopted children
receiving assistance under this part, in ways that increase the
ability of such current or prospective parents, staff members, and
institutions to provide support and assistance to foster and
adopted children, whether incurred directly by the State or by
contract,
-
50 percent of so much of such expenditures as are for the
planning, design, development, or installation of statewide
mechanized data collection and information retrieval systems
(including 50 percent of the full amount of expenditures for
hardware components for such systems) but only to the extent that
such systems--
- meet the requirements imposed by regulations promulgated
pursuant to section 479(b)(2);
- to the extent practicable, are capable of interfacing with the
State data collection system that collects information relating to
child abuse and neglect;
- to the extent practicable, have the capability of interfacing
with, and retrieving information from, the State data collection
system that collects information relating to the eligibility of
individuals under part A (for the purposes of facilitating
verification of eligibility of foster children); and
- are determined by the Secretary to be likely to provide more
efficient, economical, and effective administration of the programs
carried out under a State plan approved under part B or this part;
and
- 50 percent of so much of such expenditures as are for the
operation of the statewide mechanized data collection and
information retrieval systems referred to in subparagraph (C);
and
- one-half of the remainder of such expenditures; plus
-
an amount equal to the sum of--
- so much of the amounts expended by such State to carry out
programs under section 477 as do not exceed the basic amount for
such State determined under section 477(e)(1); and
-
the lesser of--
- one-half of any additional amounts expended by such State for
such programs; or
- the maximum additional amount for such State under such section
477(e)(1).
(b) (1) The Secretary shall, prior to the beginning of each
quarter, estimate the amount to which a State will be entitled
under subsection (a) for such quarter, such estimates to be based
on (A) a report filed by the State containing its estimate of the
total sum to be expended in such quarter in accordance with
subsection (a), and stating the amount appropriated or made
available by the State and its political subdivisions for such
expenditures in such quarter, and if such amount is less than the
State's proportionate share of the total sum of such estimated
expenditures, the source or sources from which the difference is
expected to be derived, (B) records showing the number of children
in the State receiving assistance under this part, and (C) such
other investigation as the Secretary may find necessary.
(2) The Secretary shall then pay to the State, in such
installments as he may determine, the amounts so estimated, reduced
or increased to the extent of any overpayment or underpayment which
the Secretary determines was made under this section to such State
for any prior quarter and with respect to which adjustment has not
already been made under this subsection.
(3) The pro rata share to which the United States is equitably
entitled, as determined by the Secretary, of the net amount
recovered during any quarter by the State or any political
subdivision thereof with respect to foster care and adoption
assistance furnished under the State plan shall be considered an
overpayment to be adjusted under this subsection.
(4)(A) Within 60 days after receipt of a State claim for
expenditures pursuant to subsection a), the Secretary shall allow,
disallow, or defer such claim.
(B) Within 15 days after a decision to defer such a State claim,
the Secretary shall notify the State of the reasons for the
deferral and of the additional information necessary to determine
the allowability of the claim.
(C) Within 90 days after receiving such necessary information
(in readily reviewable form), the Secretary shall--
- disallow the claim, if able to complete the review and
determine that the claim is not allowable, or
-
in any other case, allow the claim, subject to disallowance (as
necessary)--
- upon completion of the review, if it is determined that the
claim is not allowable; or
- on the basis of findings of an audit or financial management
review.
(c) AUTOMATED DATA COLLECTION EXPENDITURES.--The Secretary shall
treat as necessary for the proper and efficient administration of
the State plan all expenditures of a State necessary in order for
the State to plan, design, develop, install, and operate data
collection and information retrieval systems described in
subsection (a)(3)(C), without regard to whether the systems may be
used with respect to foster or adoptive children other than those
on behalf of whom foster care maintenance payments or adoption
assistance payments may be made under this part.
(d)(1) If, during any quarter of a fiscal year, a State's
program operated under this part is found, as a result of a review
conducted under section 1123A, or otherwise, to have violated
section 471(a)(18) paragraph (18) or (23) of
section 471(a) with respect to a person or to have failed to
implement a corrective action plan within a period of time not to
exceed 6 months with respect to such violation, then,
notwithstanding subsection (a) of this section and any regulations
promulgated under section 1123A(b)(3), the Secretary shall reduce
the amount otherwise payable to the State under this part, for that
fiscal year quarter and for any subsequent quarter of such fiscal
year, until the State program is found, as a result of a subsequent
review under section 1123A, to have implemented a corrective action
plan with respect to such violation, by--
- 2 percent of such otherwise payable amount, in the case of the
1st such finding for the fiscal year with respect to the
State;
- 3 percent of such otherwise payable amount, in the case of the
2nd such finding for the fiscal year with respect to the State;
or
- 5 percent of such otherwise payable amount, in the case of the
3rd or subsequent such finding for the fiscal year with respect to
the State.
