Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND OTHER REHABILITATION SERVICES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - INDEPENDENT LIVING SERVICES AND CENTERS FOR INDEPENDENT LIVING › Part Part A— - Individuals With Significant Disabilities › Subpart subpart 1— - general provisions › § 796c
To get federal money, a State must send the federal agency an approved State plan. The plan must be made by the chair of the Statewide Independent Living Council and the directors of the centers for independent living after getting public input from people with disabilities and other stakeholders. It must be signed by the Council chair, the State’s designated agency director, and at least 51 percent of the center directors. The plan must be reviewed and updated at least once every 3 years and sent to the agency 90 days before the old plan ends, or the State can lose funding. The plan must set goals and timelines, explain statewide strategies for independent living services, create the Statewide Independent Living Council, and name a State entity to receive, manage, and spend the funds. That State entity must give administrative support, keep records, answer for the money, provide required information, and may keep not more than 5 percent of the funds for those tasks. The plan must say how the State will give independent living services to people with significant disabilities using a written plan agreed to by the person and a staff member, unless the person waives it. It must describe the services, any grants or contracts, and a statewide network of centers that meet required standards. The plan must promote cooperation among the Council, centers, the State entity, other agencies, and community groups, avoid duplicate services, coordinate Federal and State funding, and reach unserved or underserved groups (including minorities and urban and rural populations). The plan must promise to tell clients about the client assistance program, take affirmative steps to hire qualified people with disabilities, use proper fiscal controls and records, allow audits by the federal agency and the Comptroller General, hold public hearings when making and reviewing the plan, and regularly check how well the plan meets its goals, including client satisfaction. It must also describe how services will help people with significant disabilities fully take part in community life.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 796c
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73