Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - WORKFORCE INNOVATION AND OPPORTUNITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES › Part Part D— - National Programs › § 3225a
The Secretary of Labor, working with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, will run a competitive pilot program that gives grants to states, territories, or Tribal groups to help places hit hard by opioid or other substance use disorders. Each grant must be at least $500,000 and no more than $5,000,000 per year. Applicants must show which counties or areas were badly affected and that problems rose from 1999 to 2016 (or the latest year available). They must also show the local economy or jobs were hurt. The grant money mostly goes as subgrants to local workforce boards, except Tribal grantees may use funds directly. The grantee may use up to 5% of its grant for administration. Subgrants must be spread fairly by geography and impact, and subgrant money must be sent to a local board by the later of 90 days after federal funds are available or 15 days after the grantee makes the subgrant. Local boards must work through written partnerships that include the local board plus partners like treatment providers, employers, schools, police or legal groups, community organizations, or Tribes. Partnerships may serve workers who are affected by substance use disorders (workers must say they or a friend or family member has a history of such use) and/or workers who want to train for jobs helping people with these disorders. Funds can be used for employer outreach, screening, building treatment-and-job plans with a case manager, outpatient treatment and recovery services, wraparound supports (like help getting benefits, housing, transportation, peer recovery support, and mentoring), and career and training services including help in the first 6 months of a job and supports up to 12 months. A partnership may not spend more than 10% of its subgrant on administration, 10% on treatment and recovery services, or 10% on supportive services. Grant and subgrant recipients must report quarterly. The program must be independently evaluated using random assignment when possible. Funding may come from certain Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act funds for fiscal years 2019 through 2030, but no more than $100,000,000 may be used in any one covered fiscal year. Key defined words: “eligible entity” = State workforce agency, outlying area, or Tribal entity; “participating partnership” = a written agreement including a local board and other partners; “program participant” = a worker served by the program; “treatment provider” = a licensed health provider that accepts insurance, including Medicaid; “covered fiscal year” = fiscal years 2019–2030.
Full Legal Text
Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 3225a
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73