In imposing the penalties described in this paragraph, the
Secretary shall not reduce any fiscal year payment to a State by
more than 5 percent.
(2) Any other entity which is in a State that receives funds
under this part and which violates section
471(a)(18) paragraph (18) or (23) of section 471(a)
during a fiscal year quarter with respect to any person shall remit
to the Secretary all funds that were paid by the State to the
entity during the quarter from such funds.
(3)(A) Any individual who is aggrieved by a violation of section
471(a)(18) by a State or other entity may bring an action seeking
relief from the State or other entity in any United States district
court.
(B) An action under this paragraph may not be brought more than
2 years after the date the alleged violation occurred.
(4) This subsection shall not be construed to affect the
application of the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978.
(e) Notwithstanding subsection (a), a State shall not be
eligible for any payment under this section if the Secretary finds
that, after the date of the enactment of this subsection, the State
has--
(1) denied or delayed the placement of a child for
adoption when an approved family is available outside of the
jurisdiction with responsibility for handling the case of the
child; or
(2) failed to grant an opportunity for a fair hearing,
as described in section 471(a)(12), to an individual whose
allegation of a violation of paragraph (1) of this subsection is
denied by the State or not acted upon by the State with reasonable
promptness.
DEFINITIONS
SEC. 475. [42 U.S.C. 675] As used in this part or part B of this
title:
-
The term "case plan" means a written document which includes at
least the following:
- A description of the type of home or institution in which a
child is to be placed, including a discussion of the safety
and appropriateness of the placement and how the agency which
is responsible for the child plans to carry out the voluntary
placement agreement entered into or judicial determination made
with respect to the child in accordance with section
472(a)(1).
- A plan for assuring that the child receives safe and
proper care and that services are provided to the parents, child,
and foster parents in order to improve the conditions in the
parents' home, facilitate return of the child to his own
safe home or the permanent placement of the child, and
address the needs of the child while in foster care, including a
discussion of the appropriateness of the services that have been
provided to the child under the plan.
-
To the extent available and accessible, the health and education
records of the child, including--
- the names and addresses of the child's health and educational
providers;
- the child's grade level performance;
- the child's school record;
- assurances that the child's placement in foster care takes into
account proximity to the school in which the child is enrolled at
the time of placement;
- a record of the child's immunizations;
- the child's known medical problems;
- the child's medications; and
- any other relevant health and education information concerning
the child determined to be appropriate by the State agency.
- Where appropriate, for a child age 16 or over,
the case
plan must also include a written description of the
programs and services which will help such child prepare for the
transition from foster care to independent living.
-
In the case of a child with respect to whom the permanency
plan is adoption or placement in another permanent home,
documentation of the steps the agency is taking to find an adoptive
family or other permanent living arrangement for the child, to
place the child with an adoptive family, a fit and willing
relative, a legal guardian, or in another planned permanent living
arrangement, and to finalize the adoption or legal guardianship. At
a minimum, such documentation shall include child specific
recruitment efforts such as the use of State, regional, and
national adoption exchanges including electronic exchange
systems.
(2) The term "parents" means biological or adoptive parents or
legal guardians, as determined by applicable State law.
(3) The term "adoption assistance agreement" means a written
agreement, binding on the parties to the agreement, between the
State agency, other relevant agencies, and the prospective adoptive
parents of a minor child which at a minimum (A) specifies the
nature and amount of any payments, services, and assistance to be
provided under such agreement, and (B) stipulates that the
agreement shall remain in effect regardless of the State of which
the adoptive parents are residents at any given time. The agreement
shall contain provisions for the protection (under an interstate
compact approved by the Secretary or otherwise) of the interests of
the child in cases where the adoptive parents and child move to
another State while the agreement is effective.
(4)(A) The term "foster care maintenance payments" means
payments to cover the cost of (and the cost of providing) food,
clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school supplies, a child's
personal incidentals, liability insurance with respect to a child,
and reasonable travel to the child's home for visitation. In the
case of institutional care, such term shall include the reasonable
costs of administration and operation of such institution as are
necessarily required to provide the items described in the
preceding sentence.
