Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III–A— - SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION › Part Part B— - Centers and Programs › Subpart subpart 1— - center for substance abuse treatment › § 290bb–7a
The Secretary of Health and Human Services must set up a resource center, with help from the Secretary of Education and other agencies, to support groups that get grants. HHS and the Secretary of Education will run a competitive grant program that gives 3-year awards to groups to prevent, treat, and support recovery from substance use disorders for children, adolescents, and young adults. Grants can pay for evidence-based prevention (including education about the dangers of synthetic opioids and fentanyl), recovery supports (like peer-to-peer support, counseling, job training, family groups, and recovery coaching), and treatment or referrals (including medication-assisted treatment when appropriate). HHS will find and share best practices, evaluate each grant, and give technical help. Applicants must describe the local problem, show stakeholder input, list goals and evidence-based activities, explain partnerships and how the work will continue after the grant, and agree to take part in evaluations. The Secretary must give special consideration to Tribal, urban, suburban, and rural needs. Grantees must report on how funds were used, how many young people were reached, and impacts such as student well-being and academic achievement, substance use measures, and the number of overdoses and deaths among those served. Defined terms (one line each): eligible entity — groups that can apply, such as local or State education agencies, colleges, nonprofit youth organizations, workforce boards, State or local governments, Indian Tribes, or Bureau of Indian Education high schools; recovery program — services to help young people start and stay in recovery that include peer support and community activities; foster care — children in state or tribal care as defined in federal rules; high school/secondary school, local educational agency, State educational agency, institution of higher education, local board/one-stop operator, out-of-school youth, homeless youth, Indian Tribe/Tribal organization — these use the meanings given in the cited federal laws. The Secretary must send a summary report to Congress by October 1, 2028. Authorized funding: $10,000,000 for FY2026; $12,000,000 for FY2027; $13,000,000 for FY2028; $14,000,000 for FY2029; and $15,000,000 for FY2030.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 290bb–7a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73