Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND OTHER REHABILITATION SERVICES › § 711
The Secretary of Education must evaluate all programs run under this chapter to see how well they work, how their costs compare to their results, how they affect other programs, and how services are delivered. The Secretary must create and use evaluation standards and methods. Each evaluation must be done by someone not directly running the program. The Secretary must ask program participants for their views. All studies, evaluations, proposals, and data paid for with federal money become the property of the United States. Federal departments and agencies must give the Secretary any information needed for these evaluations when asked. The Secretary must also run a long-term study of a national sample of applicants to track economic and other outcomes. That study must follow people from application, through eligibility and services, and for not less than 2 years after services end. It must look at why people leave or finish programs, what helps or hurts results, and compare similar people who did not get services. The Commissioner must find and share exemplary vocational rehabilitation practices and study many related topics (like informed choice, job placement and retention, supported employment, services for specific disability groups, assistive technology, financing personal assistance, program standards, and moving to competitive integrated employment). The Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Administrator of the Administration for Community Living may carry out the same evaluation and dissemination duties for the parts of the chapter they oversee. Money may be appropriated as needed to do this work.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 711
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73