(B) In cases where--
(i) a child placed in a foster family home or child-care
institution is the parent of a son or daughter who is in the same
home or institution, and
(ii) payments described in subparagraph (A) are being made under
this part with respect to such child, the foster care maintenance
payments made with respect to such child as otherwise determined
under subparagraph (A) shall also include such amounts as may be
necessary to cover the cost of the items described in that
subparagraph with respect to such son or daughter.
(5) The term "case review system" means a procedure for assuring
that--
(A) each child has a case plan designed to achieve placement in
a safe setting that is the least restrictive (most family
like) and most appropriate setting available and in close proximity
to the parents' home, consistent with the best interest and special
needs of the child, which--
(i) if the child has been placed in a foster family home or
child-care institution a substantial distance from the home of the
parents of the child, or in a State different from the State in
which such home is located, sets forth the reasons why such
placement is in the best interests of the child, and
(ii) if the child has been placed in foster care outside the
State in which the home of the parents of the child is located,
requires that, periodically, but not less frequently than every 12
months, a caseworker on the staff of the State agency of the State
in which the home of the parents of the child is located, or of the
State in which the child has been placed, visit such child in such
home or institution and submit a report on such visit to the State
agency of the State in which the home of the parents of the child
is located,
(B) the status of each child is reviewed periodically but no
less frequently than once every six months by either a court or by
administrative review (as defined in paragraph (6)) in order to
determine the safety of the child, the continuing necessity
for and appropriateness of the placement, the extent of compliance
with the case plan, and the extent of progress which has been made
toward alleviating or mitigating the causes necessitating placement
in foster care, and to project a likely date by which the child may
be returned to and safely maintained in the home or placed
for adoption or legal guardianship,
(C) with respect to each such child, procedural safeguards will
be applied, among other things, to assure each child in foster care
under the supervision of the State of a
dispositional permanency hearing to be
held, in a family or juvenile court or another court (including a
tribal court) of competent jurisdiction, or by an administrative
body appointed or approved by the court, no later than
eighteen 12 months after the original
placement date the child is considered to have entered
foster care (as determined under subparagraph (F)) (and not
less frequently than every 12 months thereafter during the
continuation of foster care), which hearing shall determine the
future status of the child (including, but not limited to,
whether the child should be returned to the parent, should be
continued in foster care for a specified period, should be placed
for adoption, or should (because of the child's special needs or
circumstances) be continued in foster care on a permanent or
long-term basis) permanency plan for the child that
includes whether, and if applicable when, the child will be
returned to the parent, placed for adoption and the State will file
a petition for termination of parental rights, or referred for
legal guardianship, or (in cases where the State agency has
documented to the State court a compelling reason for determining
that it would not be in the best interests of the child to return
home, be referred for termination of parental rights, or be placed
for adoption, with a fit and willing relative, or with a legal
guardian) placed in another planned permanent living
arrangement and, in the case of a child described in
subparagraph (A)(ii), whether the out-of-State placement continues
to be appropriate and in the best interests of the child, and, in
the case of a child who has attained age 16, the services needed to
assist the child to make the transition from foster care to
independent living; and procedural safeguards shall also be applied
with respect to parental rights pertaining to the removal of the
child from the home of his parents, to a change in the child's
placement, and to any determination affecting visitation privileges
of parents; and
(D) a child's health and education record (as described in
paragraph (1)(A)) is reviewed and updated, and supplied to the
foster parent or foster care provider with whom the child is
placed, at the time of each placement of the child in foster
care.; and
(E) in the case of a child who has been in foster care under
the responsibility of the State for 15 of the most recent 22
months, or, if a court of competent jurisdiction has determined a
child to be an abandoned infant (as defined under State law) or has
made a determination that the parent has committed murder of
another child of the parent, committed voluntary manslaughter of
another child of the parent, aided or abetted, attempted,
conspired, or solicited to commit such a murder or such a voluntary
manslaughter, or committed a felony assault that has resulted in
serious bodily injury to the child or to another child of the
parent, the State shall file a petition to terminate the parental
rights of the child's parents (or, if such a petition has been
filed by another party, seek to be joined as a party to the
petition), and, concurrently, to identify, recruit, process, and
approve a qualified family for an adoption, unless--
(i) at the option of the State, the child is being cared for
by a relative;
(ii) a State agency has documented in the case plan (which
shall be available for court review) a compelling reason for
determining that filing such a petition would not be in the best
interests of the child; or
(iii) the State has not provided to the family of the child,
consistent with the time period in the State case plan, such
services as the State deems necessary for the safe return of the
child to the child's home, if