Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND OTHER REHABILITATION SERVICES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SERVICES › Part Part B— - Basic Vocational Rehabilitation Services › § 732
Makes grants to states so each state can run a client assistance program. These programs must tell people with disabilities about benefits and services under this law and Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act. They must help clients and applicants who ask for help. That help can include advising, speaking up for people with the programs that serve them, and, when needed, using legal, administrative, or other remedies to protect rights and to help people get services that support employment. Programs must focus especially on people who have been left out or not served by vocational rehabilitation services. A state can only get money if it has a program that can use legal and administrative remedies and that meets the Governor’s designation rules. The Governor must pick a public or private agency to run the program, usually one that is independent of agencies that provide services, with one exception for agencies that served this role before February 22, 1984. The Governor cannot replace the agency without good cause, 30 days’ notice, public comment, and a chance to appeal to the Commissioner; special rules apply when agencies reorganize after August 7, 1998. The chosen agency must be responsible for its funds and cannot file class actions. The Secretary of Labor decides how to divide the money: by state population with minimums (at least $50,000 per State, $30,000 for each territory), higher minimums if total funds exceed $7,500,000, and other specific reserves and reallotment rules. The Secretary will issue rules to prevent conflicts of interest, require reasonable access to program officials, promote alternative dispute resolution, and protect clients’ identities in audits. Authorized funding: $12,000,000 (FY2015); $12,927,000 (FY2016); $13,195,000 (FY2017); $13,488,000 (FY2018); $13,805,000 (FY2019); $14,098,000 (FY2020).
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 732
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73