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 › § 796d
Each State must create and keep a Statewide Independent Living Council (called the Council). The Council must not be part of a State agency. The Governor (or the State official who runs these programs if not the Governor) appoints members after asking disability organizations for recommendations. The Council must have at least one director of a center for independent living chosen by those directors, and if tribal centers exist, at least one representative of their directors. The Council also must include, as nonvoting members, a representative of the designated State entity and people from State agencies that serve people with disabilities. The Council can include other center directors, people with disabilities, parents, advocates, business and service providers, and others. Members must give statewide representation, reflect many different kinds of disabilities, know about independent living, and a majority must be people described in section 705(20)(B) and not work for a State agency or a center for independent living. The chair is chosen from voting members except in States where the appointing authority must name the chair. Members serve 3-year terms, initial terms are staggered, vacancies are filled like the original appointments (or by the Council if allowed), and no one may serve more than two full terms in a row (with one narrow exception for a lone center director). The Council must write the State plan required under section 796c(a)(2) and then watch, review, and evaluate how that plan is carried out. The Council must meet regularly, keep meetings open to the public with enough notice, send reports to the Administrator when asked, and keep records the Administrator needs. The Council should coordinate with other State entities that offer similar or related services. The Council may work with centers for independent living, raise resources, and do other appropriate tasks that match the State plan, but it must not provide or run independent living services directly for people with significant disabilities. The Council may hold hearings. It must make a plan, with the designated State entity, for the staff and resources it needs using funds under this part and section 730 (consistent with section 721(a)(18)). The Council supervises and evaluates its staff, and staff must not be given State duties that cause a conflict of interest. The Council may use funds to repay members’ reasonable meeting expenses (like personal assistance) and may pay members who lose wages or are unpaid for days they work for the Council.
Full Legal Text
Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 796d
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73