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 3— - centers for independent living › § 796f–4
Requires each center for independent living that gets federal help to follow specific standards and to promise certain actions so services are run well and meet the goal of helping people with significant disabilities live independently. Centers must follow the independent-living approach: people who use the center help make decisions about its services and policies, support self-help and self-advocacy, build peer relationships and role models, and work for equal access to community services and places. Centers must serve people with many kinds of significant disabilities on a cross-disability basis, help people reach their own independent-living goals, increase community options, provide core independent-living services (and other services as needed), build local community capacity, and try to get funding from sources besides this federal program. The applying organization must be eligible and must promise, in writing, that it will be run locally by people with disabilities, that a board will govern it with a majority of members having significant disabilities, and that it will follow the standards above. It must set clear annual and 3-year program and financial goals that match the State’s 3-year plan, use fair hiring and promote qualified people with significant disabilities, keep a majority of staff and decisionmakers with disabilities, manage money properly, do yearly self-checks and make an annual report and records showing at least compliance, who was served, what services and counts, funding sources and amounts, staffing and management numbers, and year-to-year comparisons when useful. Centers must tell clients about the client assistance program, do strong outreach to unserved or underserved groups (especially minorities and urban and rural populations), train staff to serve those groups, send their grant application and annual report to the Statewide Independent Living Council, submit the annual report to the State unit or Administrator, and develop an individual independent-living plan unless the person signs a waiver saying it is not needed.
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Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 796f–4
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73