Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND OTHER REHABILITATION SERVICES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND SPECIAL PROJECTS AND DEMONSTRATIONS › § 773
The Commissioner can give grants to States and public or nonprofit groups to pay all or part of projects that test ways to give people more choice in their rehabilitation, including picking their service providers. Grant money must only be used for planning, running, and checking those projects, and must add to other funds, not replace them. Applicants must explain how they will increase client choice, make sure providers are qualified, reach eligible clients, and create a written plan with the client that lists job goals, the services to be provided with start dates and lengths, and how progress will be measured. The Commissioner will pick projects to cover different approaches, places, and kinds of clients. Projects must keep required records and let the Commissioner review them. At least 80 percent of each project’s funds must pay for direct services chosen by eligible clients. The Commissioner can evaluate the projects and can set aside money from the project funds for that evaluation. The Commissioner can also fund grants or contracts to expand or improve rehabilitation services, research, and related work. Eligible applicants include State vocational rehab agencies, community programs, tribes, nonprofits, and sometimes for-profit groups. Funded activities can include demonstrations, models, technical help, system change, studies, and sharing results. Priority is given to work that helps youth move from school to competitive jobs, supports employment for people with significant disabilities, and increases competitive integrated employment. Grants to private nonprofits can fund training and information so people with disabilities and their families can better use rehab and independent living services; these grantees must be governed mainly by people with disabilities or their families, work with related centers, meet quarterly, and serve urban and rural areas. The law allows reserving up to 20 percent of the section’s funds or $500,000 (whichever is less) for coordination and technical help. Grants also support braille training projects for staff who serve blind youth and adults. Authorized appropriations are $5,796,000 for FY2015, $6,244,000 for FY2016, $6,373,000 for FY2017, $6,515,000 for FY2018, $6,668,000 for FY2019, and $6,809,000 for FY2020. Definitions: direct services = vocational rehabilitation services (see section 723(a)); eligible client = a person with a disability (see section 705(20)(A)) who is not already getting services under a state-established individualized plan for employment.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 773
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73