Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 144— - DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES ASSISTANCE AND BILL OF RIGHTS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - PROGRAMS FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES › Part Part D— - National Network of University Centers for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities Education, Research, and Service › § 15064
To get a grant for a Center, an organization must apply to the Secretary and get the application approved. The application must include a 5-year plan with goals for each of the Center’s main work areas. The Secretary will approve the application only if the applicant gives reasonable assurances that it will meet the Secretary’s standards; use data-driven planning developed with a consumer advisory committee; review and update goals yearly; use grant money to add to, not replace, other funding; protect the legal and human rights of people with developmental disabilities (including those under guardianship); try to leverage additional public and private funds; have a qualified director and enough staff time for each core function; and inform the State legislature and the State’s Members of Congress about the Center’s purpose. The consumer advisory committee must be majority people with developmental disabilities or their family members, include representatives such as protection-and-advocacy, the State Council, a self-advocacy group, and other relevant organizations, reflect the State’s racial and ethnic diversity, help develop and review the 5-year plan, and meet at least twice each grant year. All applications must be reviewed by peer review groups chosen by the Secretary, and the Secretary may approve only applications recommended by those groups; the groups may visit sites. The Secretary can set up these groups and choose members without following some usual federal hiring rules, and may waive the peer review in exceptional cases. The federal share of project costs is normally at most 75 percent, and can be up to 90 percent for projects serving people in urban or rural poverty areas. Spending by state or local governments or other entities may count as the Center’s share under rules the Secretary sets. Each Center must send an annual report showing progress on goals (what was achieved, what helped, what got in the way), how grant funds were spent, proposed goal revisions, and how other funds were leveraged.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 15064
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73