Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - GRANTS TO STATES FOR AID AND SERVICES TO NEEDY FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN AND FOR CHILD-WELFARE SERVICES › Part Part B— - Child and Family Services › Subpart subpart 2— - promoting safe and stable families › § 629b
States must write and run a plan that explains how they will operate their child and family services program. The plan must set measurable goals for the next five fiscal years and be updated every five years. States must check progress after each of the first four years and do a final review at the end of the fifth year, then report results to the Secretary and the public and set new five-year goals after talking with required partners. The plan must say how services will link with other federal programs, limit administrative costs to no more than 10 percent of yearly program spending, and spend the rest mainly on four types of services: family preservation, community-based family support, family reunification, and adoption promotion and support. Each year the State must give the Secretary and the public a description of the services it will offer next year, who will be served, and where services will be available (for the first year when the plan is filed, and for later years by the end of the 3rd quarter of the prior fiscal year). States must promise not to use federal funds to replace other funding, must supply reports and take part in evaluations, and must submit CFS–101 forms by June 30 each year showing planned and recent actual spending, numbers served, populations, areas, and expenditures. The plan must put child safety first, explain how the State finds and targets groups at greatest risk, and describe policies and staff training to avoid separating children from parents solely because of poverty and to ensure access to certain services. The Secretary will only approve a plan that the State developed with the Secretary and after the State consulted with public and nonprofit agencies, community groups that serve families, parents with child-welfare experience, foster and adoptive and kinship caregivers, and children or youth who have lived experience in the system; the State must post a report online showing how it used youth suggestions. For Indian tribes or tribal consortia, the Secretary can waive the 10 percent rule if it’s inappropriate for the tribe, but cannot approve a tribal plan that would result in a combined allotment of less than $10,000 under the cited allotment rules. Each year by September 30 the Secretary will compile the State reports, make national summary tables (including planned and actual spending by service category), send the compilation to the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees, and publish it on the HHS website.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 629b
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73